Tag: Ink

  • Metallic Inks

    Metallic Inks

    Metal­lic inks are now sup­plied ready mixed, but you might like to exper­i­ment with old­er types of inks.  The basic premise is that the var­nish (a clear vehi­cle for the colour) is mixed with a pow­der (typ­i­cal­ly made of ground up met­al) to cre­ate an ink.  This approach was need­ed in the past because the two had a ten­den­cy to sep­a­rate.  Sil­ver ink was first to be sup­plied ready mixed because alu­mini­um is light and so did not sep­a­rate.  Gold­en inks relied on heav­ier met­als that had a ten­den­cy to fall to the bot­tom of the con­tain­er and so ruin the over­all ink.

    The process is to set the pow­er out with­in the rec­om­mend­ed pro­por­tions by weight, typ­i­cal­ly —

    • 3 Var­nish: 1 Gold
    • 2 Var­nish: 1 Sil­ver

    But man­u­fac­tur­er’s advice would over-rule these sug­ges­tions.  The pow­er should have a lit­tle well made in it and the var­nish should be added to this.  A test for readi­ness is to use an ink knife to scoop up the ink and make sure that you can cre­ate a three inch strand of con­tin­u­ous ink flow­ing.

    Too much pow­der will leave too lit­tle var­nish to car­ry the ink and this will leave the pow­der on the sur­face of the fin­ished job which will be prone to rub­bing off.

    Final­ly, whether using ready-mixed or tra­di­tion­al metal­lic inks, you could exper­i­ment by adding a lit­tle colour to see if you can achieve a metal­lic coloured effect on your work.

  • Some Modern Inks

    Some Modern Inks

    Progress in the improve­ment of print­ers’ mate­ri­als is nowa­days so rapid that it is high­ly impor­tant for the print­er to keep in touch with mod­ern devel­op­ments in the basic mate­ri­als of the trade. The main advances in print­ing ink tech­nol­o­gy have been the pro­gres­sive improve­ment of colours, var­nish­es, grind­ing meth­ods, etc.; the intro­duc­tion of out­stand­ing prop­er­ties in com­mon­ly used inks; and the dis­cov­ery of entire­ly new types of inks. These notes are intend­ed to give a few mod­ern lines.

    Blacks

    The aim of the ink mak­er is to pro­duce inks which can be used straight from the tin with­out hav­ing to be doped by the addi­tion of boiled oil, dri­ers or sim­i­lar mate­ri­als. A first-class black should, with­out incor­po­ra­tion of any oth­er mate­r­i­al, pos­sess the fol­low­ing prop­er­ties:

    • High den­si­ty and bril­liance of colour.
    • Suf­fi­cient soft­ness and free­dom from tack to pre­vent pluck­ing and pick­ing of the paper.
    • Rapid dry­ing on the paper but slow dry­ing on the machine, so that the ink remains wet for 24 hours, or prefer­ably 50 hours, on the rollers.
    • Such con­sis­ten­cy and tex­ture that it feeds well with­out hang­ing back in the duct, and does not fill up half-tones.
    • Speed of pen­e­tra­tion so that the print does not set-off, even under the pres­sure of a con­sid­er­able pile of super­im­posed sheets.
    • Quick hard set­ting, enabling back­ing up to be done soon after print­ing.
    • Free­dom from spray, even on high-speed press­es.
    • Applic­a­bil­i­ty to a wide vari­ety of dif­fer­ent papers.

    With regard to the last point, we all know that dif­fer­ent class­es of paper behave dif­fer­ent­ly with the same ink. It is easy to for­mu­late an ink which does not set off on one paper yet sets off marked­ly on anoth­er. Real­iz­ing that the print­er’s choice of paper is often lim­it­ed by prac­ti­cal con­sid­er­a­tions, the ink mak­er so for­mu­lates his stan­dard lines that they are usable on as many dif­fer­ent papers as pos­si­ble.

