Gaskell 1972
Book Production: The Hand-press Period 1500-1800
The Hand-printed Book
printing process:
- compositor: type --> composing stick (several lines) --> galley (whole page); tie with string, move to the next
- imposition: arrange many pages of type for one sheet --> fix in a pair of iron frames (chases), one for each side --> locked together, two chases of type create a forme
- trial prints (proofs) made from formes; compared with copy; errors marked by corrector (possibly author), marked proofs used by compositor to correct type
- formes placed on printing press: wooden frame; screw, worked by hand, to force the platen down onto the type; movable carriage for type and paper to run under platen; worked by two pressman --> one fits paper on frame, folds it down onto the type, and runs the carriage under the platen; the other inks the type; printed one side, then another
- arranged piles of printed sheets along a bench, picking them up one by one to collate the sheets
- collated sheets sent to binder, who folded each sheet and sewed them together into volumes
foliation: numbering leaves pagination: numbering pages
direction line: first word of the next page at the bottom of the page
head: top of book tail: bottom of book
gathering: one or more pair of leaves (conjugate paires) joined at the back, made from one folded sheet, or fraction of a sheet, or several folded sheets tucked inside one another (quired)
- identified by a signature, a letter or letters of the alphabet placed in the direction line of the first recto, often repeated on subsequent rectos, indicating order of the gatherings
- main signature series begins with the text; title page, dedication, etc., often not included because they would have been printed last -- reprints may begin signatures at the beginning
imprint: identifying printer on the title page colophon: identifying printer at the back of the book
paper:
- handmade, rough-surfaced
- of-white
- shows pattern of broad-spaced lines (chain lines) crossed by close together lines (wire lines)
- smooth edges cut by binder or rough, uncut, or unopened
binding:
- endpapers, of a different color or texture, at the front and back of book, added by binder
- then strips of paper waste to secure spine
- then boards, stiff upper and lower covers made of wood (in early days) or pasteboard, then millboard, covered with leather or rough paper
- decorated with heated brass tools, using gold leaf (gilt) or plain (blind)
Printing Type
casted in an alloy of led, antimony, and tin called type-metal which had a low melting point, didn't shrink or expand with temperature differences
height to paper varied from 24.0-27.5mm before standardization in eighteenth century (international type standards not established until late nineteenth century)
fount: group of type-cast alphabets of one body and design
making type:
- relief patter cut by hand on the end of a steel punch (~45mm long)
- punches were hammered into small blocks of copper (matrices), each matrix trimmed to squared and set to correct depth (process called justification -- different from justification in typesetting)
- matrices fixed to a mould, a teel box clad in wood for insulation
- typecaster puts two halves of mould together, holds them with left hand
- drops molten type-metal into mouth of the mould with right hand while jerking hand to get metal into recesses of matrix
- lays down ladle, removes spring holding matrix in place, pryes out type with iron picks
- jets of metal from mould mouth snapped off, type planed to be smooth
- type inspected for defects
casting type was very skilled; required precision jerks of hand for particular letters
early on, punch-cutters were specialist engravers; later (by late 15c) became independent professionals -- would strike matrices from their own punches and sell them to printers
- high trade in matrices, but not type
- printers would own matrices, and employ specialist casters to make the type
- 1560s-70s, type-founding evolved as separate trade selling cast type
- three specialist foundries developed: Guyot-Plantin foundry in Antwerp, Egenolff-Sabon-Berner-Luther foundry in Frankfurt, and Le Be foundtry in Paris
Type sizes and description
early-middle sixteenth century, standard type sizes evolved, identified by name
determining size:
- body-size: measure twenty lines of type vertically (without interlinear leads), answer given in nearest millimeter
- face size: vertical distance from top of ascending character and bottom of neighboring descender, then multiplied by twenty
- this is the approximate 20-line measurement of the minimum body on which the face could be cast without overhangs
- x-height: height of the letter "x"
- capital height: height of capitals
- therefore, typesize: [face height x 20] x [x-height]:[capital height]; e.g.: "Body 82. Face 80 x 1.7: 2.5."
table of nine bodies most commonly used during hand-press period (double pica, great primer, english, pica, small pica, long primer, brevier, nonpareil, pearl)
Type faces
- M S letter forms as printing types
- exotic alphabets
- greek
- cyrillic
- hebrew
- etc.
- latin alphabet
- gothic forms
- formal
- textura
- rotunda
- bastarda
- cursive
- civilite
- formal
- roman forms
- formal (roman)
- cursive (italic)
- gothic forms
- exotic alphabets