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Type is a small block of metal or wood bearing a raised letter or character on the upper end that leaves a printed impression when inked and pressed on paper.
Prior to hot metal composition type was produced in type foundries. In Edinburgh the most famous type foundry was Miller & Richard who kept many of Edinburgh's printing houses supplied with type.
Edinburgh City of Print is a joint project between the City of Edinburgh Museums and the Scottish Archive of Print and Publishing History Records (SAPPHIRE). The project aims to catalogue and make accessible the wealth of printing collections held by the City of Edinburgh Museums . For more information about the project please visit www.edinburghcityofprint.org
The process is called 3D printing Dubai or additive manufacturing in industrial manufacturing and if you haven’t heard of it by now, you’re not paying enough attention to breath-taking news and scores of technology blogs – or the president Barrack Obama, who announced in his recent State of the Union address that 3-D printing “has the potential to revolutionize the way we create almost anything.” Visit 3dprintingdubai.ae
Old Fishmarket Close was the location of the printing firm Neil & Co. Patrick Neill, founded of the firm of Neill & Co. In 1739, Neill was apprenticed to a printer. Neill joined in partnership with two booksellers, Hamilton & Balfour, creating the printing firm Hamilton, Balfour & Neill. Hamilton left the firm in 1762 and it became Balfour & Neill. When Balfour retired in 1765 the company became Neill & Company. The company passed to Patrick's brother, took over the firm in 1767. The company continued operating until its closure in 1973.
Edinburgh City of Print is a joint project between City of Edinburgh Museums and the Scottish Archive of Print and Publishing History Records (SAPPHIRE). The project aims to catalogue and make accessible the wealth of printing collections held by City of Edinburgh Museums. For more information about the project please visit www.edinburghcityofprint.org
Not all I do is crochet - these printings I've done in my painting class. They have something Japanese, don't you think?
Description: Printing Press from the printworks of James Ballantyne and Company, Pauls Work, North Back of Canongate, on which the 'Waverley' novels of Sir Walter Scott were produced. Plaque on press reads '1796 Ballantyne Press, used by Ballantyne in the printing of the Waverley Novels'.
Used in Edinburgh
Further Notes: Known as the Ballantyne Press it dates from the late 18th Century- a plaque gives the date as 1796, the year when James Ballantyne's first practical connection with printing was established, when he became editor and manager of a new weekly newspaper, the 'Kelso Mail'. James Ballantyne (1772 - 1833) moved his printing business from Kelso to Edinburgh, in 1802, following the success of Scott's 'Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border'. The firm remained at Paul's Work until 1870 when, due to the Encroachments of the Waverley Railway station, it moved to Newington. A branch was set up in London in 1878 and by 1916 the Edinburgh print works had been discontinued.
History: In 1957 the firm - by then Spottiswoode, Ballantyne and Company of London- gave the press to the V & A Museum who transferred it to Edinburgh in October of that year. The press is currently on display at the Writers' Museum, Lady Stairs Close, Edinburgh
Edinburgh City of Print is a joint project between City of Edinburgh Museums and the Scottish Archive of Print and Publishing History Records (SAPPHIRE). The project aims to catalogue and make accessible the wealth of printing collections held by City of Edinburgh Museums. For more information about the project please visit www.edinburghcityofprint.org
Description: white enamel white and brown lettering, brown border. Reads 'the Waverley pen is a treasure'.
Accession Number: 5348/14/90
History: Used a Waverley Cameron, Blair Street. Waverley Cameron started as Nisbet MacNiven, a paper maker, in 1770 at Balerno, just outside Edinburgh. It then developed as a stationery wholesaler, after moving into the middle of Edinburgh in 1788. The first Camerons appeared on the scene in 1840 and the name was changed to MacNiven and Cameron in 1845. The Waverley nib (narrow waist and upturned point) was first manufactured for the company by Gillott in 1864, and later by Hinks, Wells. Gillott made the Waverley Pens until the mid 1870s, when they were transferred to Hinks Wells. In 1900, MacNiven and Cameron bought a factory in Birmingham and started to manufacture their pens themselves. The Birmingham factory was at the Watery Lane site from 1900 to 1964. Towards the end of that period, the factory was making mainly paper clips, of the barrel spring type, but some nib manufacturing continued to the end. The Waverley Pen continued, little changed, in production for exactly 100 years, until the Birmingham factory was closed in 1964.
