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A panel (alternatively known as frame or box) [6] is one drawing on a page, [7] and contains a segment of action. A page may have one or many panels, and panels are frequently, but not always, [6] surrounded by a border or outline, [8] whose shape can be altered to indicate emotion, tension or flashback sequences. [9]
The design of each individual page, on the other hand, is governed by the canons of page construction. The possible layout of the sets of letters of the alphabet, or words, on a page is determined by the so-called print space, and is also an element in the design of the page of the book.
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Tape library. a storage device which contains tape drives, slots to hold tape cartridges, a barcode reader to identify tape cartridges and an automated method for physically moving tapes within the device. These devices can store immense amounts of data. Trusted paper key. a machine-readable print of a cryptographic key. Virtual Tape Library (VTL)
Once a page was complete, the board would be attached to an easel and photographed in order to create a negative, which was then used to make a printing plate. Paste up was preceded by hot type and cold type technologies. Starting in the 1990s, many newspapers started doing away with paste up, switching to desktop publishing software that ...
A carpet page from the Lindisfarne Gospels. A carpet page is a full page in an illuminated manuscript containing intricate, non-figurative, patterned designs. [1] They are a characteristic feature of Insular manuscripts, and typically placed at the beginning of a Gospel Book. Carpet pages are characterised by mainly geometrical ornamentation ...
Facsimile, a copy or reproduction that is as true to the original source as possible; Replica, a copy closely resembling the original concerning its shape and appearance; Term of art in U.S. copyright law meaning a material object in which a work of authorship has been embodied, such as a book; Copy (command), a shell command on DOS and Windows ...
Two different ways of marking cut-out records on LP jackets. When LPs were the primary medium for the commercial distribution of sound recordings, manufacturers would cut the corner, punch a hole, or add a notch to the spine of the jacket of unsold records returned from retailers; these "cut-outs" might then be re-sold to record retailers or other sales outlets for sale at a discounted price.