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Ink
Ink (or Inkwell) is also a handwriting recognition technology built
into Apple Computer's Mac OS X since Mac OS X v10.2. Ink can refer
to a TV series starring Ted Danson.
An ink is a liquid containing various pigments and/or dyes used
for colouring a surface to render an image or text. Common perceptions
consider ink for use in drawing or writing with a pen or brush.
However, inks are used most extensively in printing.
Inkpots with penholder
Types of ink
Early varieties of ink include Indian ink, various natural dyes
made from metals, the husk or outer covering of nuts or seeds, and
sea creatures like the squid (known as sepia ). India ink is black
and originated in Asia. Walnut ink and iron-gall nut ink were made
and used by many of the early masters to obtain the golden brown
ink used for drawing.
Pigmented inks
Pigmented inks contain other agents that ensure adhesion of the
pigment to the surface and prevent it from being removed by mechanical
abrasion. These materials are typically referred to as resins (in
solvent-based inks) or binding agents (in water-based inks).
Pigmented inks are advantageous when printing on paper because
the pigment stays on the surface of the paper. This is desirable
because more ink on the surface of the paper means less ink needs
to be used to create the same intensity of color.
Dyes in inks
Dyes, however, are generally much stronger and can produce more
color of a given density per unit of mass. However, because dyes
are dissolved in the liquid phase, they have a tendency to soak
into paper, thus making the ink less efficient and also potentially
allowing for the ink to bleed at the edges, producing poor quality
printing.
To circumvent this problem, dye-based inks are made with solvents
that dry rapidly or are used with quick-drying methods of printing,
such as blowing hot air on the fresh print. Other methods to resolve
this include harder paper sizing and more specialized paper coatings.
The latter is particularly suited to inks that are used in non-industrial
settings (and thus must conform to tighter toxicity and emission
controls), such as inkjet printer inks, include coating the paper
with a charged coating. If the dye has the opposite charge, then
it is attracted to and retained by this coating, while the solvent
soaks into the paper. Cellulose, the material that paper is made
of, is also naturally charged, and so a compound that complexes
with both the dye and the paper surface aids retention at the surface.
Such a compound in common use in ink-jet printing inks is polyvinyl
pyrrolidone.
An additional advantage of dye-based ink systems is that the dye
molecules interact chemically with other ink ingredients. This means
that they can benefit more than pigmented ink from optical brighteners
and colour-enhancing agents designed to increase the intensity and
appearance of dyes. Because dyes get their colour from the interaction
of electrons in their molecules, the way in which the electrons
can move is determined by the charge and extent of electron delocalisation
in the other ink ingredients. The colour emerges as a function of
the light energy that falls on the dye. Thus, if an optical brightener
or colour enhancer absorbs light energy and emits it through or
with the dye, the appearance changes, as the spectrum of light re-emitted
to the observer changes.
A disadvantage of dye-based inks is that they can be more susceptible
to fading, especially when exposed to ultraviolet radiation as in
sunlight.
The paintings are the excellent portrayal of the events and scenes
that we see around us. The painters are the best cameras of the
world. They reproduce many different types of pictures. They even
draw imaginary pictures that do not exist in this world. We tend
to use both thinned oil paints and dense oil paints. Masterpieces
can be dyed more than once, but each time it may be different from
the existing paintings.
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