Printers’ International Specimen Exchange (Vol. XIII 1892)

After writing about the Victorian Artistic Printing in the 16 volumes of the PISE… of course I had to go and buy myself a copy 🤠

The volume I got is number 13 from 1892. There is no full scan of it online and I intend to eventually make the whole thing available digitally. Until then, you can read the introduction from editor Robert Hilton and see the full list of contributors.

If you’d like a photo of a particular contribution, email me at jacob at this website and I’ll send you one!

Contribution from Ebüzziya Tevfik (more from them below)
Colourful contribution from Gebrüder Geveke of Hildesheim

Note: I extracted the text from the photos using the Optical Character Recognition tool at OCR.space.

Introduction

Since the last volume of the Exchange was issued, the revolution that has taken place in the style and execution of British printing in the last five years has been fully acknowledged by our severest critics – our confrères of the German Fatherland. At first they regarded it with suspicion as an innovation, and were especially strong in their objections to the manner in which we use their elaborate combination borders – in selected pieces and bands and panels instead of formal four-sided borders, as has been the custom of the German job printer from the time moveable type borders were introduced.

Herr A. M. Watzulik was the first, in an article in the pages of the Swiss Graphic Journal, to recognise the new style and point out its advantages. His descriptions and illustrations led to animated discussions amongst German printers, and one by one all the trade journals of the Fatherland took the matter up, many of the ablest German and Swiss printers taking part in the discussion. Extracts from some of these appreciative papers have been printed in recent issues of THE BRITISH PRINTER, and to make the record complete in the volumes of the Specimen Exchange also, as well as to emphasise the hints to be learned from its criticisms, we append a few extracts from a second paper which appeared recently in the German Graphic Observer, from the pen of the able editor. “The fame of English fancy job work is not of many years’ standing: the foundation of it was really laid in the office of THE BRITISH PRINTER, a journal whose influence over English fancy jobbing is without parallel.
“The extremely elegant appearance of English job work is in large measure due to the excellent paper and cards employed. The surfaced and plain material for cards, programmes, &c., is always of good quality and clear in colour. In addition to purest white, surfaces of soft rose, azure, ‘apple’ green, and ‘primrose’ yellow tints are especial favourites.
“The second point in which this English work contrasts so favourably with the German is the print, which is without exception faultlessly clear and clean. This, it is true, may be partly accounted for by the entirely new types, but such clearness of types, ornaments, and rules can only be attained by hard-packing make-ready and very careful preparation.
“The schemes of colour, too, differ widely from most of the German work. Black, the favourite colour with us, is seldom to be found in these English specimens. We have only come across pure black twice, and these only in conjunction with variegated colours. For the principal form brown in all shades is most in favour, then blue, greenish-blue, olive, and green-black. The effect of these colours on the paper (which for the most part is of a soft tint) is charming, and on a white ground they look much warmer than our cold black. Two of the variegated colours applied to tinted paper (e.g., olive and dark-red brown on chamois, red-brown and blue-green on grey-green, brown and green-black on greenish yellow, and so on) invariably give an effect which we can seldom attain with printed tints.

