A kind of woodcut made developed in the eighteenth century. A woodblock of very hard wood is used, and is always cut across the grain. The wood engraver is able to make much more detailed work than the woodcutter, achieving an effect of closely worked lines that print white against black, as opposed to the [...]
A kind of woodcut made developed in the eighteenth century. A woodblock of very hard wood is used, and is always cut across the grain. The wood engraver is able to make much more detailed work than the woodcutter, achieving an effect of closely worked lines that print white against black, as opposed to the black against white effect of woodcutting. The technique was frequently employed in book and newspaper illustration in the 19th century.