    The mod­ern intro­duc­tion of high-speed press­es has led to the mak­ing of spe­cial inks for these machines. An ink which has giv­en excel­lent results on a com­par­a­tive­ly slow machine may spray bad­ly when it is tried out on a fast-run­ning one.

    Dur­ing the past year or two, much atten­tion has been paid to improv­ing the set­ting of blacks and pre­vent­ing set-off. There are now obtain­able some new blacks, the phys­i­cal prop­er­ties of which are such that there is a very rapid and firm set on the paper, allow­ing of quick back­ing up, while set-off* is elim­i­nat­ed.

    Non-skinning Bronze Blues

    It is rarely indeed that the ink mak­er puts into his bronze blue inks any dri­ers such as cobalt, man­ganese or lead. This is because the bronze blue pig­ment is itself a pow­er­ful dri­er, and being, of course, present in very high pro­por­tion, caus­es rapid dry­ing and skin­ning.

    Expressed dif­fer­ent­ly, bronze blue, like cobalt, man­ganese and lead dri­ers, is a cat­a­lyst for the reac­tion between lin­seed oil var­nish and oxygen—that is, bronze blue is a sub­stance which increas­es the rate at which the lin­seed oil var­nish, which is present in the ink, com­bines with the oxy­gen in the air to pro­duce a dry film. Cat­a­lysts are used for quick­en­ing up many chem­i­cal process­es.

    When the print­er requires a bronze blue ink which will not skin on the rollers in, say, two days, the ink mak­er is faced with a prob­lem of a dif­fer­ent type from the usu­al prob­lem of dri­ers. It is, of course, impos­si­ble to reduce effec­tive­ly the bronze blue which is at once the pig­ment and the dri­er. Tiie prob­lem is best solved by using a sub­stance, known as a neg­a­tive cat­a­lyst,” which behaves in the oppo­site way to an ordi­nary cat­a­lyst; the neg­a­tive cat­a­lyst reduces the rate at which the ink skins. By using the right neg­a­tive cat­a­lyst in suit­able pro­por­tion (only a very lit­tle is required), it is pos­si­ble to pro­duce a bronze blue of bril­liant lus­tre which will not skin or dry on the rollers even in two days and yet will dry sat­is­fac­to­ri­ly on the paper.

    Coloured News Inks Although coloured news inks are by no means new, it is only in recent times that they have been used to any large extent for adver­tis­ing pur­pos­es. Good qual­i­ty coloured news inks, which work well and do not fill up even on long runs, are now obtain­able at a price suit­ed to news­pa­per work, and it is prob­a­ble that the near future will see a con­sid­er­able increase in the amount of coloured adver­tise­ments.

    Aniline Inks and Syrups

    Ani­line inks are being wide­ly employed nowa­days with good results. These inks con­sist essen­tial­ly of dyes dis­solved in methy­lat­ed spir­it, while oth­er ingre­di­ents are added to impart fast­ness to water, bright­ness, etc., and to pre­vent exces­sive dry­ing on the rollers.

    Ani­line inks are much used in paper bag and sim­i­lar man­u­fac­ture. The dry­ing of the inks is main­ly depen­dent on the rate of absorp­tion and evap­o­ra­tion of the volatile spir­it, and since this is very fast, the print­ed sheet can pass direct­ly from the rub­ber stereo to be processed into the com­plet­ed bag.

    Gen­er­al­ly, a good ani­line ink will be found suit­able for most papers, but there are a few excep­tions. For print­ing on kraft paper, for instance, spe­cial ani­lines are gen­er­al­ly required in order to obtain the max­i­mum bright­ness of colour. Spe­cial sur­faces like tin­foil and cel­lo­phane also require spe­cial inks for best results.