“Now we come to the materials used in composition. At the first glance the German jobbing compositor will, among the borders, vignettes, and types employed, recognise many old acquaintances; and on a closer inspection he will find among the ornaments but few figures strange to him.
“Many of the types, too, are of German origin, as for instance the frequently employed Mikado, the Asträa, Aurora, with appropriate initials and characters, &c. The overwhelming majority, however, consists of those types which, known as ‘American,’ have not even yet been fully introduced among us, but which in all these specimens look extremely well and materially contribute to their peculiar charm.
“The design and execution of the composition will appear new to most of our German jobbing compositors on account of the predilection for vignettes and the great simplicity of the composition technique. Of the vignettes, landscapes and sprays of leaves and blossoms, as well as groups of birds, are in especial favour, whereas other figures are almost wholly avoided. The great simplicity of the rules is worthy of remark, for 4-to-pica double-medium rules are almost exclusively employed. Thick and thin rules are seldom seen, and then only when directly required by the separate part of an ornamental figure. By the peculiar features of the design the composition is greatly simplified. Formal borders are very rare, preference being given to bands which either run beyond the edge of the paper or are cut off by perpendicular rules, whereby bevelling is avoided. The decoration of the border surface by a pleasing pattern or an appropriate vignette is of frequent occurrence, and heightens the charm of many of the specimens.
“We will now consider in how far the English fancy job style may serve as a model to the German printer, who, five years ago, scarcely thought he would be willing to learn from his English colleagues, and had almost renounced all hope of the English ever following the Germans in their conscientious treatment of fancy job work. Nor has this latter event come to pass even now, for the English style has rather gone its own way; but it has at the same time attained a development which deserves the consideration even of our German printers. As the ornamentation is for the most part of German origin, printers have gradually accustomed themselves to treat it according to German rules. Borders in several colours are less seldom to be seen in the English work; they already pay more attention to the object to be attained by an ornament, and apply it accordingly. But, whereas many Germans had amid their ornamental elaboration lost the taste for a judicious treatment of the type, this object has been more steadily kept in view by our English brethren. Though many an error may lurk in decorative detail, nevertheless, the English printing invariably shows a much more intelligent treatment of the type than the German. In fact, the English have in no way forgotten that the printed matter exists for the type, and not for the ornament.
“It was this intelligent treatment of the type which first called the attention of German jobbers to the work of their English brethren. The irregular, yet firmly deviating, ‘English display’ fulfilled the aspirations of many of our best efforts towards a freer treatment of design in fancy job work, and won on that account many friends. Now everybody is experimenting with it. It must have come to many a job compositor as a deliverance from oppressive bondage when he was taught that it was no longer a typographical sin if he, despite title rules, deviated his lines right and left as necessity demanded. Lines of equal width, with which previously no one knew what to do, and which were spread out in an unnatural way either by widening out or by addition of ornaments, are now simply moved sideways; and if this is done tastefully, and with due regard to the meaning of the text, a better effect is often obtained than by the symmetrical display.
“Thus far, then, the German printers have already learnt from the English. But there are other points from which we might, upon closer consideration, derive advantage. Among these is especially to be mentioned the vignette, on which great care and attention are expended by the German typefounders, but of which German printers do not make sufficient use, chiefly because, in the first place, our compositors in the adjustment of vignettes and their connection with other decorative material are far too timid and narrow-minded; and, secondly, because they do not understand how to print them. In both we can learn from the English.
“It never occurs to an English compositor to add joins artificially to a vignette; he would only make use of them when they were present in the vignette. The join, which is such a favourite with us, appears to the Englishman almost unpleasing, and on practical grounds we must allow that he is right, for every compositor and printer knows that its day is almost over. The English compositor rarely treats the vignette as a portion of a border, but almost always as a free and independent ornament. In any case he comes nearer to the conception of the artist who originated the vignette than we do, with our theoretical borders. Even when the vignette forms part of a border the compositor will separate it from the other ornaments by breaking the continuity of the border, regularly intersecting it, and placing the vignette in the open space caused thereby.
“With regard to the colour used to print the vignettes, we may learn from the English that they should not be printed black in fancy job work. this black printing which has so much to answer for in the ill-success of German printers hitherto in their employment of the vignette. Contrasted with the delicate type, a vignette, even when quite finely drawn or rendered lighter by diminution, is nevertheless too heavy. Intolerable are those vignettes in black ink which show full surfaces, as for instance, those with a light-coloured picture on a dark ground, or that favourite kind of vignette, the centre of which forms a full disc from which the representations stand out in strong contrast. How very different is the effect of the same vignettes on the English work! Thanks to the print being in a mixed or broken colour, the

