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Definition of chromolithograph in English: chromolithographnoun krəʊməʊˈlɪθəɡrɑːfˌkroʊmoʊˈlɪθəɡræf historical A coloured picture printed by lithography, especially in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Example sentencesExamples - Surviving company records concerning Niagara Falls, from the American Side reveal that between October 1868 and March 1869, Knoedler sold a mere sixteen copies of the chromolithograph - but they were expensive.
- The Sacred Heart may refer to inexpensive chromolithographs, but it also makes a more high-culture allusion to the modern literature of memory.
- Key's works had already been published as chromolithographs by the New York City firm of H. Wood and Company in 1869 and by L. Prang and Company of Boston in the early 1870s.
- And the chromolithographs published by the Arundel Society provided cheap colour reproductions of early Italian frescoes.
- The ten chromolithographs produced from his oil sketches are compelling images of western exploration of the 1870s.
- They were married on July 14 of that year, and in early 1884 moved to Boston, where Chase arranged employment for Welch at L. Prang and Company, publishers of chromolithographs.
- A colored lithograph is called a chromolithograph.
- The Resurrection was published as a chromolithograph.
- Unlike the other two chromolithographs showing the fair in broad daylight, this scene is bathed in the delicate light of sunset that spreads warm harmonies throughout the composition.
- As I walked into the room I was overwhelmed by the cacophony of images: statues, chromolithographs, assorted fabrics, crosses, and varied knick-knacks decorated a long, horizontal altar.
- On easel-size paper in white, green, or dark brown, Miro used conte crayon lines to connect mass-produced images cut from advertisements, anatomical engravings, and commercial chromolithographs.
- For a photograph by Frank A. Rinehart of the scene portrayed in the chromolithograph, see ‘Indian Congress - General View,’ TMI number 01090, reproduced on the Omaha Public Library Web site.
- See Peter C. Marzio, The Democratic Art: Pictures for a 19 th-Century America: Chromolithography, 1840-1900, pp.201-205, for a discussion of chromolithographs of the World's Columbian Exposition, and also pp.313, 343.
- By August 1898 Key had contracted with the Taber Prang Art Company of Springfield, Massachusetts, to provide paintings of the Omaha fair that would be made into chromolithographs.
- One of the most beautiful of these is Santa Clara Valley, the composition of which became the subject for a large chromolithograph of the same title published in 1873 by L. Prang and Company of Boston.
- Hunt ultimately painted a second, larger version of it, which was reproduced in many engravings and chromolithographs.
- Silverman begins by considering van Gogh's interest in making La Berceuse resemble ‘a chromolithograph from a cheap shop.’
- Several crucifixes hang on the wall behind the shelf, as do a variety of chromolithographs depicting saints and Virgins that are important to Espiritismo as well as to the Cuban religion Santeria, which Flores does not practice.
verbkrəʊməʊˈlɪθəɡrɑːfˌkroʊmoʊˈlɪθəɡræf [with object]historical Produce (a picture) by lithography. chromolithographed advertising Example sentencesExamples - An expanding range of methods allowed for splendid chromolithographed illustrations and hand-colored illustrations that were prestigious showcases for their companies.
- The chromolithographed tile shown above the bread plate was based on a design for Pugin's Floriated Ornament.
- Later, chromolithographed posters brought their products to the attention of a wider audience.
- The brilliantly chromolithographed boards were often embellished with capitalist symbolism as well as caricatures of magnates, speculators, and the bestial mascots of wealth.
- Their most prominent products were chromolithographed postcards that were well designed, beautifully printed in vibrant colors, and embossed for greater effect.
Derivatives nounkrəʊməʊlɪˈθɒɡrəfə historical The color plates reflect the artistry of Louis Prang of Boston, the leading chromolithographer of the period. Example sentencesExamples - Requiring multiple runs through the press, these books combine the art of the chromolithographer and the skill of the draftsman.
- A Bavarian whose publishing firm was headquartered in Nuremburg, Nister applied the technical skills of the German chromolithographers to the romantic, late-Victorian images demanded by the British and American Markets.
- American chromolithographers tended to specialize in either views of their own cities or in sentimental depictions.
- Every change of position flashes to view these diminutive birds' metallic coloring making the hummingbird an ideal subject for the chromolithographer and label collector.
adjectivekrəʊməʊlɪθəˈɡrafɪk historical Eventually Prang issued about 800 chromolithographs of this sort, establishing an oeuvre unmatched by any other American chromolithographic publisher. Example sentencesExamples - Perhaps the necessary simplifications enforced by the chromolithographic and colouring processes caused this loss.
