It also allows direct PC-less printing and has a preview screen with software which allows you to remove red-eye. |
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He was skilled in the art of a number of different printing techniques such as woodcuts, lithographs and mezzotints. |
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Now the book is in its third printing and I just threw away 1,900 rejection slips I received denying my request to publish this book. |
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Print publishing remains a very slow process with a great deal of time dedicated to copyright transfers, layout, typesetting, and printing. |
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The final feed would end up in the production department, where the text would be laid out and made ready for actual printing. |
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Entitlements range from parliamentary salaries down to a variety of allowances like the printing allowance. |
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There was a time, long ago that printers had ribbons and used dot matrix printing to create tiny dots that, when looked at, were readable. |
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As part of her earlier experimentation, she started printing on newsprint and borrowed the format of newspaper layout for her work. |
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The art of xylography consists of sample writing, carving, printing and binding, all done by hand, Xu said. |
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The same basic printing process is used in both xerographic copiers and laser or LED printers. |
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Vitally, this interval permitted the whole paper to be proofed before printing. |
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Standard printing res is 600x600 dpi and this goes up to 1,200x600 with Windows. |
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Going local means printing multiple editions with separate pages for different districts or regions. |
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The first edition of the album sleeve was done by letterpress, an old and rather inefficient means of printing. |
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A few students reported printing the images and using them instead of the computer assisted aids. |
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The type is then cleaned, distributed to the printing case, and ready for reuse. |
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Paper and board are recycled to produce packaging materials, tissue, toilet paper, printing paper, and writing paper. |
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Similar to mezzotint, aquatint is a technique to produce prints with the effect of printing rather whole areas than just lines. |
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I confess I reverted to form and consumed nearly a ream of paper printing out the contents of the Websites I visited. |
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Online journal developers are well advised to take printing format and readability of printouts into consideration. |
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On the contrary, we know that the pattern of ink markings on the page you are reading was impressed on the ink by the printing device. |
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This extends from the digital dot of the printing process to the larger scale of the repeating pattern, the panel, and the facade openings. |
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The longer the process lasts, the faster the printing presses have to run in an effort to maintain stability. |
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The language of the book is simple and straight and its fine printing makes it all the more easy to complete reading the book in 24 hours flat! |
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The investigation made finds that the Aldine printing used a set of exact ratios. |
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She studied Graphic Art in Munich and during a three year-stay in California continued work-study in aquarelle, printing and ceramics. |
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We need money to pay for layout and printing and some basic administration. |
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Instead, Congress cranked up the printing press and called on the states to levy taxes to retire the bills. |
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The printing process is not a core competency of ours, so we needed experts to rationalise the process fully. |
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Before that, he had worked as a volunteer in youth clubs, while employed as a printing and advertising manager. |
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To print a hardcopy of your map, there is ArcPress for ArcGIS, a print rasterizer for fast and high-quality printing and exporting. |
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His native area seems determined to detain foreign tourists by printing road signs in Irish only. |
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Since then the printing industry has gone through enormous technological advancements. |
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For example, a manuscript copied after the advent of printing is likely to be of little use in textual criticism. |
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Nazaruddin said the KPU would offer incentives to encourage the remaining printing firms to improve their performance. |
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They also liked being able to preview jobs before printing, to establish corporate accounts, and above all, to get their orders quickly. |
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Election officials complain of paper jams, maintenance problems at the polling places, and high costs of printing and ballot management. |
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Prudie is printing your letter as representative of the tons of suggestions that came in about how to close down talky seatmates on planes. |
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Liberty, a firm based in the United Kingdom, has begun printing on fine wale lightweight corduroy, noted Ed Harding, the firm's U.S. agent. |
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Before Japan's forced opening, the only printing method for text and images known and used in the country, was the technique of woodblocks. |
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I sometimes had to resort to printing out stories from the online edition of my local paper to appease her. |
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The Japanese government established a governmental printing department and lithography was used by the Japanese army. |
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The woodblock printing technique came from China to Japan several hundred years ago. |
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As of this printing, he has been nominated for promotion to lieutenant general and the position of Army Surgeon General. |