effect is always a highly pleasing one. Brown, green- grey and green-black, blue-green and blue-black, in lighter or darker shades according to the more or less strong drawings of the vignettes, and according as the composition of the type is kept strong or delicate, always bring the vignette into a harmonious general effect with the rest of the work.
“There remains a few more particulars concerning the technique of the English ornamental composition. We have already called special attention to the fact that it is an extremely simple one, and that this simplicity partly rests on the employment of very practical rule material. In ornaments, quiet surface ornaments with grey effect are much in vogue, with which the powerful and vivid intarsia and silhouette forms, singly employed, are in strong contrast. “The question might now be discussed whether the English method of composition can be recommended for imitation, and whether it suits German conditions. We answer these two questions in the affirmative, but at the same time would lay stress on the fact that we do not imply thereby a rigid imitation. Thus especially there is a complete economy of material; everything is used up systematically; there is no need to cut up ornaments and rules if the compositor is in any measure a man of resource. A compositor who is a thorough master of his material, and who is to some extent endowed with ‘brains,’ can with the great variety of German material, and if there is no grudging of the rules placed at his disposal, also introduce a wealth of change in his work, even though the method of composition be simplified.”


In spite of their formal ideas as to the use of borders and ornament, our German confrères know a good thing when they see it. They have now studied what they call “the free Leicester style1” appreciatively, and having realised its good points are already beginning to use it extensively in their fancy job work.

Its chief feature is the simplicity of the composition and the consequent ease and speed with which designs can be put together. With the accurate “point” standard of bodies for types, borders, and rules, fully fifty per cent is saved in the time of composition, and this is acknowledged by those printers who have arranged their plant as far as possible on the “point” system.
Now that the tastefulness of the new style and the economy of its working are fully recognised, it is being rapidly taken up not only all over the United Kingdom and in Germany, but in Austria, Switzerland, Holland, Denmark, Norway, Belgium, and even Italy. It has many admirers in France, and recently there have been enquiries from the United States for good men who can “design and execute job work in the free Leicester style”. Scarcely a week passes that we do not receive parcels of specimens from abroad in which the new style is conspicuously employed, the contrast being frequently enhanced by opposite pages being shewn in the old formal style.
This general adoption of our ideas in typographical design and execution is very gratifying to us, who have worked so long to produce an improved state of things in the craft of Gutenberg and Caxton. But a glance through the current volume of the Exchange – undeniably good as it is all through – shows us that there is yet plenty to do in the direction of improvement. “Not all of them show the same high standard of excellence”; and though the number of poor examples becomes less and less with successive collections, there are still some who cling to old-fashioned styles of display, do not recognise the utility of labour-saving material and other improvements, and therefore do not make the progress that is expected of them.
It is also gratifying to note, in looking through the current series, that a great majority of the contributors are not slavish imitators, but frequently produce decidedly fresh and original ideas of their own, a fact which tends to show that the new style is rightly named “free”. It admits of more variety in tasteful display, both of types and borders, than any other style now in vogue, and gives a new appearance to old faces when judiciously utilised. This is shewn in many specimens in the present series.
When we come to the question of finish of details, colour schemes, and general execution of both composition and presswork, it is at once seen that the improvement is noticeable “all along the line”. Not half a dozen all-round faulty specimens can be found in the whole collection, though there are a few that are somewhat faulty in finish in one or the other department. Looked at as a whole, a more tasteful or a more well-finished collection has never yet been issued, and we are well content to leave the judgment on this point to the craft at large.
It is now fully recognised by all who have adopted the “free” style, that its advantages in economy of working enable them, whilst giving their clients better and more tasteful printing, to make it pay. One and all say that they can get better prices, and at the same time get more pleasure and satisfaction out of their work, and are kept busier, than when they did common work only.
The new style of printing has also been provocative of an eager demand for more thorough technical instruction for and on the part of the workmen, who are at last generally recognising that the improvements in labour-saving material and appliances require more study of theory and practice combined, to enable them to secure and hold good positions. This demand for instruction has led to the starting of a number of new classes this session, and an addition of over two hundred to the ranks of the students, as well as to modifications of the syllabus, by which the important jobbing branch of the craft secures a fair share of the attention of the examiners.
In this increased demand for technical instruction, the influence of the Specimen Exchange and THE BRITISH PRINTER has had one effect. The examiners now include a fair proportion of questions relating to the job department2 in their examination papers, and this fact alone has had the effect of bringing more than double the number of students into the classes.
In another direction our continued strong representations in the right quarters, as to the absolute necessity of the classes being provided with the requisite material for practical instruction, have borne fruit. We are just informed, on the authority of the