    Where trans­port charges become con­sid­er­able, as is the case with export­ed inks, ani­line syrups may be used instead of ani­line inks. These syrups are so made that when one part of the syrup is mixed with two (some­times three) parts of methy­lat­ed spir­it, the resul­tis an ani­line ink. The stronger syrups (those to be mixed with three parts of spir­it per one part syrup) are so con­cen­trat­ed that, in the case of some (not all) colours, the syrup may be rather too vis­cous and may not imme­di­ate­ly mix with the spir­it. It is, there­fore, rec­om­mend­ed that those syrups, which are con­vert­ible by adding two parts of spir­it to one of syrup, should be used, as these nev­er give trou­ble on mix­ing. These lat­ter syrups are of course cheap­er.

    Spe­cial syrups are obtain­able for use on kraft papers.

    Letterpress Inks for Non-absorbent Surfaces

    A lit­tle may per­haps be said about let­ter­press print­ing of black and coloured inks on sur­faces such as cel­lo­phane, cel­lu­loid and glas­sine. Inks for these mate­ri­als dry almost entire­ly by oxidation—there is prac­ti­cal­ly no dry­ing by absorp­tion or evap­o­ra­tion. Con­se­quent­ly spe­cial quick-dry­ing var­nish­es are used.

    The print­er should care­ful­ly avoid the intro­duc­tion of any non-dry­ing ingre­di­ents into such inks. For instance, in wash­ing up pre­vi­ous to a run, par­tic­u­lar .care should be tak­en to remove traces of wash-up liq­uid from the rollers and the forme. If the print­ing were done on ordi­nary papers, the pres­ence of a lit­tle non-dry­ing liq­uid would not mat­ter so much— although here, too, there is an ele­ment of dan­ger. On non-absorbent papers, how­ev­er, the dan­ger is con­sid­er­ably increased, because the non-dry­ing liq­uid remains with the ink on the sur­face and may seri­ous­ly ham­per the hard­en­ing of the print.

    Gold and Silver Letterpress and Photogravure Inks

    When the first exper­i­ments were made towards pro­duc­ing metal­lic let­ter­press inks, the main dif­fi­cul­ty was to com­bine the desir­able prop­er­ties of resis­tance to rub­bing, extreme­ly high lus­tre, and non-dry­ing on the machine dur­ing print­ing. A very large amount of work was in fact done on this prob­lem, with the result that excep­tion­al­ly bril­liant inks which do not wipe off, or oth­er­wise mis­be­have, are on the mar­ket.

    More recent­ly, metal­lic pho­togravures have been intro­duced, and the efforts of ink mak­ers’ lab­o­ra­to­ries have result­ed in the avail­abil­i­ty of very bright, firm­ly-adher­ing metal­lic gravures which work well on the machine.

    Overprinting Varnishes

    As is well known, there are two main types of over­print­ing var­nish­es, one con­tain­ing a pro­por­tion of volatile liq­uid such as methy­lat­ed spir­it or tur­pen­tine, and the oth­er com­posed entire­ly of non-volatile ingre­di­ents. Although the for­mer type is excel­lent as far as it goes, it is prob­a­ble that it will be increas­ing­ly dis­placed by the non-volatile var­nish­es. These lat­ter are easy of appli­ca­tion, being print­able in much the same way as ordi­nary let­ter­press inks; they can also be safe­ly used to over­print many colours which would bleed in a methy­lat­ed spir­it var­nish.

    Research has been in the direc­tion of increas­ing the gloss and improv­ing the work­ing qual­i­ties of the over­print­ing var­nish. Some mod­ern prepa­ra­tions are quite soft and eas­i­ly work­able, and yield a hard, smooth film of extreme­ly high gloss, not only when applied to a dry non-absorbent ink lay­er, but also when print­ed direct­ly on to the paper. Coloured over­print­ing var­nish­es are also avail­able.

    Odourless Inks and Varnishes

    For some pur­pos­es, par­tic­u­lar­ly for print­ing on food wrap­pers, it is some­times advis­able to use an ink hav­ing as lit­tle odour as pos­si­ble. Var­nish­es made in the ordi­nary way pos­sess a slight smell which is impart­ed to inks made from them.

