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James Bama's Cheyenne Split Horn Headdress was created
by specialized print makers who use customized ink-jet
technology specifically for fine art. This technique
is also called Iris printing, after the brand name
of a particular printer, or "giclée." Each second,
the ink-jet printer produces over four million droplets
of ink that combine to form more than two thousand
shades of color. Cheyenne Split Horn Headdress was
printed on the same archival watercolor paper that
Bama used for the original painting and must be treated
as carefully. Greenwich Workshop fine art ink-jet
prints are identified by the chop marks of the printer
and The Greenwich Workshop.
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