US19645A - Improvement in picture-types - Google Patents

Improvement in picture-types Download PDF

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Publication number
US19645A
US19645A US19645DA US19645A US 19645 A US19645 A US 19645A US 19645D A US19645D A US 19645DA US 19645 A US19645 A US 19645A
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picture
types
improvement
glass
wax
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B41PRINTING; LINING MACHINES; TYPEWRITERS; STAMPS
    • B41NPRINTING PLATES OR FOILS; MATERIALS FOR SURFACES USED IN PRINTING MACHINES FOR PRINTING, INKING, DAMPING, OR THE LIKE; PREPARING SUCH SURFACES FOR USE AND CONSERVING THEM
    • B41N1/00Printing plates or foils; Materials therefor
    • B41N1/16Curved printing plates, especially cylinders
    • B41N1/20Curved printing plates, especially cylinders made of metal or similar inorganic compounds, e.g. plasma coated ceramics, carbides

Definitions

  • the object of this invention is to produce lined or granulated picture-types by depositing the metal by electrical action in a matrix prepared in the manner hereinafter described,
  • a smooth and level plate of transparent material-glass, for instance- is covered with a thin layer of adhesive and transparent substance, as beeswax or the like.
  • the original drawing is then placed under the glass, and its lines, being seen through the glass and wax, are to be followed and engravedthrough the wax by means of proper engraving-tools. After this it is necessary to fill up with wax those places where the original picture represents or the impressions are intended to represent broad lights.
  • a plaster cast is taken, which, when dry, is to be varnished with cement over those parts that are intended to have a fine grain. Fine silex-powdcr or ground glass, sand, or the like is then thickly puton the varnished places.
  • cement When dry and perfeetly hard the loose grains are to be brushed off. Cement may now be applied to such parts as require a coarser texture-such as foliage, drapery, foreground, &c.--am1 coarser-grained sand is put on such parts. In this way any variety of texture may be produced in the same picture.
  • the surface of the plaster cast should be filed or rubbed'down at the edges of broad lights, or wherever a certain degree of faintness may be desirable in the impression, The sand must be repeatedly and carefully sifted in order that the single particles of each layer shall be as equal in size as possible.
  • afac-simile may be produced in the usual way of electrotyping or stereotyping, andimpressions may be taken therefrom on the common letter-press.
  • a number of such types may be made, so as to represent various portions of the picture, and when properly granulated in the manner above described and printed in different colors the same effect can be produced as in chromo-lithography.
  • this process of graining is applicablato any other method of preparing the matrix proper,wherein the drawing is not required to be seen so as to be copied through a transparent substance.
  • an opaque plate may be used, and instead of'wax any other suitable non-transparent substance or com position of matter may be employed.
  • IIGSSBS Intestlmony whereof lhave signed my name to this specification before two subscribing wit IIGSSBS.

Description

UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
JNO. MOELHERAN, OF BROOKLYN, NE? YORK.
IMPROVEMENT lN PICTURE-TYPES.
Specification forming part of Letters Patent No. 19,645, dated March 16, 1858.
4 ful Improvements in Preparing Picture-Types;
and I hereby declare that the following is a full, clear, and exact description of the same.
The object of this invention is to produce lined or granulated picture-types by depositing the metal by electrical action in a matrix prepared in the manner hereinafter described,
whereby certain artistic effects may be produced with rapidity and without difficulty, which in the ordinary process-require great skill, labor, and time. This process also renders the lines of the drawing in alto similarin this respect toengravin g on wood, and the i-m pression may be taken on the ordinary letterpress, together with the text, it desirable.
To enable others skilled in the art to make and use my improvement, I shall now proceed to give a detailed description of the same and of the modes operand i.
A smooth and level plate of transparent material-glass, for instance-is covered with a thin layer of adhesive and transparent substance, as beeswax or the like. The original drawing is then placed under the glass, and its lines, being seen through the glass and wax, are to be followed and engravedthrough the wax by means of proper engraving-tools. After this it is necessary to fill up with wax those places where the original picture represents or the impressions are intended to represent broad lights. Next, a plaster cast is taken, which, when dry, is to be varnished with cement over those parts that are intended to have a fine grain. Fine silex-powdcr or ground glass, sand, or the like is then thickly puton the varnished places. When dry and perfeetly hard the loose grains are to be brushed off. Cement may now be applied to such parts as require a coarser texture-such as foliage, drapery, foreground, &c.--am1 coarser-grained sand is put on such parts. In this way any variety of texture may be produced in the same picture. Before cementing and sanding, the surface of the plaster cast should be filed or rubbed'down at the edges of broad lights, or wherever a certain degree of faintness may be desirable in the impression, The sand must be repeatedly and carefully sifted in order that the single particles of each layer shall be as equal in size as possible. After the cementing and sanding have been finished afac-simile may be produced in the usual way of electrotyping or stereotyping, andimpressions may be taken therefrom on the common letter-press. A number of such types may be made, so as to represent various portions of the picture, and when properly granulated in the manner above described and printed in different colors the same effect can be produced as in chromo-lithography.
The advantages of this process are, first, that it produces with great rapidity a better, more even, and sharper grain than can be obtained bytheordinarymethodofgrindinglithographic stones; secondly, that it substitutes with less .labor and expense a granulated metal surface instead of stone, which, when printed from, is rapidly worn out; thirdly, that these granotypes, as I denoininate them, can beprinted alongavith the typography of a work on' the ordinary .letter-press; fourthly, that it combines the beauties and advantages of lithography and typography, and that various parts of the picture can be difi'erently grained, which is altogether impracticable in lithography.
It should be stated here that this process of graining is applicablato any other method of preparing the matrix proper,wherein the drawing is not required to be seen so as to be copied through a transparent substance. Instead of glass, an opaque plate may be used, and instead of'wax any other suitable non-transparent substance or com position of matter may be employed.
Having now described my improvement, what I claim as my invention, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is-
The mode, herein described of preparing in the picture-types to be printed from gran-w lated surfaces, producing various shades and efl'ects, for the purposes specified.
Intestlmony whereof lhave signed my name to this specification before two subscribing wit IIGSSBS.
' J OHN MoELHERAN.
- Witnesses: v
ANTHONY PoLLoK,
. JOHN S. HOLLINGSHEAD. r
US19645D Improvement in picture-types Expired - Lifetime US19645A (en)

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4662795A (en) * 1981-10-13 1987-05-05 Clark Carl A Method of supporting a mine roof using nut element with breakable portion

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4662795A (en) * 1981-10-13 1987-05-05 Clark Carl A Method of supporting a mine roof using nut element with breakable portion

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