- Then, the ITU
chartered a
photoengravers'
union in New York City. Over the next few years, the ITU
organized photoengravers in
several other cities as...
- The Lithographers' and
Photoengravers'
International Union (LPIU) was a
labor union representing printing workers in the
United States and Canada. The...
-
helped to
secure funds for new acquisitions. He was
president of the
Photoengravers Board of
Trade from 1929 to 1934. In 1932,
Epstean started translating...
- had
never formed a union,
photoengravers did so
almost upon the
creation of
their industry. The
first American photoengravers' union, Photo-Engravers of...
-
Photoengraving is a
process that uses a light-sensitive
photoresist applied to the
surface to be
engraved to
create a mask that
protects some
areas during...
-
books and
magazines have
often been
noticeably hand-adjusted by the
photoengravers in an
effort to
compensate for some of the
difficulties of reproduction...
- In 1964, the Photo-Engravers
merged into the new
Lithographers and
Photoengravers International Union. At its
founding conference, Volz gave a
short speech...
- They
established a new studio,
Curtis and Guptill,
Photographers and
Photoengravers. In 1895,
Curtis met and
photographed Princess Angeline (c. 1820–1896)...
- he led the
union into a
merger which formed the Lithographers' and
Photoengravers'
International Union,
becoming president of the new union. He achieved...
-
March 26, 1893, the
third child and only son of
James Scott Conant, a
photoengraver, and his wife
Jennett Orr (née Bryant). In 1904,
Conant was one of 35...