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The use of woodblocks for printing text and images was probably invented in China. |
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The actual process of printing by offset lithography is not new, but has been hugely refined in terms of quality and speed. |
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The materiality of the paint and the sticky pull and release of the printing process showed a rough and ready formalism at work. |
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Due to the sheer annoyingness of printing these things, the comic is only available very rarely, and in print runs of only 16 at a time. |
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My assignments never looked so good and when I wasn't printing, I'd put the ribbon in the fridge to make it last longer. |
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Gutenberg combined the wine press and the coin punch to create moveable type and the printing press. |
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In 1452, Gutenberg made the first printing press from an old wine press, moveable type and oil based ink. |
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Part of its litho printing equipment has been moved up to York to extend the company's head office litho printing facility. |
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I thought we had a good system that couldn't be beaten but we had to rejig the company away from stationery and into bespoke printing services. |
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An example she used was an online service that specialized in printing and designing birth announcements. |
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We regret the bad quality of the Weekender this week, which was not due to poor layout or proofing, but an error at the printing press. |
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The printing press didn't abolish war, but it did create a literate population that was able to educate itself. |
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Woodcut illustration was well suited to the printed book, since woodblocks and type both require relief printing and can thus be printed simultaneously. |
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The book is already in its second printing, and a third printing is scheduled for later this year. |
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For as much as Walter was a maniac, he was at the forefront of printing art. |
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Even food and beverage companies are utilizing 3D printing to help engineer new products. |
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Large-character printing products provide superior bar-code resolution on cartons and shipping containers, as well as logos, graphies and alphanumeric images. |
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Helnwein's paintings, however, are based on his photographs, which he transfers onto canvas using an airbrush, inkjet printing or, at times, traditional paintbrushes. |
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In this we were limited only by the time and effort we wished to expend, rather than such logistical publishing considerations as page layout and total printing costs. |
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Consumers are also gaining the ability to take the designs into their own hands as 3D printing becomes more accessible. |
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A micrometer-thick coating of steam-jet-cooked starch is just the thing to improve plastic films' retention of the water-based dyes and printing inks used on food labels. |
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Divers rummaging here have found bottles of cold cream, canisters of celluloid photographic film, silver salt cellars, printing stamps, shaving kits, and lead soldiers. |
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Up close the color, added by hand after printing, is soft and dappled, and the paper is slightly raised like a new mosquito bite. |
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Throughout the 1990s, advances in chemistry led the materials solidify more quickly, thus making 3D printing more useful. |
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Try water colours, acrylic paints, pastels and coloured paper, coloured modelling clay, ordinary air-drying clay, origami paper, rubber printing stamps and gel pens. |
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Thanks to the digitization of entertainment goods and the advent of 3-D printing, a host of new applications are possible. |
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The Workspace includes several electric pottery wheels, electric kilns, a screen printing press, complete woodworking shop, photography lab and a mat cutter. |
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This would contain biometric features such as finger printing and once the person had this permit they could leave and re-enter the State without reapplying for a visa. |
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The entire process of preplanning and printing the hand, brackets, and cuffs takes just over a day. |
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What with Henretta's rips and the glitches in her printing, something seems wrong in our brave new world. |
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About 380,000 reams of paper were used for printing the rolls. |
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But getting really good color and consistent quality is a black art nearly or literally exceeding that of CMYK process on paper or other flatstocks with offset litho printing. |
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So much so that nowadays any deficiency in colour reproduction is far more likely to be a consequence of faulty photography than of careless printing. |
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She was printing on big sheets of aluminum in the spirit of Mexican retablos, and I wrote some poems for the images, and had them translated so they could appear bilingually. |
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As the printing press whirred into action for the first edition of the all-new format yesterday, reporter NADIA JEFFERSON-BROWN was on hand to chart the events. |
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The paper was too damp, or the ink too sticky, or the gods too angry or something, and it stuck solidly to the acetate that I was printing it from. |
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Using standard methods, the cost of printing DNA could run upwards of a billion dollars or more, depending on the strand. |
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We connected to the laser printer on the local network and printed the tax return to ensure that the entire process, from creation to printing, worked as expected. |
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With the Meiji period, Western lithographic or photo-mechanical printing techniques gradually replaced the old way of printing by carving woodblocks. |
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Sometimes printing instead of cursive writing can improve readability. |