trustees, that a complete letterpress plant is to be provided for the new Printers’ Institute now in course of erection in the “printers’ parish” of St. Bride, Fleet-street; and the Glasgow Branch of the British Typographia has suspended its classes, and set about providing funds for the purchase of the necessary plant. At Manchester, Edinburgh, Liverpool, and the Polytechnic class, London, more or less complete material is already provided; one or two small classes receive instruction in printing offices kindly lent for the purpose; and at the Leicester class, tools and materials, up to a new Wharfedale machine and a complete stereo plant, are introduced into the class room for special lectures. All this is very encouraging for the future prospects of the craft.
To return to the Exchange: more than the full number of 375 specimens asked for have been sent. Rejections have reduced the number to 361. Of these 54 are from abroad: 33 from Germany; 12 from Austro-Hungary; 5 from Switzerland; one each from Holland, Belgium, Denmark, and Turkey; and five from the United States. It will be seen that the foreign element continues to be well represented, both in quantity and quality. The serious labour troubles in Germany were the means of preventing nearly a score more of contributions to this volume.
At home, it will be seen that the contributors are more generally distributed than formerly. Scotland, formerly represented by an average of a dozen, now sends more than that number from one office alone; Wales, once represented by one or two a year, now sends nearly a score; and Ireland has gone up in equal proportions – all three countries equally in quality as in numbers. The representative collections from the leading Scotch and Irish offices could, indeed, not easily be surpassed anywhere. Coming to the large remainder of purely English contributions, the succession of really well-designed, tasteful, and admirably executed specimens is really remarkable, and many of those from small offices are equally as good in every way as those from the more important and, presumably, better furnished establishments. As a rule better inks and papers are used, and a more judicious and pleasing selection of inks and papers made than in previous volumes, though there are still a few, and these not only amongst British printers, who do not see that good paper is absolutely needed for good work. In the matter of ornament there is a more general observance of the unities, and several conflicting styles of ornament are now seldom or ever mixed in one design. As a result the incongruities of former collections are in this series few and far between. There are but few ill-balanced designs, though several are spoiled by being set too full out to the paper. Some of the “collective” exhibits from well-known British offices could not be surpassed anywhere in any country of the world.
With the next volume-the fourteenth-the Exchange will have run through two apprenticeships, as it were. A comparison of the first and thirteenth volumes show what an astonishing reformation has been effected in that time in British typography. The revolution in style, as well as in workmanship, has been complete. The change in the latter respect has been caused to a great extent by the rapid introduction and more careful study of labour-saving material and appliances, and the gradual extension of the “point” system; and it is a matter for regret that we have had to look almost entirely to the “enterprising foreigner” for most of the improvements in this direction.
The next volume being, as we have said, the end of the “second apprenticeship in progress, we make an earnest appeal to contributors everywhere to signalise it by helping us to crown the edifice of fourteen years’ steady work, by the production of a collection that shall in the design and execution of every individual specimen be a monument to the taste and ability of contributors, and such as will show that British printers are determined to hold their own, and keep British printing in its old position of the best in the world.
In order to secure this desirable end, the number of contributions required for the next volume will remain at 375, and every care will be taken to exclude specimens that do not come fully up to the standard required. We would, therefore, advise all intending contributors who are at all doubtful of coming up to the standard to send advance proofs to the Editor, who will, as usual, cheerfully advise as to any improvements or alterations that may be needed to ensure success.


THE issue of the current volume has been considerably delayed by the time lost by many contributors during the general election and press of business since, the last parcels not reaching us till December 6th.

