When.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: origin of omg letter copy paper printing

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Logographic printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logographic_printing

    Logographic printing is a form of moveable type printing where the font comprises words or parts of words rather than single letters.. The system, whilst not widely adopted, was used to produce a number of books in the eighteenth century, as well as The Times or The Daily Universal Register as it was originally known.

  3. Letterpress printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letterpress_printing

    The general form of letterpress printing with a platen press shows the relationship between the forme (the type), the pressure, the ink, and the paper. Letterpress printing is a technique of relief printing for producing many copies by repeated direct impression of an inked, raised surface against individual sheets of paper or a continuous roll ...

  4. History of printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_printing

    The history of printing starts as early as 3000 BCE, when the proto-Elamite and Sumerian civilizations used cylinder seals to certify documents written in clay tablets. Other early forms include block seals, hammered coinage, pottery imprints, and cloth printing.

  5. Wood type - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_type

    Wooden movable types in the China Printing Museum, Beijing. Both in China and Europe, printing from a woodblock preceded printing with movable type. [12]Along with clay movable type, wooden movable type was invented in China by Bi Sheng in 1040s CE/AD, although he found clay type more satisfactory, and it was first formally used to print by Wang Zhen.

  6. List of duplicating processes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_duplicating_processes

    Carbon paper; Blueprint typewriter ribbon; Carbonless copy paper; Photographic processes: Reflex copying process (also reflectography, reflexion copying) Breyertype, Playertype, Manul Process, Typon Process, Dexigraph, Linagraph; Daguerreotype; Salt print; Calotype (the first photo process to use a negative, from which multiple prints could be ...

  7. Duplicating machines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duplicating_machines

    A copying clerk would begin by counting the number of master letters to be written during the next few hours and by preparing the copying book. Suppose the clerk wanted to copy 20 one-page letters. In that case, he would insert a sheet of oiled paper into the copying book in front of the first tissue on which he wanted to make a copy of a letter.

  8. History of Western typography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Western_typography

    The scribal letter known as textur or textualis, produced by the strong gothic spirit of blackletter from the hands of German area scribes, served as the model for the first text types. Johannes Gutenberg , around 1450, invented a lead type mold, applied it to an alphabet of about 24 characters, and used known press technology to print ink on ...

  9. Stereotype (printing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereotype_(printing)

    A stereotype mold ("flong") being made Stereotype casting room of the Seattle Daily Times, c. 1900. In printing, a stereotype, [note 1] stereoplate or simply a stereo, is a solid plate of type metal, cast from a papier-mâché or plaster mould taken from the surface of a forme of type.