State of Relief Printing
A Field Report, 2026
By the Gouge Editorial Collective · 2,400 words · 11 min read
omething shifted in the studio around 2022. The printmakers who had spent decades arguing the virtues of oil-based inks — their richness, their slow open time, the way they sit on the block before transferring — began quietly switching. Not all at once, and rarely without ceremony. But the data doesn't lie: water-based formulations now account for 63% of ink purchases among active relief printmakers globally.
The reasons are practical and philosophical in equal measure. Cleanup without solvents. Drying times compatible with an apartment studio. Pigment densities that have finally caught up to their oil-based counterparts. But beneath these justifications runs a deeper current: printmaking is being claimed by a new generation of makers who learned on kitchen tables, not in MFA print labs.
"The block doesn't care where you learned to carve it. What matters is whether you can feel the resistance give way at exactly the right moment."
— Kenji Watanabe, Master Woodblock Printer, Kyoto
Tool preferences tell a parallel story. The V-gouge — long considered a beginner's tool, too direct, too obvious — now outsells the U-gouge two to one among practitioners with fewer than three years of experience. This isn't a regression. It's a rediscovery. The V-gouge produces the kind of stark, high-contrast line that photographs well on Instagram, translates cleanly to small-edition runs, and rewards the kind of decisive carving that comes from working quickly between jobs and school pickups.
The Japanese Woodblock Revival
For the third consecutive year, searches for "mokuhanga" — the Japanese water-based woodblock technique — have outpaced every other printmaking term in English-language queries. The method demands patience: multiple blocks, careful registration, pigments mixed with rice paste. It is, in almost every way, the opposite of the spontaneous garage-studio linocut. And yet the same hands that pull quick lino editions on Saturday mornings are ordering Japanese water stones and sharpening their chisels to mokuhanga tolerances.
What unites these seemingly contradictory tendencies — the quick V-gouge linocut and the meditative multi-block woodblock — is an appetite for mastery that formal art education has largely stopped providing. The printmaker of 2026 is self-directed, community-taught, and hungry for exactly the kind of technical depth that trade publications and online forums have only recently begun to supply.
Editorial Assessment
The survey above describes the field.
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Five questions. Two minutes. One printmaker profile — drawn from the data above — that tells you which archetype you are, where your practice is heading, and what to read next.
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Five questions drawn from the State of Relief Printing survey.
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The Traditionalist
Keeper of the old ways
The Experimentalist
Failure is data
The Editioner
The market table awaits
The Storyteller
Every mark carries meaning