List of Contributors to Vol. XIII


AcKRILL, ROBERT, Harrogate.
Oldfield, Arthur, foreman.
Do. contributed for the
Harrogate Technical Class.
Fisher, E., compositor.
Parkin, C. B., apprentice.
Thackwray, R.
ACTIENGESSELSCHAFT für Schriftgiesserei
und Maschinenbau, Offenbach-am-Main.
Winkler, Reinhold.
ARCHIBALD. James, Hull.
Pickles, J., foreman.
AUSTEN, W. G., Canterbury.
Houlden, S.
BABINGTON, T. K., Ripon.
Taylor, J. H.
BAILDoN & Sons, Halifax.
Baildon, G.
Dixon, H., foreman.
BAKER, A. W., Birmingham.
Overton, W. H.
BARBER & FARNWORTH, Manchester.
Daltry, E., foreman.
Barlow, W. S., Bury.
Pettitt, E.
BELLErBY & SON, Selby.
BEMROSE & SONS, LIMITED, Derby.
Garratt, G. H.
Williams, A. W.
BERNSTEEN, S., Copenhagen.
BEYAERT, LEON, Courtrai.
BOOT, EDWIN S., LIMITED, London, E.C.
Bonz' ERBEN, A., Stuttgart.
BRANCH, J. E., South Hackney, N.
Liddiard, F. E.
BRITTEN, W., West Bromwich.
Woodhall, E.
Brooker, J., Uckfield.
BRÜDER MAGYAR, Temesvar, Hungary.
BRUNNS, OSCAR, Breslau.
BRYAN & Co., Oxford.
Bryan, George.
Fletcher, W. C., foreman.
BUCKLER BROTHERS, Birmingham.
Priestland, W.
BURKART, W., Brunn.
BURT & SONS, London, W.
BURTON, T. I., Louth.
BUSHILL, T. & SONS, Coventry.
CALDCLEUGH, THOMAS, Durham.
Glenton, A.
Nicholson, R. A.
Phillips, F.
CASLON LETTER FOUNDRY, London, E.C.
Luxton, H. H.
CAXTON WORKS, Newbury.
Purdue, T., machinist.
CHENEY & SONS, Banbury.
Davies, G. M., machinist.
CHILVER, ARTHUR, London, E.C.
Cuthbert, E.
CHORLTON & KNOWLES, Manchester.
CHRISTOPHERS & SON, Newport, Mon.
Morley, E., foreman.
Morgan, E., machinist.
CLARKE, A., Loughborough.
Wells, J. W.
COATEs & YATES, Rochdale.
Ashmore, R. A.
Webster, A.
COLLINS & DARWELL, Leigh.
COOPER & Co., LIMITED, Birmingham.
White, A. H.
COOPER & BUDD, Peckham, S.E.
Joyner, Geo., foreman.
CRAIGHEAD, A., Galashiels.
CUTHBERTSON & BLAcK, Manchester.
Black, John
Cuthbertson, W. S principals.
Shadwell, J. A. H., foreman.
Clarke. S.
DANIEL & Co., St. Leonards.
DE MONTFORT PRESS (Raithby, Lawrence and Co., Ltd., Leicester).
Hilton, Robert
Lawrence, J. C.
Raithby, H. C.
Grayson, R., foreman.
Brown, Joseph, assistant-foreman.
Harwood, J. H., foreman, platen dept.
Jackson, T. W., foreman machinist.
Brad, A., machinist.
Breese, R., compositor.
Bruce. J., compositor.
Budden, C. G., compositor.
Clarke, John S., compositor.
Clarke. W., machinist.
Coleman, H., compositor.
Davis, W. W., machinist.
Fisher, Chas. H., machinist.
Flint, J. W., machinist.
Graham, Jas., compositor.
Hilton, Frank.
Hutt, E. E., compositor.
Luck, F.. machinist.
Martin, W. S.
Parker, G. A., compositor.
Readings, H., compositor.
Richards. A. (foreman, litho dept.)
Stevens, E.T. D. (manager, litho dept.)
Thomas, F.. compositor.
Turville, W.
Wade, W. H., compositor.
Walkington, R. T., machinist.
Wilson, Major, machinist.
Whetton, H.
DENNIS, E. T. W., Scarborough.
Jowsey, Arthur, machinist.
