- on
letter copying presses was
limited by the
properties of the
available copying inks. Some do****ents that were to be
copied with
copying presses were...
-
literal sense, it is an act of
creative interpretation rather than rote
copying.
Inkers fine-tune the
composition by
adding the
proper weight to lines, creating...
-
Sutra copying (Chinese: 抄經, chāo jīng; ****anese: 写経, shakyō) is the East
Asian practice of hand-
copying Buddhist sutras.
Sutra copying involves the meticulous...
-
copying currency that has a
special pattern.
Color copying also
raises concerns regarding the
copying and/or
forging of
other do****ents, such as driver's...
-
engrossed copy. Stone's
engraving was made
using a wet-
ink transfer process,
where the
surface of the do****ent was moistened, and some of the
original ink transferred...
-
various nib shapes. The
refillable ink comes in
bottles of 12 ml and 32 ml, and can be used like
regular bottled inks. The
company also
issues empty markers...
-
duplicating device that
produces a
copy of a
piece of
writing simultaneously with the
creation of the original,
using pens and
ink.
Patented by John
Isaac Hawkins...
- clay.
Copying pencils were
introduced in the 1870s and were
originally marketed for
copying do****ents,
especially for
making permanent copies of a permanent...
-
costs per
copy when
copying more than 100
copies. A good
lifespan for a
risograph might involve making 100,000
masters and 5,000,000
copies. Risograph...
-
computer printing that
recreates a
digital image by
propelling droplets of
ink onto
paper and
plastic substrates.
Inkjet printers were the most commonly...