    There are two meth­ods of pro­duc­ing an ink which does not pos­sess the smell of ordi­nary var­nish. Either there can be incor­po­rat­ed with the ink a small quan­ti­ty of a per­fume which sat­is­fac­to­ri­ly masks the oth­er smells, or odour­less var­nish­es (made by spe­cial process­es) can be used. Both meth­ods can be com­bined.

    Offset and Litho Inks

    Improve­ments in off­set and litho inks have includ­ed the increas­ing of the water resis­tance and the strength of colour. For—good qual­i­ty off­set work, par­tic­u­lar­ly where in com­pe­ti­tion with pho­togravure process­es, great colour inten­si­ty of the ink is, of course, high­ly desir­able, since the film of ink in the off­set print is so thin.

    One type of mod­ern off­set ink con­tains spe­cial water-insol­u­ble dyestuffs in addi­tion to the usu­al pig­ments, a device which results in great colour strength and quite sat­is­fac­to­ry resis­tance to water.

    Washing Up—Ink Removers

    A vari­ety of good ink removers have been in use for a long time and are well known, but a point of which many are unaware is that there are spe­cial removers for dry ink. A roller or type face which con­tains patch­es of dry ink will require a con­sid­er­able amount of labo­ri­ous scrub­bing with an ordi­nary ink remover before it is clean, but with spe­cial sol­vents or sol­vent mix­tures, it is only nec­es­sary to moist­en the sur­face. After a few min­utes the pow­er­ful action of the sol­vent uproots the dry film. Some­times it may be prefer­able to remove the worst of the dry film with the spe­cial sol­vent and then to fin­ish off with an ordi­nary ink remover. In this way, the clean­ing of dry ink can be done in a tenth of the time usu­al­ly employed. Of course, the sol­vent does not injure the roller or type face in any way.

    With regard to the clean­ing of ordi­nary ani­line inks from the machine, methy­lat­ed spir­it is the stan­dard medi­um for this pur­pose. The best ani­lines do not dry on the rollers too quick­ly, but if the rollers or oth­er parts have been left inky overnight, it may be desir­able to wet the sur­face with a spe­cial ani­line ink remover before fin­ish­ing off the clean­ing with methy­lat­ed spir­it.