DOERING, C., Karlsruhe.
DOTESIo, W. C., Bradford-on-Avon.
Glover, B.
Harris, W.
East Anglian Daily Times, Ipswich.
Daws, Thos. (manager, typo dept.)
EDDINGTON, E., Thornbury.
Eddington, C.
Hale, E., machinist.
EDDInGTON & CADBURy, Swindon.
Eddington, W. C.
Cousin. J.
Dance, R.
Docwra, G. W., machinist.
Fulton, J. A.
Garrett, R. W.
Knight, C. E.
Proctor. W. T.
EDWARDS, H., Cheltenham.
Taylor, G. W., foreman.
ELLIOTT, P. E., Finsbury, E.C.
ENGEL, E. M., Vienna.
FITCH, OSWALD, London, E.C.
FARQUHARSON, ROBERTS & PHILLIPS, LIMITED, London, E.C.
Webber, R. W.
FöRSTER & BoRRIES, Zwickau.
Goebel, Paul, foreman.
FOSTER & BIRD, King's Lynn.
Davison. J. H., compositor.
Morgan, J. P.
FROMME, CARL, Vienna.
Haas, Anton, foreman.
Jochs, Edmund, compositor.
Olmühl, Fr., machine-foreman.
FUCHS, SIGMUND, Budapest.
FUHRMANN, OTTO, Stendal.
FUSSLI, ORELL, Zurich.
GAILLARD. EDM., Berlin.
GARDNER BROTHERS, Leith.
GAZE & SONS, Strand, London.
Lee, F. C., compositor.
GEIBEL, S. & Co., Altenburg.
GEVEKE, GEB., Hildesheim.
Krulls, Th., machinist.
GILMOUR & CARMICHAEL, Glasgow.
Greig. Colin.
GILLESPIE, H. G., Glasgow.
GOODNER, T. E., Midhurst.
Witham. C. R.. foreman.
GOTELEE, A., Odiham.
Clinker, S. H., overseer.
GRAPHO PRESS, London, E.C.
Andrews, A.
Collins, A.
Fisher, W.
Jarvis, W.
Robinson. F.
GRIFFITH, E. & SON, Birkenhead.
GRIGG, G. W., Dover.
Grigg, C. H.
HARPUR, T., Derby.
Rouse, G., apprentice.
HARRIs & SoNS, Manchester.
Harris, A. H.
HARRISON, WM., Ripon.
Harrison, W.
Fairley, F. J., machinist.
Groves, J. W.
HARTLEY & SON, Attercliffe.
Belton, G. J.
Dobinson, T. E., apprentice.
HELLER & STRANSKY. Prague.
HEPWORTH, LEWIS, & Co., Tunbridge Wells.
Cox, James, foreman.
HERALD & WALKER, Manchester.
HILL, S. & Co., Liverpool.
HILLMAN, T. & Co., Birmingham.
Lucas, A. E.
HODGE & Co., Glasgow.
M'Kirdy, Chas., apprentice.
Smith, C., apprentice
Brown, T., apprentice
HODGSON, J. L., St. Helens.
HOFFMANN, HERMANN, Steglitz.
HOHMANN, H., Darmstadt.
HORNYANSZKY, VIKTOR. Budapest.
HOSSACk, A., Edinburgh.
Hossack. J. W.
HOWARTH, JOHN, Rochdale.
Howarth, J. D.
HUGHES & HARBER, Longton.
Dryland, Chas., foreman.
HUNT, BARNARD & Co., London, W.
HURST, ARTHUR, York.
IMP. EB-UZ-ZIA, Constantinople.
JACKSON, C. M., Woolwich.
Jackson, C. M.
JAMES, A. C., Redland, Bristol.
JASPER, FR., Vienna.
JOHNS. R. H., Newport, Mon.
Johns, R. S.
Bate, F. A. M., apprentice.
Chave, Wm.
Gould. H.
JOHNS, W. N., Newport, Mon.
Fussell, H. J. G., overseer.
Clissitt, C. T., apprentice.
Gronow, A. C.
Watkins, A.
JOHNSON. C. H., Leeds.
Crosland, Wm.
JONES, ROBERT, Wrexham.
Wilkinson, J.
KARAFIAT, LEOPOLD, Brunn.
KAY & SONS, Haworth.
K. K. HOF-UND-STAATSDRUCKEREI, Vienna.
KNöFLER, H. & R., Vienna.
KREBS, BENJAMIN, Frankfort-am-Main.
LAUBNER, KARL, Essegg, Slavonia.
LEA & Co., LIMITED, Northampton.
Beeby, W. J.
Marsden, T. J.
Underwood, W.
