Spokane Print Fest returns for its fifth run, introducing an array of printmaking processes and artists to the community

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CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: Koichi Yamamoto’s Gani, Mary Farrell’s Random Thoughts and Sean Caufield’s Ascent featured in the Transmutations exhibition during Spokane Print Fest.

Since humans started figuring out how to make marks on semi-permanent surfaces and, eventually, how to duplicate those ideas with new processes and tools, printing has evolved into a diverse and universal means of communication. Printing lets us learn, entertain, connect and even demand change.

However, now that modern technology makes it all as easy as clicking a button, many early printing techniques —

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