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Introduction
to Mass Communication MCM
101
VU
LESSON
18
INDUSTRIALIZATION
OF PRINT PROCESSES
Development
of the printing
press
The
original method of printing was
block printing, pressing
sheets of paper into
individually
carved
wooden blocks also called
xylography. It is believed that block
printing originated in China,
and the
earliest
known printed text, the
Diamond
Sutra (a Buddhist
scripture was printed in China in
868 A.D.
The
technique was also known in
Europe, where it was mostly
used to print Bibles.
Because of the
difficulties
inherent in carving massive quantities of
minute text for every
block, and given the levels
of
peasant
illiteracy at the time, texts such as the
"Pauper's Bibles" emphasized
illustrations and used
words
sparsely.
As a new block had to be
carved for each page,
printing different books was an
incredibly time
consuming
activity.
Moveable
clay and metal type are
processes much more
efficient than hand copying. The use of
movable
type
in printing was invented in
1041 A.D. by Bi Sheng in
China. Bi used clay type,
which broke easily,
but
eventually
Goryeo (Korea) sponsored the production
of metal type (a type foundry was
established by the
Korean
government in the early 15th century).
Since there are thousands of
Chinese characters
(Koreans
also
used Chinese characters in literature),
the benefit of the technique is not as
apparent as with
alphabetic
based
languages.
Movable
type did spur, however, additional
scholarly pursuits in China and
facilitated more creative
modes
of
printing. Nevertheless, movable type was
never extensively used in China
until the European style
printing
press was introduced in relatively
recent times (thus bringing
the technology full circle).
Although
probably unaware of the Chinese/Korean
printing methods, Gutenberg
refined the technique
with
the first widespread use of movable
type, where the characters
are separate parts that
are inserted to
make
the text. Gutenberg is also
credited with the first use
of an oil-based ink, and
using "rag" paper
introduced
into Europe from China by
way of Muslims, who had a
paper mill in operation in
Baghdad as
early
as 794.
Before
inventing the printing press in
1440, Gutenberg had worked
as a goldsmith. Without a doubt,
the
skills
and knowledge of metals that he
learned as a craftsman were
crucial to the later invention of the
press.
The
claim that Gutenberg
introduced or invented the printing
press in Europe is not
accepted by all. The
other
candidate advanced is the Dutchman
Laurens Janszoon
Coster.
Impact
of printing
Previously,
books were copied mainly in monasteries, or
(from the 13th century) in
commercial
scriptoria,
where scribes wrote them out
by hand. Books were therefore a scarce
resource. While it
might
take
someone a year to hand copy a
Bible, with the Gutenberg
press it was possible to
create several
hundred
copies a year, with two or
three people that could read,
and a few people to support the
effort.
Each
sheet still had to be fed
manually, which limited the reproduction
speed, and the type had to be
set
manually
for each page, which
limited the number of different pages
created per day. Books produced
in
this
period, between the first
work of Johann Gutenberg and
the year 1500, are collectively referred
to as
incunabula.
The
replacement of hand copied manuscripts
with printed works was not
received with much joy.
Not only
did
the authorities contemplate making printing
presses an industry requiring a license
from the Catholic
Church
(an idea rejected in the
end), but as early as in the
15th century some nobles
refused to have
printed
books
in their libraries to sully their
valuable hand copied manuscripts. Similar
resistance was later
encountered
in much of the Islamic world, where
calligraphic traditions were extremely
important, and also
in
the Far East.
Despite
some resistance, Gutenberg's
printing press spread
rapidly across Europe.
Within thirty years of
its
invention
in 1453, towns from Hungary to
Spain and from Italy to
Britain had functional
printing presses. It
54
Introduction
to Mass Communication MCM
101
VU
has
been theorized that this incredibly
rapid expansion shows not
only a higher level of industry (fueled by
the
high-quality European paper mills that
had been opening over the
past century) than expected,
but also
a
significantly higher level of literacy than
has often been
estimated.