    Progress in the improve­ment of print­ers’ mate­ri­als is nowa­days so rapid that it is high­ly impor­tant for the print­er to keep in touch with mod­ern devel­op­ments in the basic mate­ri­als of the trade. The main advances in print­ing ink tech­nol­o­gy have been the pro­gres­sive improve­ment of colours, var­nish­es, grind­ing meth­ods, etc.; the intro­duc­tion of out­stand­ing prop­er­ties in com­mon­ly used inks; and the dis­cov­ery of entire­ly new types of inks. These notes are intend­ed to give a few mod­ern lines,
    Blacks
    The aim of the ink mak­er is to pro­duce inks which can be used straight from the tin with­out hav­ing to be doped by the addi­tion of boiled oil, dri­ers or sim­i­lar mate­ri­als. A first-class black should, with­out incor­po­ra­tion of any oth­er mate­r­i­al, pos­sess the fol­low­ing prop­er­ties:
    High den­si­ty and bril­liance of colour.
    Suf­fi­cient soft­ness and free­dom from tack to pre­vent pluck­ing and pick­ing of the paper.
    Rapid dry­ing on the paper but slow dry­ing on the machine, so that the ink remains wet for 24 hours, or prefer­ably 50 hours, on the rollers.
    Such con­sis­ten­cy and tex­ture that it feeds well with­out hang­ing back in the duct, and does not fill up half-tones.
    Speed of pen­e­tra­tion so that the print does not set-off, even under the pres­sure of a con­sid­er­able pile of super­im­posed sheets.
    Quick hard set­ting, enabling back­ing up to be done soon after print­ing.
    Free­dom from spray, even on high-speed press­es.
    Applic­a­bil­i­ty to a wide vari­ety of dif­fer­ent papers.
    With regard to the last point, we all know that dif­fer­ent class­es of paper behave dif­fer­ent­ly with the same ink. It is easy to for­mu­late an ink which does not set off on one paper yet sets off marked­ly on anoth­er. Real­iz­ing that the print­er’s choice of paper is often lim­it­ed by prac­ti­cal con­sid­er­a­tions, the ink mak­er so for­mu­lates his stan­dard lines that they are usable on as many dif­fer­ent papers as pos­si­ble.
    The mod­ern intro­duc­tion of high-speed press­es has led to the mak­ing of spe­cial inks for these machines. An ink which has giv­en excel­lent results on a com­par­a­tive­ly slow machine may spray bad­ly when it is tried out on a fast-run­ning one.
    Dur­ing the past year or two, much atten­tion has been paid to improv­ing the set­ting of blacks and pre­vent­ing set-off. There are now obtain­able some new blacks, the phys­i­cal prop­er­ties of which are such that there is a very rapid and firm set on the paper, allow­ing of quick back­ing up, while set-off* is elim­i­nat­ed.
    Non-skin­ning Bronze Blues
    It is rarely indeed that the ink mak­er puts into his bronze blue inks any dri­ers such as cobalt, man­ganese or lead. This is because the bronze blue pig­ment is itself a pow­er­ful dri­er, and being, of course, present in very high pro­por­tion, caus­es rapid dry­ing and skin­ning.
    Expressed dif­fer­ent­ly, bronze blue, like cobalt, man­ganese and lead dri­ers, is a cat­a­lyst for the reac­tion between lin­seed oil var­nish and oxygen—that is, bronze blue is a sub­stance which increas­es the rate at which the lin­seed oil var­nish, which is present in the ink, com­bines with the oxy­gen in the air to pro­duce a dry film. Cat­a­lysts are used for quick­en­ing up many chem­i­cal process­es.
    When the print­er requires a bronze blue ink which will not skin on the rollers in, say, two days, the ink mak­er is faced with a prob­lem of a dif­fer­ent type from the usu­al prob­lem of dri­ers. It is, of course, impos­si­ble to reduce effec­tive­ly the bronze blue which is at once the pig­ment and the dri­er. Tiie prob­lem is best solved by using a sub­stance, known as a neg­a­tive cat­a­lyst,” which behaves in the oppo­site way to an ordi­nary cat­a­lyst; the neg­a­tive cat­a­lyst reduces the rate at which the ink skins. By using the right neg­a­tive cat­a­lyst in suit­able pro­por­tion (only a very lit­tle is required), it is pos­si­ble to pro­duce a bronze blue of bril­liant lus­tre which will not skin or dry on the rollers even in two days and yet will dry sat­is­fac­to­ri­ly on the paper.
    Coloured News Inks Although coloured news inks are by no means new, it is only in recent times that they have been used to any large extent for adver­tis­ing pur­pos­es. Good qual­i­ty coloured news inks, which work well and do not fill up even on long runs, are now obtain­able at a price suit­ed to news­pa­per work, and it is prob­a­ble that the near future will see a con­sid­er­able increase in the amount of coloured adver­tise­ments.
    Ani­line Inks and Syrups
    Ani­line inks are being wide­ly employed nowa­days with good results. These inks con­sist essen­tial­ly of dyes dis­solved in methy­lat­ed spir­it, while oth­er ingre­di­ents are added to impart fast­ness to water, bright­ness, etc., and to pre­vent exces­sive dry­ing on the rollers.
    Ani­line inks are much used in paper bag and sim­i­lar man­u­fac­ture. The dry­ing of the inks is main­ly depen­dent on the rate of absorp­tion and evap­o­ra­tion of the volatile spir­it, and since this is very fast, the print­ed sheet can pass direct­ly from the rub­ber stereo to be processed into the com­plet­ed bag.
    Gen­er­al­ly, a good ani­line ink will be found suit­able for most papers, but there are a few excep­tions. For print­ing on kraft paper, for instance, spe­cial ani­lines are gen­er­al­ly required in order to obtain the max­i­mum bright­ness of colour. Spe­cial sur­faces like tin­foil and cel­lo­phane also require spe­cial inks for best results.
    Where trans­port charges become con­sid­er­able, as is the case with export­ed inks, ani­line syrups may be used instead of ani­line inks. These syrups are so made that when one part of the syrup is mixed with two (some­times three) parts of methy­lat­ed spir­it, the result

