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  2. Gestetner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gestetner

    The Gestetner Cyclograph was a stencil-method duplicator that used a thin sheet of paper coated with wax (originally kite paper was used), which was written upon with a special stylus that left a broken line through the stencil, removing the paper's wax coating. Ink was forced through the stencil (originally by an ink roller), and it left its ...

  3. David Gestetner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Gestetner

    The stencil copy method meant that only one copy had to be read, as all copies were mechanically identical. David Gestetner eventually moved to London , England and in 1881 established the Gestetner Cyclograph Company to produce stencils, styli and ink rollers.

  4. Cyclostyle (copier) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyclostyle_(copier)

    The Cyclostyle duplicating process is a form of stencil copying. A stencil is cut on wax or glazed paper by using a pen-like object with a small rowel or spur-wheel on its tip. A large number of small short lines are cut out in the glazed paper, removing the glaze with the spur-wheel, then ink is applied.

  5. Duplicating machines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duplicating_machines

    It was claimed that a roller copier could make a half dozen copies of a typewritten letter if the letter was run through the copier several times. It could make a dozen copies if the letter was written with a pen and good copying ink. The Process Letter Machine Co. of Muncie, Indiana, offered the New Rotary Copying Press, a loose-leaf copier ...

  6. Mimeograph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mimeograph

    The stencil material consists of a very thin polymer film laminated to a long-fiber non-woven tissue. It makes the stencils and mounts and unmounts them from the print drum automatically, making it almost as easy to operate as a photocopier. The Risograph is the best known of these machines. [citation needed]

  7. List of duplicating processes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_duplicating_processes

    Stencil-based copying methods Papyrography; Electric pen, invented by Thomas Edison; Trypograph (also file plate process) Cyclostyle, Neostyle; Stencil-based machines Mimeograph (also Roneo, Gestetner) Digital Duplicators (also called CopyPrinters, e.g., Riso and Gestetner) Typewriter-based copying methods Carbon paper; Blueprint typewriter ribbon