The
first printing press in a
Muslim territory opened in Andalusia
(Muslim Spain) in the 1480s.
This printing
press
was run by a family of
Jewish merchants who printed
texts with the Hebrew
script. After 1490s,
the
press
was moved from Granada to
Istanbul (a popular destination for
thousands of Andalusia Jews).
Art
of book printing and typeface
For
years, book printing was
considered a true art-form. Typesetting, or the
placement of the
characters
on the page, including the use of
ligatures, was passed down
from master to apprentice.
In
Germany,
the art of typesetting was termed the
"black art", and it has
largely been lost, due to
advances in
computer
typesetting programs, which make it
possible to get similar
results with less human
involvement.
Some
few practitioners continue to print books the way
Gutenberg did. There is a yearly
convention of
traditional
book printers in Mainz, Germany.
Printing
in the industrial age
While
the Gutenberg press was much
more efficient than manual
copying, the Industrial
Revolution
and the invention of the steam
powered press by Friedrich
Gottlob Koenig and
Andreas
Friedrich
Bauer in 1812 made it
possible to print tens of
thousands of copies of a page in a
day. Koenig and
Bauer
sold one of their first
models to The
Times in
1814 and went on to perfect the early
model so that it
could
print on both sides of a
sheet at once. This made
newspapers available to a mass
audience, and from
the
1820s changed the nature of
book production, forcing a
greater standardization in titles and
other
metadata
(computing). Later on in the middle of the
19th century the rotary press
(invented in the United
States
by Richard M. Hoe) allowed millions of
copies of a page in a single
day. Mass production of
printed
works
flourished after the transition to rolled
paper, as continuous feed allowed the presses to
run at a
much
faster pace. It is interesting to note
that the Gutenberg press was
essentially unchanged from the
time
of
its invention until the
industrial revolution--a testament to
its effectiveness. Movable type
has been
credited
as the single most important
invention of the millennium.
Lithography
A
printing technology that dates
back to 1798 when Alois
Senenfelder developed a method of
imaging
limestone from which a print
was produced. Based on the
principle that oil and
water do not mix,
an
aluminum or plastic plate is coated
with a photopolymer film
that is exposed to light
through a
photographic
mask. The exposed areas
are chemically "hardened,"
and the unexposed areas are
dissolved
when
the plate is put through a chemical
process, which is the next
stage. When printing a page,
the plate is
dampened,
and the water adheres only
to the unexposed, non-image areas,
which repel the greasy ink
that is
applied
to the plate immediately thereafter.
Lithography
("writing on stone") is accomplished
according to the same principle
today, but the stone
has
been
replaced by a metal plate
and the technology of preparing the plate
has become more
sophisticated.
Lithography
is less expensive than either
letterpress or gravure printing
and is a reasonable alternative,
particularly
when an order calls for a short
run.
Offset
printing
Offset
printing is a widely used
technique where the inked
image is transferred (or
"offset") from a
plate
first to a rubber blanket, then to the
printing surface. When used
in combination with the
lithographic
process,
which is based on the repulsion of oil
and water, the offset technique
employs a flat image
carrier
on
which the image to be printed obtains
ink from ink rollers, while
the non-printing area attracts a
film of
water,
keeping the nonprinting areas
ink-free.
The
advantages of offset printing
include:
·
Consistent
high image quality --
sharper and cleaner than
letterpress printing because the
rubber
blanket
conforms to the texture of the printing
surface
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Introduction
to Mass Communication MCM
101
VU
·
Usability
on a wide range of printing surfaces in
addition to smooth paper (e.g.,
wood, cloth, metal,
leather,
rough paper)
·
Quick
and easy production of
printing plates
·
Longer
plate life than on direct litho
presses -- because there is no direct
contact between the plate
and
the printing surface.
