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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a print called" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a specific print or artwork by its name or title.
Example: "I recently acquired a print called 'Starry Night' that beautifully captures the night sky."
Alternatives: "a print titled" or "a print named".
Exact(7)
In 1557 Bruegel engraved a print called Big Fish Eat Little Ones.
Kuo's project, a print called "Reasons to Move to L.A.," provides metric visualizations of the relative merits of living in New York versus moving to Los Angeles.
But a print, called "La Femme qui Pleure," from 1938, was snapped up by a telephone bidder for $4.7 million or $5.1 million with fees, nearly twice its high $2.5 million estimate.
That's fine for viewing on your computer screen; but if you try to print such a picture or, heaven forbid, enlarge it, you wind up with a print called "Portrait of a Person as Viewed Through the Textured Glass of a Dentist's Office Door".
Little did Rick Rush know when he decided to paint Tiger Woods for a print called "The Masters of Augusta" that he would set into motion a major lawsuit involving the estates of some of the most prominent sports and entertainment figures in American popular culture: Frank Sinatra, Elvis Presley, Jimi Hendrix, Gene Autry and the legendary golfer Bobby Jones, all weighing in from the great beyond.
Utamaro placed the three beauties in the same composition three or four years later in a print called Three Beauties.
Similar(52)
Most of them are abstract: there's a David Bomberg print called Ju-Jitsu and an old, psychedelic Mark Rothko image that looks like some sort of memory of a home planet.
The edited camera negative is combined with the synchronized sound track negative into a composite print called the answer print.
One piece by Mr. Ritchie, a relief print called "Sea State One," kept Susan Granat Weil company during her recent four-week stay at the hospital, which conducts a variety of medical research projects.
One day he saw an old print called "An Englishman Tastes the Sweat of an African", which showed a slave-trader licking a slave.
This year, there was even a Pucci-esque print called Fantesticle, featuring a monstrous Alan with beast-headed genitals.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com