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Some 1,400 printing workers at the State Printing Corporation of Sri Lanka went on strike on August 27 to demand reinstatement of a company storekeeper. |
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This business of spinning into outer space is just so juvenile and naive that one has to wonder why these booklets didn't burst into flames on the printing press. |
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With a pre-assigned code, you can send documents to a queue, then access them for printing at any time, such as at hotel and airport business centers. |
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Unlike the Pappenheim version, the 1913 printing had a fine introduction, notes and index, albeit abridged and reworked under the editorship of Alfred Feilchenfeld. |
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In 1978, for instance, Hockney was introduced to a new printing method by the famed printer Ken Tyler. |
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He adapted a wine press to make the first movable type printing press. |
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In offset lithography, a printing process commonly used for mass production, the image is taken from the plate by a rubber roller that then transfers the image to the paper. |
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The routine, workaday books that keep rolling off printing machines and that one lives and works with today share very little of that quality, or that sensibility. |
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In the mid-1870s, a French missionary and a Chinese priest went to France and brought advanced lithographic printing to Shanghai, setting up China's first lithographic press. |
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There were many notable innovations during the Tang, including the development of woodblock printing. |
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Woodblock printing made the written word available to vastly greater audiences. |
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The first use of the playing card during the Tang dynasty was an auxiliary invention of the new age of printing. |
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Media in Sierra Leone began with the introduction of the first printing press in Africa at the start of the 19th century. |
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This industry, coming just before the dawn of printing, contributed enormously to the sudden expansion of the intellectual horizon. |
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During the 13th century, Ghanaians developed their unique art of adinkra printing. |
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The rapid dissemination of Columbus's letter was enabled by the printing press, a new invention that had established itself only recently. |
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This suggests that the printing of the Columbus letter, if not directly undertaken by royal command, probably had royal knowledge and approval. |
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Thus, Columbus's letter serves as an early example of the harnessing of the new printing press by the State for propaganda purposes. |
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This work was an attempt to enliven Donatus' Ars Minor by printing up illustrated card sets for each grammatical rule. |
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In addition, French missionaries engaged in education and medicine and brought the first printing press into the country. |
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Other products produced include metals, processed foods, beverages, printing and publishing, textiles and machinery. |
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By Ivan's order in 1553 the Moscow Print Yard was established and the first printing press was introduced to Russia. |
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Nevertheless, printing of books resumed from 1568 onwards, with Andronik Timofeevich Nevezha and his son Ivan now heading the Print Yard. |
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The availability of the printing press provided the means for the rapid dissemination of religious materials in the vernacular. |
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The newly invented German printing press spread rapidly throughout Europe in the 15th century, and Venice was quick to adopt it. |
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Typically used for texts, the invention and spread of the printing press was one of the most influential events in the second millennium. |
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The printing press was invented in the Holy Roman Empire by the German Johannes Gutenberg around 1440, based on existing screw presses. |
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The printing press spread within several decades to over two hundred cities in a dozen European countries. |
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By 1500, printing presses in operation throughout Western Europe had already produced more than twenty million volumes. |
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The device was also used from very early on in urban contexts as a cloth press for printing patterns. |
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Gutenberg adopted the basic design, thereby mechanizing the printing process. |
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To speed up the printing process, he introduced a movable undertable with a plane surface on which the sheets could be swiftly changed. |
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Gutenberg greatly improved the process by treating typesetting and printing as two separate work steps. |
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Another factor conducive to printing arose from the book existing in the format of the codex, which had originated in the Roman period. |
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The invention of mechanical movable type printing led to a huge increase of printing activities across Europe within only a few decades. |
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European printing presses of around 1600 were capable of producing about 1,500 impressions per workday. |
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By comparison, book printing in East Asia, did not use presses and was solely done by block printing. |
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In the early days of the Reformation, the revolutionary potential of bulk printing took princes and papacy alike by surprise. |
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For many works prior to the printing press, the name of the author has been entirely lost. |
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Certainly, modern developments in printing have revitalized the role of illustrations. |
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Nonetheless, the limitations inherent to the traditional method of printing became obvious. |
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In East Asia, both woodblock and movable type printing were manual reproduction techniques, that is hand printing. |
