E_News_Spring_2003_Vol. 2 No. 3
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>Volume II Number 3

< Atelier AskArt Fine Art Giclée Printing E-News >

           Spring 2003<

Our website is dedicated to educating and assisting fine artists with
 the reproduction, promotion, and sale of their work. 

Selling Your Art Strategies: Idea #9
Increasing Sales of Your Editions

Canvas Giclée Editions
See Stellar Sales Increase
 
Prints on Canvas - Especially Giclées
Are a Hot Commodity for 
Dealers and Collectors
 
by Alexander S. Kabbaz


A modern Giclée printer is a technologically superior printing device which, once the graphics are finalized and the "go" button is pushed, needs no attendant!

Exclusive to Atelier AskArt - Recent enhancements in printing technology combined with the great reduction in capital outlay provided the original impetus behind the popularity of giclée in the fine art world.
These improvements in the quality of giclée on fine art canvas have coupled with increasing recognition by the art-buying public to cause a tremendous increase in sales during the past twelve months. According to a number of sources polled at the recent Art Expo in New York, giclée prints on canvas have a much greater collector appeal due to their close resemblance to the original oil and acrylic works. Prints on paper remain viable as reproductions of works originally on paper, but canvas has sped ahead as the substrate of choice for editions of canvas and digital originals.
Canvas has traditionally been printable by three methods; offset, transfer, and giclée. In the offset lithography process the inks come out in dots which, just as in magazine printing, are too visible to the naked eye. The second method involves the use of a transfer medium. The image is printed on the transfer medium and then adhered to canvas. The ultimate method of canvas printing is giclée. Giclées are not only printed directly on canvas. Their color spectrum is the broadest of the three processes and, in contrast to offset, the dots are virtually invisible. In fact, a skilled giclee printer can usually make adjustments of ink sufficient to cause the majority of the dots to actually blend together. This creates what is in fact a continuous-tone print.One way we take our measure of the public's preferences is through gallery preferences as this is always a trend precursor. The majority (55%) of recent requests for pieces destined for the various galleries we serve have been for canvas.



Traditional offset printing requires tremendously large and extremely costly printing equipment ... 
and a great deal of high-priced labor.

Reasons for this include the unavoidable fact that canvas reproductions have a higher perceived value than paper prints. Of paramount importance is that canvas, unlike paper, can be stretched and framed without glass just like an original work. This provides the buyer with the feeling of owning an original masterpiece rather than a reproduction.                                       more

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- - - Article Continues below

 

April $uper $avings $pecial

Discounts on ALL Services!


Don't forget to order envelopes and other accessories to make your notecard presentation professional. Shown here are the Clear Self-Seal envelopes.

For all orders received by us
during the month of April 2003,
 the following discounts apply:

Notecards and Postcards
25% OFF

All Giclée Printing
All Digital Services
15% OFF

Discounts apply to your entire order (except freight) including scanning, digitizing, color correction, typesetting, sell posters, additional type or graphic design, set-up options, and all notecard accessories. To receive your discount, just write Code V2N3MSSS on your order.

Orders must be received with payment to qualify. No additional discounts or coupons of any sort may be applied. Orders must mention code V2N3MSSS and be received by us here at Atelier AskArt by April 30, 2003 to qualify.


Notecards can be used to showcase more than one of your works. Here, a total of 10 different works are promoted. Additional scanning and set-up costs apply


The most professional presentation is Boxed Sets. Include a selection of 4 or 8 different cards for maximum impact. Print a Box Insert showing all of the images.

Go to AtelierAskArt.com now, print Order Forms, and $ave!