The
first lithographic offset
printing press was created
in England around 1875 and
was designed for
printing
on metal. The offset cylinder
was covered with specially
treated cardboard that
transferred the
printed
image from the litho stone
to the surface of the metal. About
five years later, the
cardboard
covering
of the offset cylinder was changed to
rubber, which is still the
most commonly used
material.
The
first person to use an
offset press to print on
paper was most likely
American Ira Washington Rubel in
1903.
Roughly at the same time, a German engineer by the
name of Christopher Hermann invented
a
similar
machine. He got the idea
accidentally by noticing that
whenever a sheet of paper
was not fed into
his
lithographic
press during operation, the
stone printed its image to
the rubber-covered impression
cylinder,
and
the next impression had an
image on both sides: direct
litho on the front and an
image from the rubber
blanket
on the back. Rubel then noticed
that the image on the back of the
sheet was much sharper
and
clearer
than the direct litho image because the
soft rubber was able to
press the image onto the
paper better
than
the hard stone. He soon decided to
build a press which printed
every image from the plate
to the
blanket
and then to the paper. Brothers Charles
and Albert Harris independently
observed this process at
about
the same time and developed an offset
press for the Harris
Automatic Press Company soon
after.
Harris
designed his offset press
around a rotary letterpress machine. It
used a metal plate bent
around a
cylinder
at the top of the machine that
pressed against ink and
water rollers. A blanket cylinder
was
positioned
directly below, and in contact
with, the plate cylinder.
The impression cylinder below
pressed the
paper
to the blanket in order to transfer the
image to the sheet (see
diagram). While this basic
process is still
used
today, refinements include two-sided
printing and web feeding
(using rolls of paper rather
than sheets).
During
the 1950s, offset printing
became the most popular form
of commercial printing as
improvements
were
made in plates, inks and
paper, maximizing the technique's superior
production speed and
plate
durability.
Today, the majority of printing,
including newspapers, is done by the
offset process.
Photo
offset
The
most common kind of offset
printing is derived from photo
offset process. In such
cases, the
documents
to be printed are first
recorded on film negatives.
Images from such negatives
are then
transferred
to photomechanical printing plates much
the same way as photographs are
developed. A
measured
amount of light is allowed to pass
through the negatives and
exposed the printing plate.
A
chemical
reaction then occurs that
allows an ink-receptive coating to be activated,
thus transferring of the
image
from the negative to the
plate.
Present
day
Offset
printing is the most common form of
high volume commercial
printing, due to
advantages
in
quality and efficiency in high
volume jobs. However, modern
digital "presses" (inkjet
based) are getting
closer
to the cost/benefit of offset for
high quality work. However,
they have not yet been
able to compete
with
the sheer volume of product that an
offset press can
produce
Desktop
publishing
It
requires a desktop publishing
program, such as PageMaker or
Quark Express, a large
monitor
and
laser printer. The term
"desktop publishing" was very
popular when personal computers
began to
proliferate
in the 1980s.
A
desktop publishing program (DTP),
also called a "page layout
program," provides complete page
design
capabilities,
including magazine style
columns, rules and borders,
page, chapter and caption numbering
as
well
as precise typographic alignment. A key
feature is its ability to
flow text around graphic
objects in a
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Introduction
to Mass Communication MCM
101
VU
variety
of ways. Although many word
processing programs offer
most of these features, a
desktop
publishing
program provides ultimate flexibility.
Original
text and graphics may be
created in a desktop publishing program,
but graphics tools
especially are
often
elementary. Typically, text is
created in a word processing
program, and illustrations are
created in a
CAD,
drawing or paint program. Then, the
text and images are
imported into the publishing
program.
A
laser printer may be used
for final output, but
shaded drawings and photographs
print better on
commercial
high-resolution image setters.
For transfer to a commercial
printer, documents are
generally
saved
in their native page layout
format such as PageMaker and
Quark Express or as PDF
files. For
publishing
on the Web, PDF files have
become the de facto standard for
documents that are
downloaded
and
read independently of the HTML pages on the
site.
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