    This arti­cle from the British Print­er, 1934 and writ­ten by J. D. Cohen, BSc, AIC

  • Suppliers

    Suppliers

    There are a rea­son­able num­ber of sup­pli­ers for your let­ter­press needs. This lim­it­ed list is based on per­son­al rec­om­men­da­tions. Please con­tact me if you want to rec­om­mend a sup­pli­er or want to be added.  The Let­ter­press Alive site pro­vides a more com­pre­hen­sive list of cur­rent sup­pli­ers.

    Blockmakers

    Per­son­al­ly used and rec­om­mend — Metal­lic Ele­phant, or Cen­tu­ri­on Graph­ics.

    Printers’ Engineer

    Tony Wood, Leeds: 0113 260 6134http://www.impression-works.co.uk/

    Rollers

    Rollers for com­mon hand press­es are avail­able from a num­ber of UK sources.  Try Adana’s par­ent com­pa­ny — Caslon.

    The Logan Press

    Patrick Roe runs a Mono­type oper­a­tion; a let­ter­press print­ing works; and also a ser­vice to move and restore machin­ery!  Have a look at http://www.theloganpress.co.uk for details.

    Alderson & Co

    Alder­son & CO Lim­it­ed spe­cialise in all things let­ter­press. Full Restora­tion, Sales, Ser­vice, Break­down and Relo­ca­tion of all Let­ter­press Machin­ery. Con­tact Neil Alder­son on 07834045453 or neil@aldersonco.co.uk.

    Caslon

    Caslon, Adana’s par­ent com­pa­ny, are again pro­duc­ing Adana machines and all the asso­ci­at­ed equip­ment and sup­plies.

    Adana Shop

    France-based sup­pli­er of ren­o­vat­ed Adana machines.  http://adanashop.info/

  • Ink

    Ink

    You will need two small palette knives with springy blades around 150mm long, one with a round end, one a push-knife (with a flat end like a a high-class dec­o­ra­tors scraper). Also a small hand-roller, say 75mm wide x 25mm diam­e­ter, a flat ink slab 300 x 300mm or larg­er, turps and clean­ing rags-or kitchen roll. Some might pre­fer to work in rub­ber gloves.

    Most print­ing ink comes in cans, of a size which many com­mer­cial print­ers use up in one job! Nev­er­the­less, such cans gen­er­al­ly have a close-fit­ting lid-don’t dam­age it! Inside a fresh can the ink is cov­ered by an air­tight’ waxed-paper or plas­tic disc, care­ful­ly peel this back and skim a suit­able amount from the sur­face, using the push-knife with­out dig­ging down. A blob the size of half a golf-ball is suf­fi­cient for sev­er­al hun­dred cards or let­ter­heads. Smooth the air­tight disc back: be care­ful to avoid trap­ping any pock­ets of air. The air­tight disc restricts oxi­da­tion to a thin ring of ink around the wall of the can. If you’ve inher­it­ed a care­less­ly used can you’ll waste, not only time, but more ink than you can use, in try­ing to pick out bits of oxi­dised ink skin’-hard insol­u­ble chips-well worth avoid­ing.

    Even in warm con­di­tions, ink needs work­ing’ to make it usable. Don’t spread ink beyond a patch the width of your hand-roller but, with the round-end knife, pum­mel, lift, fold and beat it vig­or­ous­ly. Fric­tion between the gran­ules of pig­ment and medi­um will warm and loosen the ink. Test occa­sion­al­ly by lift­ing the knife until the strand of ink con­nect­ing knife to slab breaks; each time you’ll notice the strand length­en before break­ing. When you can draw up a 100150mm strand, the ink is use­able-con­sis­ten­cy sim­i­lar to gold­en syrup — how deli­cious­ly un-healthy!

