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See also: engineers
.
The earliest discovered See also: process, the ferroprussiate, is still the one most largely used, on account of its See also: economy and permanence, combined with a simplicity of manipulation that renders it highly suitable for office use; it was invented in 1840 by See also: Sir See also: John
See also: Herschel
.
This method has the disadvantage that the copies are blue in colour, and, as it is a negative process, the black lines of the See also: original become the See also: white lines of the
See also: print; the development is by washing in See also: water, so that the important feature of accuracy of See also: scale is lost
.
The next step of importance was in 1864, when See also: William Willis of
See also: Birmingham, the See also: father of the inventor of the platinotype See also: system of photographic printing, invented the aniline process
.
In this method a paper sensitized with bichromate of potassium is exposed to See also: light, with the document (generally a tracing) in front of it; the unprotected lines are bleached out, but the protected ones remain and are See also: developed by contact with vapour of aniline, a subsequent washing for the removal of chemicals completing the print
.
For twenty years this process was successfully used with little opposition other than that of the blue prints previously referred to, and of the Pellet process, which gave a blue See also: line on a white ground, the inventor being associated throughout with the See also: firm of Vincent Brooks, See also: Day & Son; but since that See also: time a large number of other methods have come into use, some requiring a paper negative in the first instance and some not, but all much aided by improved methods of applying electric light
.
The earliest of these improved systems utilizing electric light was that invented by Mr B
.
J
.
See also: Hall, whose photo-copier consists of two semi-circular glasses forming a cylinder, which may be revolved, and through which an arc lamp travels, while the tracing and sensitized paper are strapped to its
See also: outer See also: surface
.
Between 1900 and 1908 See also: attention was chiefly directed to overcoming the variation of scale that is inevitable in all systems that require a final washing in water either for development o: for the removal of chemicals; and at least four excellent systems have arisen
.
While Mr F
.
R . Vandyke was perfecting the system which he patented in 1901 and which has been adopted by the Ordnance Survey Department at Southampton, Messrs Vincent Brooks, Day & Son were working along somewhat similar lines, the outcome of which was their " True-to-Scale Photo Litho " system . In both these methods a reversedSee also: positive print is secured on See also: zinc, from which copies can be made in printer's ink of any colour by the usual lithographic method on almost any material that may be desired
.
The plates prepared by these methods are so sensitive to light that excellent results can be secured from drawings made even on semi-transparent material such as See also: drawing paper, and of course the plates when made are capable of alteration or addition and can be stored for reprints
.
An admirable process had since been invented by MM
.
Dorel Freres of See also: Paris, which is even more expeditious, and being less in See also: prime cost is more suitable when only a small number of prints is required
.
In this See also: case a large See also: sheet of thin zinc is coated with chemically-treated See also: gelatin, with the result that when a ferroprussiate print is pressed down on it either with the See also: hand or by a See also: roller the protected lines affect the gelatin in such a way that the parts that have been in contact with them receive a greasy ink while the See also: remainder of the surface rejects it, so that a small number (not generally exceeding six) of very excellent prints can be secured
.
The inventors refrained from taking out a patent either in See also: France or elsewhere, preferring to
See also: work their invention as a secret process, but the See also: formula appears either to have leaked out or to have been discovered, so that the process is, perhaps with slight variations, used under numerous names
.
With the aid of the various systems of rotary copiers, by which blue prints of almost any length can be secured, Dorel prints identical in scale with the originals have been made of the length of 22 feet
.
An interesting kindred process but with well defined variations is known as'velography
.
For the technical and chemical details of the various methods reference may be made to Ferric and Heliographic Processes by G
.
E
.
See also: Brown (Dawbarn &
See also: Ward)
.
(F
.
V
.
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