
terms) filled with these images would look like from this small sample.
These images have already been identified - the post-it notes on their sides
have the name and any other note I thought necessary on them. You might notice
the "Veins of a dragonfly wing" in the top center has notes indicating
what the various cells on the wing are called. They have also been alphabetized
to make it easier for me to create the text for them and arrange them into
the book.----------------- ----
What
you see here is the form I created to make a log of the engravings I'm borrowing
from Yale so I have a record of what I take and that they are all returned.
It's hard to see the engraving, but it's "Velvet Grass" and it's
5 pica's wide. The engraving is sitting on top of the International Dictionary.
When I get the engravings back to my shop I pull out my old dictionaries to
see which dictionary the engraving first appears in, I check my spelling (I'm
a terrible speller), and I copy down latin names or other interesting features
- say if an engraving has labelled parts etc. In this picture, just above
the ruler, there is a funnel shaped image - if you look above, you can see
it ("ventriculate") in the lower left portion of the photo. This
borrowing sheet now becomes my guide for linotyping the text to accompany
the images. ----- ---- ----- ----- ------ --Here
I am at my Model 8 linotype,
and it's summertime, and I'm correcting something in the composing elevator.
Notice the sheet above the keyboard where I type in the text. The linotype
is an amazing machine - an operator merely types on the keyboards and brass
mats assemble in the composing elevator w/ steel spacebands forming the spaces
between words. Each mat has the mold of a letter punched in its backside.
After a line is assembled, the operator depresses a lever and the machine
takes over, casting this form into a line 'o type and then re-distributing
the mats and spacebands so you can start again.
The shiny
silver things are the 7 point, 12 pica slugs cast on the linotype. The pen
is to mark the metal for chopping on a leading cutter so the slugs will match
the width of the engravings. This is an image of Umbel - the first line beneath
it reads "Umbel" backwards so it will print correctly (Letterpress
is direct as opposed to offset which is an indirect printing process.) on
the paper. The second line has the number associated with umbel and the notation
MN which means it is an electrotype that was created for the 1890 International
Dictionary.
In
addition to creating text for the engravings, each engraving must be checked
to see that it is "type high." This magnificent dial indicator is
on loan from Fred Widmer who put it together using an old base from the Waltham
Watch Factory and a new dial piece. If an engraving is not within a couple
thousandths of .918" high, it will either not get enough ink and enough
pressure, or it will get too much ink and too much pressure when printing.
Most of the engravings are low.You can see this engraving needed about 3 thousanths
of an inch of underlay to reach "type high." Notice I use old "Work
in Progress!" for my 3 thousanth underlay needs. If an engraving is high,
it might be because it had too much underlay put on in the 19th Century. This
old underlay must be carefully removed w/ a wheat-paste poultice. Often you
will find manuscript written by a draghtsman or the engraver indicating what
the engraving is.Here is an example of what you might find:
It
reads "Hyperbola. Crabb. Page 246." Crabb is the source from which
the engraving was copied! I made scans of almost every engraving I cleaned
and am planning to include a bibliography of the sources from which the engravings
for the dictionary were taken in my book.
Since
we are talking about the engravings - Here is my set-up for making my own
engravings. You can see the various burins and a block of wood in a Korean
letter vice. My opti-visor magnifying lenses are invaluable. Luke Hepler,
a friend who did micro-injections of cells for electron-microscopy once explained
to me that the human hand is able to adjust its movements to whatever the
eye can see.This is just a test block in the vice.
Here
is an engraving of "Die Stock" and you can see that the drawing
was reproduced photographically from some catalog as evidenced by the words
"Die Stock" in the upper left.The engraver would then engrave the
block leaving the black lines to print. These wood engravings created for
the International Dictionary did not always have all the material cleared
away on the engraving as it was not worth the time of the engraver to do that.
(And it may have even helped with the electrotyping process?) This engraving
would have a wax mold taken of it, copper would be electroplated to that mold
and then the image would be backed with lead and mounted on a piece of wood
to make a type-high block. I believe the way they dealt with the border areas
was to fill only the image itself with lead, and the border areas would be
nailed down to the base - thus becoming lower than the printing surface. (Please
contact me if I give any poor information!)
Here
is my type and page setting area. On the table by the lamp is a page form
being set.
Here
you can see the first page of the "U's" is being set. I created
this page setting form using metal furniture and locking it up in a galley.
I have four such forms. These images will have leading carefully set in between
to fill up all the voids so that the engravings will not move during printing.
For setting engravings, one doesn't need excessive pressure, but it needs
to be consistent from page to page. I usually rough set the two pages facing
each other first so I know what each page spread will look like, then I, or
an intern, finishes setting the page.
Once
all 16 pages are set for a section, 8 of them are set into the press for a
print run. I then spend a day proofing, and fixing underlay and then working
on "makeready." Makeready is adding or removing paper to the drum
of the press to adjust the pressure in printing. Many of the mounted engravings
have a certain amount of spring to them - it might be in part the wood they
are mounted on, and also the looseness of their mounting. These images will
get enough ink from proper underlay, but because of that spring, they will
not receive enough pressure and so will not print well. To gauge pressure,
one looks at the underside of a printed sheet at a low angle with a good light
source behind. If one sees no impression at all, adding make-ready is imperative.
Many times I have been seduced by a great first few impressions and not added
adequate make-ready - partly in deference to the age of the engravings - only
to discover twenty impressions later that the image isn't really printing
that well b/c it's just not pressing the ink into the page. Yeah, you can't
always gauge on first impressions!
Here
are poofs I keep hanging over my interleaved stack of the run I'm currently
printing. These help remind me of what a good and bad impression looks like
over time. The ink I use dries much lighter than it originally appears - the
ink seeps into the paper and so I must print slightly darker than I want the
final pages to appear.

Here is an engraving sitting next to the print of the same engraving. The
engraving was first used in the 1864 Dictionary, and the white you see in
the wood engraving is French Chaulk sprinkled on to help show what the engraving
will look like.
After I finish printing both sides of a run,
the
sheets get wrapped up and stored in my Webster's Project file cabinet.You
can see the piles of sections ong the bottom and top shelves of the cabinet.
The other shelves have old proofs, makeready, and special proofing paper to
use when the book is reproduced as a trade edition.
Watch the process unfold in an 8 min.video
........ Pictorial Webster's; ........ Inspiration to Completion
..........The story begins with the engravings, themselves. You might imagine what a Ham-ilton Type Case (a big flat drawer in layman's
