Small press publications… without the printing press!

The vast majority of 20th century books and pamphlets will be printed via offset press or as letterpress.  What’s the difference?  Offset transfer the ink to a rubber blanket before its put to a surface.  It provides a more even print on less even papers.  Letterpress directly applies the plate to paper which also produces a slight indent around the lines.  It can make for slightly higher contrast in illustrations due to the faint indent.

Then there’s the tiny fraction of other things that were done using other duplication processes.  Many items that were produced in very small batches for special events , local groups, etc were produced using various other methods that may require special handling.  If you handle lots of ephemera, you may encounter alternate printing processes.  Many fanzines, chapbooks, pamphlets, and APAs may use this methods. Also, if there’s no date on the item, but you CAN ID the process used, it will give you a better idea of the date and how many copies were probably produced.

 

 

Master and print

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A Real Character of a Writer

One of the gravy parts of my tenure managing mystery bookshops, was meeting and greeting authors. Established, brand new, legends, ego maniacs, and future friends. Granted, I worked in arguably the greatest city in the world (I take that line from the David Letterman show) and therefore had more opportunity to meet authors. In a … Read more

Out of Jeopardy–E-Book All Ready To Go

Well, at least publishers intend to print a hardcover later on. My question, is there really a need to have either? What info could possibly be imparted about this silly contest–I say silly, because although Waldo is a computer, all computers are programmed by humans. Tell me about one computer physically programming another, and that’s … Read more

Funny and Pointed Response to Library of Congress About E-books

The quote is from the head librarian at the Library of Congress, so you’d think he’d be a bit smarter than his statement. The  statement was found on: http://www.shelf-awareness.com/issue.html?issue=1385#m11415 A response to the preposterous statement is sharp, witty, and on the money: http://julieandrews.livejournal.com/100569.html