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The printing press was introduced to England in the 1470s by William Caxton and later Richard Pynson. |
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The adoption and use of the printing press accelerated the process of standardization of English spelling, which continued into the 16th century. |
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In older printed editions of Old English works, an acute accent mark was used to maintain cohesion between Old English and Old Norse printing. |
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He is thought to be the first person to introduce a printing press into England, in 1476, and was the first English retailer of printed books. |
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Hamlen of New Haven, Connecticut, prepared the 1841 printing of the second edition. |
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It remained standard in western writing throughout the medieval period and was adopted in early printing with movable types. |
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These terms originated from the common layouts of the shallow drawers called type cases used to hold the movable type for letterpress printing. |
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The use of punctuation was not standardised until after the invention of printing. |
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Printing arrived in London in 1476, but the first printing press was not introduced to Scotland for another 30 years. |
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Luther made effective use of Johannes Gutenberg's printing press to spread his views. |
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The printing press restored Bracton to prominence in English legal literature. |
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Bracton was popular in the time of Elizabeth because he was available through the printing press. |
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Woodblock printing, still used in India and elsewhere today, is the oldest of these dating back to at least 220 CE in China. |
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In 1800, Matthias Koops, working in London, investigated the idea of using wood to make paper, and began his printing business a year later. |
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Besides the fibres, pulps may contain fillers such as chalk or china clay, which improve its characteristics for printing or writing. |
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The paper is then fed onto reels if it is to be used on web printing presses, or cut into sheets for other printing processes or other purposes. |
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Also, synthetics such as Tyvek and Teslin have been introduced as printing media as a more durable material than paper. |
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The Didot company of France was ultimately incorporated into the modern CPI printing group. |
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In 1825 he took his printing plant to Brussels and founded the Royal Printing House. |
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Letterpress is a method of printing many identical copies that requires characters being impressed upon the page. |
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Typing with a typewriter is obsolescent, having been largely superseded by preparing a document with a word processor and printing. |
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The process involves printing the desired designs or text with an ink that remains wet, rather than drying on contact with the paper. |
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Embossing is a printing technique used to create raised surfaces in the converted paper stock. |
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Woodblock printing is a technique for printing text, images or patterns that was used widely throughout East Asia. |
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It originated in China in antiquity as a method of printing on textiles and later on paper. |
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Block printing, called tarsh in Arabic, developed in Arabic Egypt during the ninth and tenth centuries, mostly for prayers and amulets. |
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Movable type is the system of printing and typography using movable pieces of metal type, made by casting from matrices struck by letterpunches. |
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Movable type allowed for much more flexible processes than hand copying or block printing. |
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Copper movable type printing originated in China at the beginning of the 12th century. |
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Around 1450, Johannes Gutenberg introduced the first movable type printing system in Europe. |
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Compared to woodblock printing, movable type page setting and printing using a press was faster and more durable. |
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The printing press rapidly spread across Europe, leading up to the Renaissance, and later all around the world. |
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Gutenberg's innovations in movable type printing have been called the most important invention of the second millennium. |
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More recently, letterpress printing has seen a revival in an artisanal form. |
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It is also used for printing postage stamps and decorative plastic laminates, such as kitchen worktops. |
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In 1515, Sultan Selim I issued a decree under which the practice of printing would be punishable by death. |
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It was thought that the introduction of the printing medium 'would strengthen religion and enhance the power of monarchs. |
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The invention of printing also changed the occupational structure of European cities. |
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Before the invention of the printing press, most written material was in Latin. |
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However, after the invention of printing the number of books printed expanded as well as the vernacular. |
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Printed electronics is the manufacturing of electronic devices using standard printing processes. |
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During the Renaissance, the creation of printing allowed a wider diffusion of encyclopedias and every scholar could have his or her own copy. |
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The botanical work, The Ferns of Great Britain and Ireland, is a notable example of this type of nature printing. |
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After William Caxton introduced the printing press in England in 1476, vernacular literature flourished. |
