Blueprint
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For other uses, see Blueprint
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Modern blueprint of the French
galleon La Belle.
Architectural drawing, 1902
Architectural drawing, Canada,
1936
A blueprint is a reproduction of
a technical drawing, documenting an architecture or an engineering design,
using a contact print process on light-sensitive sheets. Invented in the 19th
century, the process allowed rapid and accurate reproduction of documents used
in construction and industry. The blue-print process was characterized by light
colored lines on a blue background, a negative of the original. The process was
unable to reproduce color or shades of grey.
Various base materials have been
used for blueprints. Paper was a common choice; for more durable prints linen
was sometimes used, but with time, the linen prints would shrink slightly. To
combat this problem, printing on imitation vellum and, later, polyester film
(Mylar) was implemented.
The process has been largely
displaced by the diazo whiteprint process and by large-format xerographic
photocopiers, so reproduced drawings are usually called "prints" or
just "drawings".
Contents
1 The blueprint process
2 Replacements for blueprints
3 See also
4 References
5 Further reading
The blueprint process
In 1861 Alphonse Louis Poitevin,
a French chemist, found that ferro-gallate in gum is light sensitive.[1] Light
turns this to an insoluble permanent blue. A coating of this chemical on a
paper or other base may be used to reproduce an image from a translucent
document.
The ferro-gallate is coated onto
a paper from aqueous solution and dried. The coating is yellow. In darkness it
is stable for up to three days. It is clamped under glass and a light
transmitting document in a daylight exposure frame, which is similar to a
picture frame. The frame is put out into daylight requiring a minute or two
under a bright sun or about ten times this under an overcast sky. Where
ultra-violet light is transmitted the coating converts to a stable blue or
black dye. The image can be seen forming, when a strong image is seen the frame
is brought indoors and the unconverted coating, under the original image, is
washed away. The paper is then dried.
The result is a copy of the
original image with the clear background area rendered dark blue and the image
reproduced as a white line. The image is stable. The contact printing process
has the advantage that no large-field optical system is required. A further
advantage is that the reproduced document will have the same scale as the
original. Another quality is that the dark blue background makes it difficult
to add new information to the print (such as recording as-built changes); a
blueprint cannot easily be altered -- depending on the situation, this can be
either a strength or a drawback. Since the paper is soaked in liquid during
processing, a minor change of scale can occur,and the paper can also become
brittle. Engineering drawings often are marked to remind users not to rely on
the scale of reproductions. [2]
Other blueprint processes based
on photosensitive ferric compounds have been used. The best known is probably a
process using ammonium ferric citrate and potassium ferricyanide.[3] In this
procedure a distinctly blue compound is formed and the process is also known as
cyanotype. The paper is impregnated with a solution of ammonium ferric citrate
and dried. When the paper is illuminated a photoreaction turns the trivalent
(ferric) iron into divalent (ferrous) iron. The image is then developed using a
solution of potassium ferricyanide forming insoluble ferroferricyanide
(Turnball's blue identical to Prussian blue) with the divalent iron. Excess
ammonium ferric citrate and potassium ferricyanide are then washed away.
This is a simple process for the
reproduction of any light transmitting document. Engineers and architects drew
their designs on cartridge paper; these were then traced on to tracing paper
using Indian ink for reproduction whenever needed.
Introduction of the blueprint
process eliminated the expense of photolithographic reproduction or of
hand-tracing of original drawings. By the latter 1890s in American
architectural offices, a blueprint was one-tenth the cost of a hand-traced
reproduction. [4] The blueprint process is still used for special artistic and
photographic effects, on paper and fabrics. [5]
Replacements for blueprints
Traditional blueprints have
largely been replaced by more modern, less expensive printing methods and
digital displays. In the early 1940s, cyanotype blueprint began to be supplanted
by diazo prints, also known as whiteprints, which have blue lines on a white
background; thus these drawings are also called blue-lines or bluelines. Other
comparable dye-based prints are known as blacklines.
Diazo prints remain in use in
some applications but in many cases have been replaced by xerographic print
processes similar to standard copy machine technology using toner on bond
paper. More recently, designs created using computer-aided design techniques
may be transferred as a digital file directly to a computer printer or plotter;
in some applications paper is avoided altogether and work and analysis is done
directly from digital displays. Another common modern method of copying is the
use of large-format scanners. These digitize an image which can then be printed
with a large-format plotter.
As print and display technology
has advanced, the traditional term "blueprint" has continued to be
used informally to refer to each type of image.
See also
Architectural reprography
Floor plan
Van dyke brown
Whiteprin
References
^ "Forgotten processes", Historic
processes, Alternative photography.
^ Ralph W. Liebing Architectural Working
Drawings, John Wiley & Sons, 1999 ISBN 0471348767 page 576
^ Blue, WS: PSLC.
^ Mary N. Woods From Craft to Profession:
The Practice of Architecture in Nineteenth-Century America University of
California Press, 1999 ISBN 0520214943, page 239-240
^ Gary Fabbri, Malin Fabbri Blueprint to
Cyanotypes - Exploring a Historical Alternative Photographic ProcessLulu.com,
2006 ISBN 141169838X page 7
Further reading
Wikimedia
Commons has media related to: Blueprints
Look
up blueprint in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Page, Walter Hines; Page, Arthur
Wilson (November 1915). "Man And His Machines: Electric Blue Printing
Machine". The World's Work: A History of Our Time XXXI: 113. Retrieved 4
August 2009.
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