 
Selling Your Art Strategies: Idea #9 - - - continued from above 
Increasing Sales of Your Editions    
Here at Atelier AskArt we have experienced the trend toward canvas firsthand. Our giclée on canvas sales have doubled just since the Summer of 2002. We use two types: waterproof cotton fine art canvas and traditional cotton fine art canvas. Both have their advantages. The waterproof, with its obvious benefit of being completely resistant to the effects of water, has the disadvantage of a shorter fade-proof life. Although with fade resistance now being measured in centuries this may not seem significant, we consider it to be an important criteria. The regular fine art canvas is much more resistant to the UV effects and most artists are selecting the regular over the waterproof. 
If done with skill, it can be gloss, satin, or matte spray coated with a waterproof acrylic fixative or varnish. This process achieves the waterproofing benefit but with the slight additional expense of an extra step in the process.
From an artist's point-of-view giclée's greatest appeal is the flexibility and extremely low cash outlay. Once the work has been scanned and color corrected, the artist need make only 1 print. Depending on the size of the original when all is said and done, the initial investment will fall between $75 and $300. And now comes the most important part: Prints need to be ordered ONLY when sold! For, in fact, once your giclée printer has your work scanned, color-corrected, and proofed, the expense is only for each sold print.


Lucia's famous "Sanctuary", shown here reproduced 
in the first official canvas edition, is a virtual duplicate 
of the original work produced in the 1940's



Michael Knigin (left), a true pioneer in the 
printmaking field and a renowned artist in his own right, 
is shown here with two of the beautiful canvas prints
 of his "Vintage Nude" series at a recent show.

For example: the initial set-up of an 11" x 15" paper print averages about $125 and the first print will cost about $60. In other words, for $185 you have everything you need to sell more prints. And now the best news of all. Your next 4 prints will cost you only $45 each and the subsequent 6 only $39 each. Each quantity of prints thereafter is progressively less expensive. Canvas generally runs about 10%-15% more than paper. With 11" x 15" paper giclées going for $250 - $450 and canvas giclées upwards of $400 - $1000, your first sale actually repays the entire up-front investment and then some!
To compare with the other two printing methods use the following: The canvas transfer process will initially cost slightly more than giclée.
But that is where the similarity ends. The quantity/cost reduction curve of giclée is not only much steeper in your favor than transfer, the quality of a direct-printed giclée is immeasurably greater. And the offset process? As they say, fuhgedaboutit! Your initial investment (without even one print) will exceed $1500 and you'll need to make hundreds of prints just to make this much lower quality process worthwhile.
The final critera lies in image selection. Oils and acrylics, originally done on canvas, canvas board, or art board are the top choices for canvas giclées. The "why" is simple. Watercolors, gouaches, and other media originally done on paper naturally look best when reproduced on their original substrate. When printed on canvas, they tend to have a fake and unreal quality about them. Other good candidates for canvas reproduction are many works of digital art which, due to the method of their creation, cannot suffer from the stigma of a change in substrate as they have no original substrate.



The surreal "Everyone Has A Church Within",
 a '50's Lucia on canvas, was an ideal candidate 
for an official historical edition.



Marjory Dressler's "Sphere-Circle", 
a digitally created work, proved ideal for 
a large (40" x 58") canvas reproduction

And what is the newest trend in canvas? It's loosely termed the "original giclée". Cutting-edge artists are now hand-enhancing their canvas editions to individualize each print. This has been immensely successful in the retailing of editions because it creates not only a higher price-point but also a higher perceived value to the work of art. When an artist hand-embellishes a work of art before it is sold, people are willing to spend more money for the print. People like "having a piece" of the artist. It is truly an original, one-of-a-kind ... but at a price many more consumers can afford.
Put simply, today's increase in the sales of canvas giclée prints is not a trend. It is a groundswell - and with its mutual benefits for both artist and collector - one which shows only an outlook for continued increase.

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That's about it for this issue. We hope you found this article useful and pertinant. For more helpful information on giclée, notecards, postcards, and a complete glossary of digital and paper terminology, be sure to visit our web site at http://www.AtelierAskArt.com.  Until next issue, keep on creating!
Alexander S. Kabbaz,

Giclée Printing Artist
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