Off-topic: Early compositing technology Jeff Zeitlin (21 Sep 2023 22:42 UTC)
Re: [TML] Off-topic: Early compositing technology James Catchpole (21 Sep 2023 23:38 UTC)
Re: [TML] Off-topic: Early compositing technology Evyn MacDude (21 Sep 2023 23:45 UTC)
Re: [TML] Off-topic: Early compositing technology Jeff Zeitlin (22 Sep 2023 13:25 UTC)
Re: [TML] Off-topic: Early compositing technology Roger Gammans (22 Sep 2023 15:02 UTC)
Re: [TML] Off-topic: Early compositing technology Evyn MacDude (21 Sep 2023 23:59 UTC)
Re: [TML] Off-topic: Early compositing technology Richard Aiken (22 Sep 2023 11:56 UTC)
Re: [TML] Off-topic: Early compositing technology Ethan McKinney (22 Sep 2023 02:50 UTC)
Re: [TML] Off-topic: Early compositing technology Phil Pugliese (26 Sep 2023 18:48 UTC)
Re: [TML] Off-topic: Early compositing technology Timothy Collinson (27 Sep 2023 09:52 UTC)
Re: [TML] Off-topic: Early compositing technology Jeff Zeitlin (27 Sep 2023 12:23 UTC)
Re: [TML] Off-topic: Early compositing technology Rupert Boleyn (27 Sep 2023 14:41 UTC)
Re: [TML] Off-topic: Early compositing technology Evyn MacDude (27 Sep 2023 18:52 UTC)
Re: [EXT]Re: [TML] Off-topic: Early compositing technology Johnson, Bruce E - (bjohnson) (06 Oct 2023 18:22 UTC)
Re: Off-topic: Earlycompositingtechnology Nick Walker (22 Sep 2023 15:00 UTC)
Re: [TML] Re: Off-topic: Earlycompositingtechnology J. Michael Looney (22 Sep 2023 15:19 UTC)
Re: [TML] Off-topic: Early compositing technology Christopher Sean Hilton (22 Sep 2023 16:34 UTC)
Re: [TML] Off-topic: Early compositing technology Rob Conley (27 Sep 2023 18:35 UTC)

Off-topic: Early compositing technology Jeff Zeitlin 21 Sep 2023 22:42 UTC

Ok, the younger members of the list won't have a clue on this one, unless
they've a specific interest in early commercial printing technology.

For those of you who are my age or older...

Back before compositing pages for printing using a computer and software
like PageMaker was A Thing, you'd go into a print shop and you'd see the
compositors making up camera-ready master pages by taking sheets of ... not
cellophane, but... that had letters, numbers, punctuation, etc., on them,
and they'd carefully position and then rub the letters onto the master
page. Once that was done, the page would be "camera ready", and they'd
really take a picture of it to etch onto the plates that were used to
actually print the bulk run on the big-as-a-room printing press. The body
text was generally done with "hot lead", with the main manufacturer of the
machines in question (and the "default" name for the general idea of such
machines) being LinoType, but if you-the-customer provided camera-ready
pages except for things like titles and logos, the cost was less, and you
probably made up your "master" pages using an IBM Selectric typewriter
(because they were widely available, and you could actually change the type
ball element, to any of about _two dozen_ type styles ("fonts", today)!).

OK, enough digression.

That bit about taking the sheets of letters, and pressing them onto the
master page... There was a name for that "technology", and it was the name
of the company that was more-or-less the standard/definition of it, just
like "LinoType" was the "default" name for the "hot lead" text setup. What
was that name?

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