Quote:
Originally Posted by steve B
Almost, one stone for each color.
But only one stone of each color for the entire sheet.
The shop I worked at did something like a million deposit slips for a bank. 25x36 sheet, about 64 per sheet.
In 1910 they would print transfers for each color and use those to layout the stone(or plate) That's where the alignment marks at the halfway points of the border come from. Different positions had the alignment marks erased differently. I'm hoping that eventually we will be able to figure out the overall makeup of a sheet from those tiny differences.
Having another group of 12 without the exceptions and maybes of the 150 group is going to be fun.
Steve B
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Ok, I've always had it in mind that it was kinda like typeset with say 108 individual stones put together in a 12 x 8 layout then all pressed onto the sheet simultaneously - seemed like a lot of setup work! Transferring the individual subjects to one stone then printing a color on multiple sheets makes more sense.
Thanks and best regards,
Craig