Giclée (pronounced zhee-clay) is the French word for spray. Using digital technology, some of Edna Hibel’s most endearing and popular images are transferred onto various surfaces, such as archival-quality canvas or paper, by the spraying of very fine droplets of ink.
The fidelity of color and line on this kind of image is many times finer than what can be created by offset lithography. In fact, the results can be easily confused with an oil painting on canvas. Giclees are framed without glass and look just like paintings.