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The success of the forgery was partially due to the difficulty in finding Bertram's original text, which had a limited printing in Copenhagen. |
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Manufacturing diversified by 1914 to printing, engineering, chemicals and clothing manufacture. |
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The printing works on Station Road has now been converted into residential flats. |
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Whereas, before, our forefathers had no other books but the score and the tally, thou hast caused printing to be used. |
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There are many types of sealed systems, for example an audio speaker, a printing machine, a heating system, or a grain storage system. |
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Molds of these pages were dropped down chutes to the basement pressroom and used to cast semicylindrical printing plates. |
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We should make the printing direction sticky so the user doesn't have to keep setting it. |
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The most important factors are definitely the consistency and quality of the photoactive and aluminium oxide layers of the printing plates. |
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Staying on the artsy side of things, as of Thursday the house will be offering free arts sculpture, printing, engraving and monotype workshop. |
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Also, the company recently started printing local bank cheques after being approved by the Kenya Bankers Association. |
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Financial institutions continue to spend millions of dollars annually on the printing and postage of periodic, paper-based account statements. |
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A wayzgoose is a centuries-old festive day for those who practice the black art of printing, Tilcock says. |
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This helps add detail to new presets for alternative photographic processes like cyanotype, lith printing, and wet plate photography. |
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It is also designed for optimal printability and toner keying with all xerographic printing processes. |
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With the advent of computer printing and xerographic technologies, art as a medium for protest is available to anyone. |
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We have a policy against printing vulgarities in our magazine. |
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Almost every printing that includes the second preface also includes the first. |
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The purchase requests for the day were stored in a queue and batched for printing the next morning. |
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He and Mr. Goldie have managed to beat the clock, finishing and printing the book themselves while Mr. Murray is still alive. |
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For general duty color printing, inkjet and bubblejets are the most cost-beneficial. |
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This is especially true in distributed printing environments, where a fleet of printers is shared by users on a network. |
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On Team Valley are De La Rue, with their largest banknote printing facility, and Myson Radiators, the second largest in the UK market. |
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Mr. Brett does not follow the examples set by White and Tudor and Smith of printing his leading cases in extenso. |
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The rediscovery of ancient texts and the invention of printing democratized learning and allowed a faster propagation of ideas. |
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The development of printing made distribution of music possible on a wide scale. |
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The invention of the printing press by German printer Johannes Gutenberg allowed the rapid transmission of these new ideas. |
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In the 17th century printing became widespread, and woodcuts became especially popular. |
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That led to the development of a special form of folk art known as lubok printing, which persisted in Russia well into the 19th century. |
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Moreover, printing, which had become widespread at the end of the previous century, meant that vernacular Bibles could be produced in quantity. |
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The first printing used a black letter typeface instead of a roman typeface, which itself made a political and a religious statement. |
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In the first printing, the device of having different type faces to show supplied words was used sparsely and inconsistently. |
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The differences may stem from copying or printing errors, from notes by actors or audience members, or from Shakespeare's own papers. |
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In 1763 Edinburgh had six printing houses, three paper mills, and by 1783 there were 16 printing houses and 12 paper mills. |
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Elsewhere in the city, the John Rylands Library holds an extensive collection of early printing. |
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Birmingham's role as a manufacturing and printing centre has supported strong local traditions of graphic design and product design. |
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With the introduction of the printing press, spellings became standardised. |
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Second, new machines, especially the rotary press, allowed the printing of tens of thousands of copies a day at a low cost. |
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Especially consider kerning if you are printing on a relatively high-resolution printer, such as a 600-dpi laser printer. |
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Polestar, at Tinsley off the A631 next to the M1, claim to have the most advanced gravure printing plant in Europe. |
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At the same time the CGPM formally adopted a recommendation for the writing and printing of unit symbols and of numbers. |
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The motors ran at up to 600 revolutions per minute, and powered machine tools and a printing press. |
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Changes in alphabet and spelling were heavily influenced by the advent of printing and continental printing practices. |
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This procedure ensures low costs for storage and reduces the likelihood of printing more books than will be sold. |
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The remaining books often travel from the printing facility via sea freight. |