- In this Edition, Julius Bien produced some of the finest examples of large-scale chromolithographic art of the mid 19th century.
- In the chromolithographic labels which we will call ‘chromos’, the mastery of both the typographer and the artist is absolutely evident.
- This is an important collection of all known varieties of apples grown in Herefordshire with excellent chromolithographic plates to illustrate many of the varieties.
noun krəʊməʊlɪˈθɒɡrəfiˌkroʊmoʊlɪˈθɑɡrəfi historical Colour printing had enormous commercial potential through the development of chromolithography, and a large part of the history of lithography is in its commercial application, often bright and garish, to posters and advertisements. Example sentencesExamples - By the 1890's, chromolithography was being replaced by a new photographic reproduction methods.
- At the same time, chromolithography allowed mechanical printing to replace much hand painting on tin plated toys.
- There is something inherently exquisite about Victorian chromolithography that is so compelling.
- But as awkward as it might seem, chromolithography was a huge leap forward for natural history books.
Definition of chromolithograph in US English: chromolithographnounˌkrōmōˈliTHəɡrafˌkroʊmoʊˈlɪθəɡræf historical A colored picture printed by lithography, especially in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Example sentencesExamples - The Resurrection was published as a chromolithograph.
- On easel-size paper in white, green, or dark brown, Miro used conte crayon lines to connect mass-produced images cut from advertisements, anatomical engravings, and commercial chromolithographs.
- They were married on July 14 of that year, and in early 1884 moved to Boston, where Chase arranged employment for Welch at L. Prang and Company, publishers of chromolithographs.
- See Peter C. Marzio, The Democratic Art: Pictures for a 19 th-Century America: Chromolithography, 1840-1900, pp.201-205, for a discussion of chromolithographs of the World's Columbian Exposition, and also pp.313, 343.
- And the chromolithographs published by the Arundel Society provided cheap colour reproductions of early Italian frescoes.
- Surviving company records concerning Niagara Falls, from the American Side reveal that between October 1868 and March 1869, Knoedler sold a mere sixteen copies of the chromolithograph - but they were expensive.
- Silverman begins by considering van Gogh's interest in making La Berceuse resemble ‘a chromolithograph from a cheap shop.’
- The Sacred Heart may refer to inexpensive chromolithographs, but it also makes a more high-culture allusion to the modern literature of memory.
- The ten chromolithographs produced from his oil sketches are compelling images of western exploration of the 1870s.
- Hunt ultimately painted a second, larger version of it, which was reproduced in many engravings and chromolithographs.
- One of the most beautiful of these is Santa Clara Valley, the composition of which became the subject for a large chromolithograph of the same title published in 1873 by L. Prang and Company of Boston.
- By August 1898 Key had contracted with the Taber Prang Art Company of Springfield, Massachusetts, to provide paintings of the Omaha fair that would be made into chromolithographs.
- Unlike the other two chromolithographs showing the fair in broad daylight, this scene is bathed in the delicate light of sunset that spreads warm harmonies throughout the composition.
- Several crucifixes hang on the wall behind the shelf, as do a variety of chromolithographs depicting saints and Virgins that are important to Espiritismo as well as to the Cuban religion Santeria, which Flores does not practice.
- For a photograph by Frank A. Rinehart of the scene portrayed in the chromolithograph, see ‘Indian Congress - General View,’ TMI number 01090, reproduced on the Omaha Public Library Web site.
- As I walked into the room I was overwhelmed by the cacophony of images: statues, chromolithographs, assorted fabrics, crosses, and varied knick-knacks decorated a long, horizontal altar.
- A colored lithograph is called a chromolithograph.
- Key's works had already been published as chromolithographs by the New York City firm of H. Wood and Company in 1869 and by L. Prang and Company of Boston in the early 1870s.
verbˌkrōmōˈliTHəɡrafˌkroʊmoʊˈlɪθəɡræf [with object]historical Print or produce (a picture) by the chromolithographic process. chromolithographed advertising Example sentencesExamples - Their most prominent products were chromolithographed postcards that were well designed, beautifully printed in vibrant colors, and embossed for greater effect.
- The chromolithographed tile shown above the bread plate was based on a design for Pugin's Floriated Ornament.
- The brilliantly chromolithographed boards were often embellished with capitalist symbolism as well as caricatures of magnates, speculators, and the bestial mascots of wealth.
- Later, chromolithographed posters brought their products to the attention of a wider audience.
- An expanding range of methods allowed for splendid chromolithographed illustrations and hand-colored illustrations that were prestigious showcases for their companies.
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