LEWIS, G. & SON, Selkirk.
Lewis, John, principal.
Calderwood, Dan, Joreman.
Grieve, W. B., late foreman.
Anderson, John, compositor.
Henderson, Peter, machinist.
Kyles, John, compositor.
McLauchlan, Hugh, compositor.
Niven, Archibald, compositor.
Ramage, Geo.
Scott, Wm., machinist.
Thom, John, compositor.
Thomson, J. W., apprentice.
LIBERTY PRESS, Wexford.
Wood, Fred, principal.
Evans, Chas. E., manager.
Doyle, P.. apprentice.
Keefe, Wm., apprentice.
Knights, E. J., compositor.
McGuire, Hugh.
Shudel, Geo., machinist.
Waterhouse, F., machinist.
West, W. H., compositor.
LION, L., Fuerth.
LITTLE BOYS' HOME, Farningham.
Beavis, T. S.
Briggs, W. J., apprentice.
Francis, G. S.
Owen, R., apprentice.
LODGE & SON, Bristol.
Hobbs, A., foreman.
LONG, W. J. C., Worthing.
Long, D. E.
MARLBOROUGH, PEWTRESS & Co., London, E.C.
Gregory, W. G., foreman.
MARTEN, B. R., Sudbury.
MASSEY & Co., Trowbridge.
MAWSON, PHILLIPS & Co., LIMITED, Sunderland.
Munroe, S. C., foreman.
Messenger office, Bromsgrove.
Bate, J., manager.
Heyden, C., compositor.
MICHAEL, W., Barnstaple.
Camp, Frank, foreman.
Michael, P. D., apprentice.
MIDWOOD, Odo, Manchester.
Huffey, W., manager.
MORISON BROTHERS, Glasgow.
Dunlop, J. A., compositor.
MORTIMER, E., Halifax.
Moss & THOMAS, Hebden Bridge.
Moss, J.
Thomas, A. E.
MOUTON & Co., The Hague, Holland.
NAUMANN, C. G., Leipzig.
NEWMAN & SON, London, E.C.
Hancock, H. J., foreman.
Bateman, S. M., machinist.
Cornelius, F. G.
NEW PRESS PRINTING Co., Hanley.
NORMAN, SAWYER & Co., Cheltenham.
OELHAFEN, Fr., Mainz.
PARNELL & Co., Grimsby.
Parnell, G. B.
Carr, E.
Forman, Wm.
Benson, J. N., compositor.
Brown, R., apprentice.
PEARSON BROS., Halifax.
Fielden, J. H.
PERCY Bros., Manchester.
Chorlton, C. A.
Fletcher. T.
Nickson, F.
PHOENIX PRINTING Co., Birmingham.
Williams, P. C., manager.
Whiting, C.
PHELP BROS., Walthamstow.
Hanson, F., compositor.
Pitt, F. W., machinist.
PLATT, J. & H., Preston.
PODMORE, W. H., Warrington.
POYSER, W., Wisbech.
Poyser, W. F.
PRIES, AUGUST, Leipzig.
RABITZ, H., Solingen.
RAMM & SEEMANN, Leipzig.
RATCLIFFE, C. & H., Liverpool.
Duncan, Alex.
Sharples, John E.
REID, SONS & Co., Newcastle-on-Tyne.
Gill, J.
Tinker, J.
REVELL & SON, Manchester.
Jones, F.
ROBINSON, R., Margate.
Tanner, F., compositor.
ROBINSON, W., Bolton. (possibly William Robinson with the Bolton Advertiser)
Robinson, W., principal.
Robinson, Chas.
Robinson. G. A.
Mather, J.
Orrell, E., apprentice.
ROHRER, RUDOF M., Brunn.
RYDER, R., Wednesbury.
Wallbank, J., foreman.
SAVORY, E. W., Cirencester.
Wray, C. G., foreman.
SCHELTER & GEISECKE, Leipzig.
SCHIRMER & MAHLAU, Frankfurt-am-Main.
SCHLEICHER & SCHÜLL, Düren.
SCHWEIZ. VERLAGS-DRUCKEREI, Basel.
Boehm, G., foreman.
Zickwolff, J. F., machinist.
SEVERN & SON, Heanor.
Severn, Joseph.
SEWARDS, J., Sleaford.
SILSBURY, J. H., Shanklin.
Silsbury, M.
