A History of the Old English Letter Foundries: With Notes, Historical and Bibliographical, on the Rise and Progress of English Typography |
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Page 5
... already the contrary . Wetter's letters not only declined to have themselves regularly printed , but they also retained their pear - tree - wood - like impatience afterwards . " The specimen of these types may be seen in the Album of ...
... already the contrary . Wetter's letters not only declined to have themselves regularly printed , but they also retained their pear - tree - wood - like impatience afterwards . " The specimen of these types may be seen in the Album of ...
Page 14
... already been said , appears to have arrived at once at the secret of the punch , matrix and adjustable mould . We should be loth to assert that they arrived at once at the most perfect mechanism of these appliances ; indeed , an ...
... already been said , appears to have arrived at once at the secret of the punch , matrix and adjustable mould . We should be loth to assert that they arrived at once at the most perfect mechanism of these appliances ; indeed , an ...
Page 17
... already . The importance of absolute squareness in the body and height of the type would demand an appliance of greater precision than the uncertain hollowed cube of sand or clay ; the heat of the molten lead would point to the use of a ...
... already . The importance of absolute squareness in the body and height of the type would demand an appliance of greater precision than the uncertain hollowed cube of sand or clay ; the heat of the molten lead would point to the use of a ...
Page 19
... already familiar in the fifteenth century , of metal in the abstract , and to include , at least , the lead , tin , or pewter in which the types were almost certainly cast . The reference to copper and bronze might either apply to the ...
... already familiar in the fifteenth century , of metal in the abstract , and to include , at least , the lead , tin , or pewter in which the types were almost certainly cast . The reference to copper and bronze might either apply to the ...
Page 20
... already stated that , with regard to the traditional perforated wooden types seen by certain old writers , the probability is that , if these were the genuine relics they professed to be , they were model types used for forming moulds ...
... already stated that , with regard to the traditional perforated wooden types seen by certain old writers , the probability is that , if these were the genuine relics they professed to be , they were model types used for forming moulds ...
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Common terms and phrases
2-line English alphabet Andrews appears Arabic artist Baskerville Baskerville's beautiful Bible Birmingham Black body Bowyer Brevier broadside Canon cast types Caxton century character Chiswell Street Colard Mansion copy Cottrell curious Dominica Double Pica Dutch early edition Edmund Fry England English typography engraved Enschedé face facsimile famous folio fount Glasgow Grammar Greek Greek types Hansard Hebrew interesting Irish issued Jackson James John John Baskerville Joseph Moxon labour Latin Letter Founder letter-founding list of matrices London Long Primer master mentions metal mould Moxon Nichols Nonpareil original matrices Oxford Paris Pica Roman Polyglot printers Printing Types probably produced published punch-cutting punches and matrices purchased Roman and Italic Roman letter Rowe Samaritan Saxon says sheet Small Pica Specimen Book Specimen of Printing Star Chamber subsequently Syriac Testament Thomas trade two-line typefounding Types cast typography University Vincent Figgins vols William Caslon Wilson
Popular passages
Page 154 - I do not love thee, Doctor Fell, The reason why I cannot tell ; But this alone I know full well, I do not love thee, Doctor Fell.* 1 Sec Proverbial Expressions.
Page 281 - Amongst the several mechanic Arts that have engaged my attention, there is no one which I have pursued with so much steadiness and pleasure, as that of Letter-Founding. Having been an early admirer of the beauty of Letters, I became insensibly desirous of contributing to the perfection of them.
Page 170 - A specimen of the Several sorts of Letter given to the University by Dr. John Fell, late Lord Bishop of Oxford. To which is added, the Letter given by Mr. F. Junius. Oxford, printed at the Theater, AD 1693.
Page 138 - Court doth award that you be led back to the place from whence you came, and from thence to be drawn upon...
Page 165 - She supported herself by keeping school, and was afterwards tutoress in the family of the Duchess-dowager of Portland, " where," says this writer, "we have visited her in her sleeping-room at Bulstrode, surrounded with books and dirtiness, the usual appendages of folk of learning.
Page 138 - An Act for the more effectual Suppression of Societies established for seditious and treasonable Purposes, and for better preventing treasonable and seditious Practices...
Page 290 - Stranger, Beneath this cone, in unconsecrated ground, A friend to the liberties of mankind directed his body to be inurned. May the example contribute to emancipate thy mind From the idle fears of Superstition, And the wicked Arts of Priesthood ! 74.
Page 326 - In a country so remote from all connection with European artists, he has been obliged to charge himself with all the various occupations of the Metallurgist, the Engraver, the Founder, and the Printer.
Page 281 - It is not my desire to print many books ; but such only, as are books of Consequence, of intrinsic merit, or established Reputation, and which the public may be pleased to see in an elegant dress, and to purchase at such a price, as will repay the extraordinary care and expense that must necessarily be bestowed upon them...
Page 138 - ... hanged by the neck, and being alive shall be cut down, and...