About The Met/ Collection Areas/ Drawings and Prints/ The Materials and Techniques of Drawings and Prints
Composite image showing a drawing of two young lovers by Peter Paul Rubens (left) and a print of an identical image by the same artist (right)

The Materials and Techniques of Drawings and Prints

Essential to understanding a work of art on paper is an appreciation of how it was made. Did the artist choose to draw in red chalk, gouache, or with pen and ink? Was their print created through woodcut, etching, or lithography? And how did those critical choices affect the final appearance of the work of art?

In every description of a work of art—in a book, on the wall labels of an exhibition, or on a website page—there is a field that identifies its medium; in other words, an explanation of the materials and techniques employed by the artist to produce the object. Understanding the process as well as the distinct qualities—and limitations—of specific materials illuminates and expands our understanding of the work of art.

This online feature outlines the most common techniques for making prints and drawings. Through the descriptions of each technique, as well as the animated images (GIFs) and illustrative works from The Met collection, you will be able to learn the ways these materials and processes are used to create works on paper. Today, artists still employ all of these techniques in much the same way they did hundreds of years ago.


How Is a Drawing Made?

Learn more about the materials used for drawing and the variety of ways artists employ them.

What Is Printmaking?

Learn more about this artistic process based on the principle of transferring images from a matrix onto another surface.


Marquee image: Peter Paul Rubens (Flemish, 1577–1640). The Garden of Love (left portion, detail), ca. 1633–35. Pen, brown ink, gray-green wash over traces of black chalk, touched with indigo, green, yellowish, and white paint on paper, 18 1/4 x 27 3/4 in. (46.3 x 70.5 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Fletcher Fund, 1958 (58.96.1). Christoffel Jegher (Flemish, 1596–1652/53), after Peter Paul Rubens (Flemish, 1577–1640). The Garden of Love (right block, detail), 1630s. Woodcut, sheet: 18 1/8 x 21 1/16 in. (46 x 53.5 cm). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Harris Brisbane Dick Fund, 1930 (30.53.17b)