SMITH, G. B., Chipping Norton.
SMITH, LEWIS & SON, Aberdeen.
Barry, H. A., compositor.
Fraser, R. C., apprentice compositor.
Smith, W. & J.
SMITH'S PRINTING AND PUBLISHING AGENCY, London, E.C.
Hall, A. W.
Townson, E. W.
Shreeve, A., machinist.
SOUTHALL BROS. & BARCLAY, Birmingham
(Private Press of).
Smith, James, compositor.
Smith, J. H., machinist.
SOUTHALL, J. E., Newport, Mon.
Iles, W., foreman.
SPAMERSCHE BUCHDRUCKEREI, Leipzig.
Sport and Play office, Birmingham.
Machin, A. E., compositor.
SPONG & SON, Biggleswade.
Green, Chas. E., apprentice.
STEPHENS & EYRE, Bristol.
STOOLE & WHITE, Hull.
Needham, J., foreman.
STRECKER & MOSER, Stuttgart.
SWINBURNE PRINTING Co., Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.A.
Swinburne, J. W., manager.
SYRETT, C. J., Manchester.
TAFT, H. D., Riverhead, N.Y., U.S.A.
TATUM & BOWEN, San Francisco, California, U.S.A.
Holton, M. B.
Loy, W. E.
THOMAS & Co., Huddersfield.
Edwards, B., apprentice.
Foster, A.
THORNTON & PATTINSON, Hull.
Evison, C., compositor.
Ralphs, H.
TOPHAM & LUPTON, Harrogate.
Topham, J.
Lupton, S. B.
TURNER, JAMES, Manchester.
VICTORIA WORKS, Forest-hill, S.E.
Anderson, Ed., compositor.
Visiter office, Southport.
Richardson, R., overseer.
Langley, Ed., compositor.
WAGNERS ERBEN, Zurich.
WALDIE, J. M., Stonehaven.
Bissett, J. C., manager.
WALKER & Co., Warrington.
Beardall. J. E., compositor.
WALLAU, CARL, Mainz.
WEBBERLEY & MADDOX, Longton.
Webberley, J. A.
WENDLING, DR. HAAS & Co., Mannheim.
Boehm, Hans, compositor.
WHEELER, G. & Co., Manchester.
Wright, H. N.
WHITEHEAD & SONS, Huddersfield.
Jenkinson, G. T.
WHITTINGHAM & Co., LTD., London, E.C.
Baker, W. J.
Freeston, H.
WILLIAMS, F., Hawkhurst.
Willard, J. G., foreman.
Delia, B. W.
WILLIAMS, W. T., Portsmouth.
Kellaway, J. S.
WILLS, H., Loughborough.
Pallett, W.
Oldham, J.
WINKLEy, MARK, 4 Southwark-street, S.E.
WISCHAU & WETTENGEL, Halle a. S.
WOHLFELD, A., Magdeburg.
WOOD & Co., St. Helen's.
Brown, J.
Lockie, R. H.
WORTHY, F., Battersea, S. W.
Deacon, A., apprentice.
Goodman, H. A.
  1. See the note below the footnotes re: the Leicester Free Style ↩︎
  2. By “the job department”, editor Robert Hilton means “Job Printing” – disposable printing of ephemera, advertising, packaging etc. This is the opposite of “Book Printing” – the more respected & older branch of printing. ↩︎

Leicester Free Style
This was the Raithby Lawrence “house style”. More about this style in this detailed comment on Fonts In Use. Examples of this style:

Side note: Eb-uz-zia Tevfik

(Also known as Ebüzziya Tevfik)

Friend of the blog Fatih has emailed me with more samples of artistic printing from this Ottoman printing press:

From the US Library of Congress

and

Also from the Library of Congress

More photos and artefacts about this printing press, in Turkish.


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