    Scrape most of the ink into a blob and push it out of the way to be your reserve. Roll your hand-roller back and forth over the remain­ing patch of ink, lift­ing the roller between strokes to ensure all of its cir­cum­fer­ence is even­ly coat­ed. Trans­fer, with the hand-roller, a coat­ing of ink to the ink-plate or disc of your press and, before clip­ping in the forme, work the press-rollers to and fro until they and the disc are even­ly coat­ed. Clip in the forme and, with grip­pers, etc. well clear of the type, work the rollers across ink disc and type forme sev­er­al times with­out actu­al­ly ful­ly clos­ing plat­en to bed. Now press down ful­ly and take a tri­al pull on the tym­pan (the card pack­ing on the plat­en) and exam­ine it care­ful­ly.

    If the impres­sion is even, but under-impressed and under-inked, the thick­ness of a sheet of paper or card will improve it. Care­ful­ly posi­tion lay-gauges and grip­pers to locate the paper with­out hit­ting the type and try a sheet. If still under-inked, add a lit­tle more and try anoth­er pull; don’t over-ink, build up grad­u­al­ly.

    An un-even impres­sion demands local pres­sure adjust­ment; weak at the hinge end of the plat­en requires more tym­pan pack­ing, weak at the open end requires less. One cor­ner weak, or heavy demands care­ful adjust­ment of the pres­sure screws behind the bed. If indi­vid­ual let­ters print too strong or too weak, check for and replace worn let­ters, plane it (again?) on a clean impos­ing sur­face and try again.

    This guide kind­ly con­tributed by John R Smith of the Old Forge Press. Orig­i­nal­ly appeared in the newslet­ter of the Oxford Guild of Print­ers

    Ink Additives

    White Ink
    White Ink (from Flickr)

    Com­mer­cial print­ers used a myr­i­ad of addi­tion­al ingre­di­ents to make a dif­fer­ence to their inks.  When print­ers were using a great mass of ink the unit price was very impor­tant, and so cheap ink was com­mon.  A sur­vey of com­mer­cial print­ers showed that com­mon addi­tions at one time were —

    • French chalk
    • Paraf­fin wax
    • Lard
    • Coconut oil
    • Beeswax
    • Lubri­cat­ing oil

    Work was done to reduce the num­ber of addi­tives (known as dopes) to a real­is­tic num­ber.  The list below should cov­er almost all changes need­ed to inks —

    • Heavy Var­nish
      will stiff­en the ink and also make it dry a lit­tle quick­er
    • Medi­um Var­nish
      will soft­en the ink, use­ful for print­ing on a soft­er paper
    • Reduc­er (‘Num­ber 1’ from a com­mer­cial sup­pli­er)
      this will slow dry­ing but reduces pick­ing: the action of the ink pulling the sur­face of the paper away from the main body of the paper
    • Super­mat­ting
      this addi­tive will help ink to dry when over­print­ing on a sur­face that will not allow ink to be absorbed, like plas­tic or met­al foil
    • Reduc­er (‘Num­ber 2’ from a com­mer­cial sup­pli­er)
      This helps ink soak in to the paper

    While some print­ers had a ten­den­cy to add dopes to every ink, the rec­om­men­da­tion of the experts was clear: ink mak­er pro­duce inks that should work direct from the can.  Seek advice from your ink man­u­fac­tur­er about what is best for a par­tic­u­lar job and paper.

