The Art of Etching Through Time
Etching is the method of engraving using acid on a metal
surface. It is also a printmaking method wherein the image is
carved into a surface of a metal plate with the use of an acid.
This acid bores into the metal surface, and leaves behind rough
areas or lines if the surface is too narrow.
Etching is a process which is believed to have started in
Augsburg, Germany, by Daniel Hopfer who used the technology in
armor making. Later on, the method was applied to printmaking.
The metal plate used in etching is usually copper or zinc, which
has a thin coating of resin that is resistant to acid. This
coating can also be made of some waxy material. The metal plates
are usually smoked so that the engravings and lines become
clearly visible through the resin. A sharp tool then scratches
the metal and exposes it without actually penetrating it.
As the etching design is completed, the plate is immersed in an
acidic solution that attacks the exposed metal parts. During
this process, called a bath, the plate is immersed, but
frequently removed until the lines are etched to their
satisfactory depth.
A coating varnish is then applied to stop the acid from
attacking the metal surface further. In this process, the lines
which were exposed to the acids longer get the darker prints.
Other etchers also apply the acids directly on the plate's
surface.
In printmaking; however, the varnish is removed, and the plate
is coated with ink after being warmed or heated. The ink is then
wiped carefully so that enough amounts remain the etched
depressions. A soft, moist paper is then used to cover the
plate, and ran through an etching press.
There is a wide range of modifications in etching techniques.
Some etchers modify their products by removing undesired lines.
They do this by burnishing or by modifying the original state of
the plate after their trial print.
Prints appear differently in various stages, and only a few
first prints can be made out of a single plate. Etchers also
destroy these plates after making a number of prints.
Several methods of etching produce different effects.
Soft-ground etching looks like a pencil drawing, while aquatint
produces an effect similar to wash drawing. Aquatint is usually
used in combination with hard-ground etching.
Pictorial etching, which evolved from burin engraving also
originated from Germany, where artists etched on iron as the
earliest example of this delicate form of art.
Nowadays, the popular methods of etching are wet and dry
etching. Wet etching is a simple method that requires a
container or bin with a solution that is meant to dissolve the
metal used.
The downside of this process is that it needs a mask to
selectively etch the plate, and one has to find a mask that will
not dissolve in the prepared solution. This process is fairly
suitable for etching on thin films.
Dry etching, is divided into three classes, namely, reactive ion
etching (RIE), sputter etching, and vapor phase etching. Several
gases are introduced in the RIE method, where plasma is mixed in
the gas to break gas molecules into ions. The ions are then
accelerated and start reacting to the metal surface.
Sputter etching is similar to RIE, but without the reactive
ions. Vapor phase method is the simplest dry etching technique.
In this method, the metal plate is placed inside a chamber,
where gases are introduced. The design is then dissolved at the
metal surface by the chemical reaction with the gas molecules.
The most popular vapor phase etching techniques are silicon
dioxide etching (uses hydrogen fluoride) and silicon etching
(uses xenon diflouride).