Edinburgh City of Print is a joint project between City of Edinburgh Museums and the Scottish Archive of Print and Publishing History Records (SAPPHIRE). The project aims to catalogue and make accessible the wealth of printing collections held by City of Edinburgh Museums. For more information about the project please visit www.edinburghcityofprint.org
Dessa bilder och videor visar hur skalmodeller av stolar från Nyköpings Tekniska Gymnasium studenter skrivs ut i färg på en ZPrinter 3D-skrivare.
Om skolan:
www.nykoping.se/Nykopings-gymnasium/
Om ZPrinter 3D-skrivare
Looking for screen printing in Manchester, NH? Red Brick Clothing is your number one source for screen printing in Manchester, NH. We currently offer screen printing in Manchester, NH.
Wow, the registration was a pain in the ass! I used tape to try to line them up from print to print and I was on for about half of them, but the others are kinda off. It was very ambitious to have to screens that really needed to match up to be our first multi-screen print. The black in the second screen outlined the red text in the first. What a headache. What FUN!
Will did the illustration and it looks great.
Leading Exhibition Solutions Provider - Hawk Display - ♥Digital Printing Display System♥
Fast Exhibit NO.ZP-30
Product Name: Fast Exhibit
Model: NO.ZP-30
Colour: White
Net Weight: 9.0oz/257g
Width: 59"/1550mm
Advantage: No Fade
Appliance: Roll Up
Hawk Display is dedicated to the development of textile digital printing, applications and services. With the diversified production of exhibits and display system that give rise to a perfect combination with the digital printing on textile graphic. Most of the textile fabric is preceded with the fire-proof treatment which company with the European Standards. Hawk Display employs the most advanced ICC color management system to monitor the color output so as to ensure the color details can satisfy their clients' requirement.
My second print on paper, the circles were either gouged out of the printing plate (we used Dahler board) or cut out and stuck on the surface. For the raised circles I chose to use textured wall paper and some thin artificial lace. Can you work out which is the lace and which the wallpaper?
a new technique for me, first seen on the www, which promises so many possibilities. I'm sure i'll try again.
This summer, we have ten college students join our group as the intern.Three of them were under the guidance of my colledge –Atai(tiger)who was trained as a designer in colledge and now serves as the restorer in our museum.Atai is especially interested in printing machines and want to make them workable.Today’s task is to make name cards of their own by operating the proofing press.Fankly speaking, I never see this machine before and also excited about the process and outcome….
WIPO hosted an exhibition on 3-D printing from April 22 to May 3, 2013. 3-D printing offers totally new ways of creating products; the possibility of easily customized, local manufacture; and the potential to reduce the environmental impact of industrial production.
Copyright: WIPO. Photo: Violaine Martin. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 IGO License.
After inking and polishing an engraved plate, Don showed us intaglio printing using an old press. I saw the same type of press, maybe even this exact one, on a documentary about the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.
Printing Season's Greetings cards. Carved MDF block, Daler Rowney/Schmincke block printing inks. The "cards" are painted lining paper, stretched in advance and then ripped to size once dry.
All of these are immensely satisfying activities.
*Inks
Ultrachrome K3 and HDR inks for widest gamut and longevity
*Paper and Media Options
**Photo – resin coated traditional effect
**Proofing – used to proof and simulate offset reproduction
**Fiber – traditional heavy weight ph neutral alphacellulose
**Watercolor – traditional watercolor papers coated for inkjet printing
**Rag – 100% cotton
**Canvas – cotton and polyester blend
**Fabric – PhotoTexTM and Jacquard Fabrics
**Film – polyester – clear, transparent, opaque
**Pressure Sensitive Adhesive (PSA) vinyl
*Surfaces
**Matte, Satin, Pearl, Glossy, High Gloss
*Weights: 90-500gsm
*Thickness: 5-25 mil
*Finishes
**Renaissance Wax
**Hahnemuhle and Lyson UV protective spray
*Equipment
**Epson Stylus Pro 9900 - up to 44” wide
**Epson Stylus Pro 4800 – up to 17” wide