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Although newspaper and magazine companies still often own printing presses and binderies, book publishers rarely do. |
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Other industries include printing, the production of mosaics, and the manufacture of staff uniforms. |
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The Reformation was a triumph of literacy and the new printing press invented by Johannes Gutenberg. |
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In Bayard's nonreading utopia the printing press would never have been invented, let alone penicillin or the MacBook. |
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By 1515, Hans and Ambrosius had moved as journeymen painters to the city of Basel, a centre of learning and the printing trade. |
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Caxton is credited with printing as many as 108 books, 87 of which were different titles. |
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Shakespeare's plays, in particular, had multiple editions, each of which contained errors caused by the printing process. |
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The process is also referred to as illuminated printing, and the finished products as illuminated books or prints. |
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Moreover, printing costs were very high in 1950s Britain, requiring The Lord of the Rings to be published in three volumes. |
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He and William Byrd were the only ones allowed to use the paper that was used in printing music. |
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The spread of printing affected the transmission of literature across Britain and Ireland. |
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In 1848, Fred Lillywhite used a portable printing press at grounds to print updated scorecards. |
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In 2008 the CIA discontinued printing the Factbook themselves, instead turning printing responsibilities over to the Government Printing Office. |
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In the 1790s a racecourse, printing press, bank and coffee house all opened, and Cardiff gained a stagecoach service to London. |
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The spread of Gutenberg's printing press provided the means for the rapid dissemination of religious materials in the vernacular. |
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Between 1520 and 1550, printing presses in Spain were tightly controlled, and any books of Protestant teaching were prohibited. |
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Meanwhile, News International had built and clandestinely equipped a new printing plant in the London district of Wapping. |
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This is because printing money has other effects that the government may see as more problematic than defaulting. |
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Song Dynasty China introduced the practice of printing paper money in order to create fiat currency. |
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With his second wife, he had four daughters who reached adulthood, but no male heirs to continue running the printing business. |
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Richardson did not devote all of his time just to working on his new novel, but was busy printing various works for other authors that he knew. |
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The invention of printing immediately created a new market of comparatively cheap entertainment and knowledge in the form of chapbooks. |
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Waugh maintained his reputation in 1942, with Put Out More Flags, which sold well despite wartime restrictions on paper and printing. |
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In 1796, Scott's friend James Ballantyne founded a printing press in Kelso, in the Scottish Borders. |
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In 1809 Scott persuaded James Ballantyne and his brother to move to Edinburgh and to establish their printing press there. |
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This provoked such a response that the Government was forced to relent and allow the Scottish banks to continue printing pound notes. |
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The list above deals with initial publications except where the name was changed in a subsequent edition or printing. |
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Marketing and printing services, including reminder letters and licence distribution, are carried out by Proximity London Ltd. |
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This led to a confrontation with the printing unions National Graphical Association and Society of Graphical and Allied Trades. |
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The Sun used the same printing presses, and the two papers were managed together at senior executive levels. |
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In November 2006 The Times began printing headlines in a new font, Times Modern. |
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Walter bought the logography's patent and to use it, he decided to open a printing house, where he would daily produce an advertising sheet. |
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On 6 June 2005, The Times redesigned its Letters page, dropping the practice of printing correspondents' full postal addresses. |
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Scotus's works were collected into many editions, particularly in the late fifteenth century with the advent of printing. |
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At that time all printing presses and publications were required to be licensed, and publishers were liable to the Court of High Commission. |
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Most of Part I was ready for printing in 1946, but Wittgenstein withdrew the manuscript from his publisher. |
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This period also saw a growth of a patriotic literature facilitated by the rise of popular printing. |
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Congress attempted to remedy this by printing vast amounts of paper money and bills of credit to raise revenue. |
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New technologies in printing and publishing allowed Art Nouveau to quickly reach a global audience. |
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The figures depicted are of Johannes Gutenberg and William Morris, both eminent in the field of printing. |
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It is countered by anticounterfeiting measures in the printing of banknotes. |
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Fighting the counterfeiting of banknotes and cheques has been a principal driver of security printing methods development in recent centuries. |
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Unlike most printing and writing paper, banknote paper is infused with polyvinyl alcohol or gelatin, instead of water, to give it extra strength. |
