I just want to add that photo offset and "hot lead" printing aren't the same technologies and having a shop set up for one does't mean you can do the other. On Fri, Sep 22, 2023 at 10:01 AM Nick Walker - cnw at globalnet.co.uk (via tml list) <xxxxxx@simplelists.com> wrote: > > > > I want to say Lettraset is the name you are looking for, > > > > Off-topic: Early compositing technology by Jeff Zeitlin (21 Sep 2023 22:42 UTC) > Reply to list > > 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? > > ®Traveller is a registered trademark of > Far Future Enterprises, 1977-2022. Use of > the trademark in this notice and in the > referenced materials is not intended to > infringe or devalue the trademark. > > -- > Jeff Zeitlin, Editor > Freelance Traveller > The Electronic Fan-Supported Traveller® Resource > xxxxxx@freelancetraveller.com > http://www.freelancetraveller.com > > Freelance Traveller extends its thanks to the following > enterprises for hosting services: > > onCloud/CyberWeb Enterprises (http://www.oncloud.io) > The Traveller Downport (http://www.downport.com) > > ----- > The Traveller Mailing List > Archives at http://archives.simplelists.com/tml > Report problems to xxxxxx@simplelists.com > To unsubscribe from this list please go to > https://archives.simplelists.com/confirm/?u=nxrDtFdMUuRm7Wsf3AOGTO5KWLVBt3I8 -- Some of us have a little bit of Crazy and some of us have a 40,000 liter drum filled to the brim of the stuff - and you don't know how much Crazy there is until it's awake - by which time it's waaaay too late to try and cram it back in the box. -- Simon the BOFH