How does relief printing for images differ from relief printing for letters?

(1 point) ,
The carved letters are raised but images are not.
• The process is the same, but the plate carvings are different.
O Relief printing cannot be used to print images and requires a different process.
• Relief printing allows for multiple copies of letters but a single copy of images.

The process is the same, but the plate carvings are different.

The correct answer is: The process is the same, but the plate carvings are different.

The correct answer is: The carved letters are raised but images are not.

Relief printing is a technique that involves carving a plate or block, applying ink to the raised surface, and then transferring the inked image onto paper or another surface. In relief printing for letters, the letters are carved to be raised, meaning that the ink is applied to the surface of the carved letters, and then transferred onto the paper, creating a relief or raised impression.

On the other hand, relief printing for images involves carving the negative spaces around the image, leaving the image itself uncarved or at a lower level. This means that when the ink is applied to the plate or block, only the negative spaces around the image hold the ink, while the image itself remains uninked. When transferred onto the paper, the uninked image area appears as the printed image, while the inked negative spaces form the background.

So, the main difference between relief printing for letters and relief printing for images is that in letter relief printing, the carved letters are raised, while in image relief printing, the image itself is uncarved or at a lower level.

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