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This is particularly true for the most popular journals where the number of accepted articles often outnumbers the space for printing. |
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In May 1880, the company integrated editorial and printing in a former malthouse in Mill Street, Aberystwyth. |
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It was under his direction that, after 113 years, printing was contracted out. |
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Copper is used as the printing plate in etching, engraving and other forms of intaglio printmaking. |
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Manufacturing, printing, publishing and food processing also play major roles in the city's economy. |
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By the late 1990s technological developments had eliminated the need for vast areas for storing maps and for making printing plates by hand. |
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In addition, some designs such as Joanna were released to fine printing use long before they became widely available from Monotype. |
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The printing of Puffin stamps continues to this day and they are available at face value from the Lundy Post Office. |
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In contrast with printing, hand copying is an individual act by an individual copyist with ideas and a style of his own. |
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Other areas of interest for the Greeks in Egypt were foods, wine, soap, wood crafts, printing. |
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This can involve sophisticated analytical chemistry focused on finger printing an oil source based on the complex mixture of substances present. |
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Everything at the school, including the large printing presses, moved to the North where the boys quickly settled into their familiar routine. |
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With the development of the printing press, new ideas spread throughout Europe and challenged traditional doctrines in science and theology. |
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Johannes Gutenberg, credited with the invention of the modern printing press with movable type, was born here and died here. |
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The innovations were brought about by the printing press and were also associated with Lutheranism. |
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At the same time, it also led to a boom in printing, and Iceland today is one of the most literate societies in the world. |
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The roots of the Western media can be traced back to the late 15th century, when printing presses began to operate throughout Western Europe. |
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Chinese printing technology was transferred to the Mongols through Kingdom of Qocho and Tibetan intermediaries. |
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However, most published works were still produced through traditional block printing techniques. |
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One of the more notable applications of printing technology was the chao, the paper money of the Yuan. |
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Marco Polo documented the Yuan printing of paper money and almanac pamphlets called tacuini. |
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Clive Keogh, 40, was formerly a successful businessman and graphic designer who ran his own printing firm. |
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There are braided carpets, screen prints, pitloom weaving, kilim weaving, bath tufting, embroidery, applique work and chromojet printing. |
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Her move came after Kiwi restructured to take up a new deal offered by a US financial printing company. |
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But printing from mobile devices can be a challenge with software downloads and kludgy apps that may or may not be effective. |
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The Ministry of Economy banned the printing of the Albanian-language newspaper Koha e Re, which was part of Velija Ramkovski's media behemoth. |
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The first examples of stamping, stencilling and relief printing can often be seen in old ceramic pieces, tiles and bricks used in architecture. |
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Having won a bursary to study in Kyoto, Lesley Lillywhite's work is still strongly influenced by Japanese and Chinese relief printing. |
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For the past ten years, Feinstein has been relief printing on paper using found soft materials and custom-made templates. |
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Beginning with the early years of relief printing which includes woodcuts, and moveable metal type, to today's digital processes. |
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Letterpress is a form of relief printing that requires type to be set by hand, and broadsides are a mixture of text and images. |
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Flexography, a form of relief printing, lends itself to printing on nonporous materials, such as metal foils. |
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Low Mw high acid value polymers are well known in the printing ink industry, where resolubility on a press is one of the key properties. |
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Contract notice for Delivery and installation of flexographic printing machine control system with printing and label rewinder. |
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Presentation-quality printing includes a print-to-fit option for printing legal-size reports on letter-size paper. |
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Sandra Canning, an artist using 3D printing to make photography 3D printed lithophanes. |
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But biotechnologists are also interested in printing, given the potential it offers for building artificial tissue in layers. |
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With 3D printing you can continue to use the file and update. |
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Blurb, self-publishing book printing service recently declared that it can now provide offset book printing services. |
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With an experienced background in both printing and bookbinding, Machycek decided to choose the less competitive field for his venture. |
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Gutenberg's printing press had profound impacts on universities as well. |
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Unlike traditional screenprinting, digital printing significantly reduces the need for chemicals used to develop films, to produce screens and to screenprint the overlays. |
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Some printing companies use electronic proofs rather than printed proofs. |
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