  • Paper

    Paper

    Tra­di­tion­al­ly those of us who print let­ter­press on a small scale often used to beg or buy off­cuts from com­me­cial print­ers, few of whom went whol­ly litho until the 1970s. Since then papers for litho have become increas­ing­ly dif­fer­ent to those suit­able for let­ter­press. The lat­ter, essen­tial­ly soft, absorbent and spongy, allow type to sink in with­out exces­sive­ly dis­tort­ing the oth­er side of the sheet. This enables one to achieve a decent impres­sion from rather worn case type whose char­ac­ters are no longer of pre­cise­ly con­sis­tent height. Such papers are not suit­ed to mod­ern high-speed pho­tolith­o­g­ra­phy which demands hard non-absorbent sur­faces which require less ink and don’t shed fibres on con­tact with plate-damp­ing solu­tions.

    With unworn type, newish rollers and near per­fect dis­tri­b­u­tion of ink and pres­sure it is pos­si­ble to print kiss impres­sion (ie no per­ceiv­able inden­ta­tion) let­ter­press on such paper if it is smooth sur­faced, although the slight­est over-ink­ing will result in a splodgy edge to the print­ed let­ters. Such rel­a­tive­ly brit­tle papers, when giv­en a tex­tured or embossed sur­face and even those made to resem­ble a tra­di­tion­al laid paper, such as the mod­ern ver­sion of Con­queror are, though, total­ly unsuit­ed to let­ter­press and will quick­ly wear out ones type rather than accept a decent impres­sion. Many cur­rent pres­tige’ brand­ed papers do not resem­ble in sub­stance or char­ac­ter those pro­duced under the same name thir­ty or more years ago: beware!

    The days when one could find paper suit­able for let­ter­press in a sta­tion­er’s shop are long gone.

    For let­ter­press, choose paper with a soft, silky sur­face and a resilient core which allows type to bite with­out over­ly emboss­ing the oth­er side.

    You don’t have to splurge on hand-made paper — mould-made paper, made on a slow­ly rotat­ing wire-mesh drum is more con­sis­tent and there­fore eas­i­er to print. Often made of sim­i­lar raw mate­ri­als, it is more afford­able whilst gen­er­al­ly of neu­tral ph and thus regard­ed as archival­ly per­ma­nent and will cer­tain­ly out­last most mod­ern mass-pro­duced papers. Cer­tain machine-made papers made on a wire-mesh con­vey­or belt, are of equal per­ma­nence and still less expen­sive. But avoid all hard, shiny, arti­fi­cial­ly tex­tured stock.

    Most machine or mould-made paper has a def­i­nite grain direc­tion; along the grain it is stiffer but eas­i­er to tear, across the grain it will more read­i­ly curl but is hard­er to tear. Book pages should have the grain ver­ti­cal so that they open and lie prop­er­ly, thus for a book project you need short-grain A4, which fold­ed will give long-grain A5 pages. A ream of A4 will be enough for more than 200 eight-page pam­phlets with an allowance for wastage.

    Think in terms of 100 to 160 gsm-or thick­er if you wish. Con­sid­er hav­ing a larg­er sheet cut down to approx­i­mate­ly A4 size and using the off­cuts for future projects.

    Take the advice of a knowl­edge­able spe­cial­ist paper mer­chant. Spe­cial­ist paper-mer­chants, who will advise on and sup­ply suit­able paper in small sizes and quan­ti­ties include-

    • Paper Resources Ltd., (Peter Gilbert and Simon Gilling­ham) Low­er Mill House, Mil­ton Road, Ship­ton Under Wych­wood, OX7 6XU (tele­phone 01933 276 689)
    • John Pur­cell Paper, 15, Rum­sey Road, Lon­don SW9 0TR (tele­phone 0207 737 5199) John Pur­cel­l’s cat­a­logue indi­cates the suit­abil­i­ty of each list­ed paper and includes an excel­lent four page arti­cle out­lin­ing the char­ac­ter­is­tics of all the class­es of paper one is like­ly to wish to use.

    This guide kind­ly con­tributed by John R Smith of the Old Forge Press. Orig­i­nal­ly appeared in the newslet­ter of the Oxford Guild of Print­ers