vertical_align_top
View:
Images:
S · M

Printing

This list has 26 sub-lists and 54 members. See also Graphic design, Publishing, Mass media technology, Chinese inventions
FLAG
      
favorite
Typography
Typography 15 L, 89 T
Printmaking
Printmaking 11 L, 68 T
Printers
Printers 10 L, 73 T
Textile printing
Textile printing 2 L, 4 T
Printing companies
Printing companies 5 L, 29 T
Typesetting
Typesetting 3 L, 18 T
Printing devices
Printing devices 4 L, 3 T
Page layout
Page layout 1 L, 2 T
Print production
Print production 2 L, 4 T
Stationery
Stationery 16 L, 33 T
  • William Friese-Greene
    William Friese-Greene British cinema pioneer
     0    0
    rank #1 ·
    William Friese-Greene (born William Edward Green, 7 September 1855 – 5 May 1921) was a prolific English inventor and professional photographer. He is principally known as a pioneer in the field of motion pictures, creating a series of cameras in the period 1888–1891 with which he shot moving pictures in London. He went on to patent an early two-colour filming process in 1905. His inventions in the field of printing – including photo-typesetting and a method of printing without ink – brought him wealth, as did his chain of photographic studios. However, he spent everything he earned on inventing, going bankrupt three times and being jailed once, before dying in poverty.
  • Tabloid (newspaper format)
    Tabloid (newspaper format) Type of newspaper format
     0    0
    rank #2 · 1 1
    A tabloid is a newspaper with a compact page size smaller than broadsheet. There is no standard size for this newspaper format.
  • Newspaper
    Newspaper Scheduled publication containing news of events, articles, features, editorials, and advertising
     0    0
    rank #3 ·
    A newspaper is a periodical publication containing written information about current events and is often typed in black ink with a white or gray background. Newspapers can cover a wide variety of fields such as politics, business, sports, art, and science. They often include materials such as opinion columns, weather forecasts, reviews of local services, obituaries, birth notices, crosswords, editorial cartoons, comic strips, and advice columns.
  • Adam Ramage
    Adam Ramage American printing press manufacturer and inventor
     0    0
    rank #4 ·
    Adam Ramage (1772—1850) was a printing press manufacturer and the originator of Ramage printing press, a "one-pull" printing press. He is noted for being one of the most important printing press makers and innovators of his day, and the primary press-builder in the United States during the beginning of the 19th century. Ramage was one of the first press makers to incorporate an iron printing bed into the apparatus. The advent of printing was the primary way information was passed on from town to town, colony to colony, state to state, and functioned as a news network during its early years.
  • Fine press branch of publishing
     0    0
    rank #5 ·
    In printing and publishing, the fine press are printers and publishers publishing books and other printed matter of exceptional intrinsic quality and artistic taste, including both commercial and private presses.
  • Coating
    Coating any adherent layer that covers a surface
     0    0
    rank #6 ·
    A coating is a covering that is applied to the surface of an object, or substrate. The purpose of applying the coating may be decorative, functional, or both. Coatings may be applied as liquids, gases or solids e.g. powder coatings.
  • Linotype machine
    Linotype machine printing machine used in hot type
     0    0
    rank #7 ·
    The Linotype machine (LYNE-ə-type) is a "line casting" machine used in printing which is manufactured and sold by the former Mergenthaler Linotype Company and related companies. It was a hot metal typesetting system that cast lines of metal type for one-time use. Linotype became one of the mainstays for typesetting, especially small-size body text, for newspapers, magazines, and posters from the late 19th century to the 1970s and 1980s, when it was largely replaced by phototypesetting and digital typesetting. The name of the machine comes from producing an entire line of metal type at once, hence a line-o'-type. It was a significant improvement over the previous industry standard of letter-by-letter manual typesetting using a composing stick and shallow subdivided trays, called "cases".
  • Book size
    Book size size of a book, manuscript, or sheet of paper resulting from folding standard sheets into multiple pages
     0    0
    rank #8 ·
    The size of a book is generally measured by the height against the width of a leaf, or sometimes the height and width of its cover. A series of terms is commonly used by libraries and publishers for the general sizes of modern books, ranging from folio (the largest), to quarto (smaller) and octavo (still smaller). Historically, these terms referred to the format of the book, a technical term used by printers and bibliographers to indicate the size of a leaf in terms of the size of the original sheet. For example, a quarto (from Latin quartō, ablative form of quartus, fourth) historically was a book printed on sheets of paper folded in half twice, with the first fold at right angles to the second, to produce 4 leaves (or 8 pages), each leaf one fourth the size of the original sheet printed – note that a leaf refers to the single piece of paper, whereas a page is one side of a leaf. Because the actual format of many modern books cannot be determined from examination of the books, bibliographers may not use these terms in scholarly descriptions.
  • Printer (publishing)
    Printer (publishing) company for printed products
     0    0
    rank #9 ·
    In publishing, printers are both companies providing printing services and individuals who directly operate printing presses.
  • Intaglio (printmaking)
    Intaglio (printmaking) Family of printing and printmaking techniques
     0    0
    rank #10 ·
    Intaglio (in-TAL-ee-oh, -⁠TAH-lee-) is the family of printing and printmaking techniques in which the image is incised into a surface and the incised line or sunken area holds the ink. It is the direct opposite of a relief print where the parts of the matrix that make the image stand above the main surface.
Desktop | Mobile
This website is part of the FamousFix entertainment community. By continuing past this page, and by your continued use of this site, you agree to be bound by and abide by the Terms of Use. Loaded in 0.56 secs.
Terms of Use  |  Copyright  |  Privacy
Copyright 2006-2025, FamousFix