Union Recorder 200 Years | Page 13

OW IT’S MADE PAPER PRODUCTION nd camera cards, the o develop negatives, wanted to use with a Year’s Eve fire, and ve the chosen photo inted to be placed on e layout. Pictured are e negatives with the rcled photo printed nd ready to be placed. n order to know the ize to make the photos, an editor would use a piece of paper to put the scale, column size and description of the left. T Two other ways negatives were viewed. The left is a slide that the paper would recieve from either a reporter or a contributing photog- rapher to look at to print. Above are medium format negatives. Medium format cameras were used before standard film cameras. imeliness is of the essence in the newspaper business. Once stories were researched, reported, written and then edited, rows of compositors would be poised to work all night setting type for the next day’s paper. With the coming of the telegraph to parts of the U.S. in the mid-19th century, editors commonly kept one or two compositors late into the night ready to set stories that came in from the telegraph. The dots and dashes of the telegraph message, often consisting of just key words and phrases, were hastily transcribed by the te- legrapher and given directly to the typesetters. Compositors were skilled enough to decipher the telegrapher’s scribbles, compose full sentences while setting type (letter by letter) by hand, and complete the entire story by deadline. The Linotype machine, developed in the 1880s, combined the processes of composing text, casting type, and redistributing the type molds. By working a keyboard, the Linotype operator assembled molds, or matrices, of letters, num- bers, or punctuation marks in sequence. The matrices were then mechanically held in place while molten type metal was forced into them, creating a line of type (“lin’ o’ type”). The individual matrices were automatically replaced in the machine’s magazine for reuse. The Linotype increased the speed of a typesetter fourfold. Once a story was received, the type was set by hand, letter by letter. A typesetter dropped small metal letters into a hand-held tray called a “stick.” Individual lines of type were then placed by hand onto a page form. When a page was completed, it was then sent to a plate room where a curved metal plate was made from the page form. The page form was then placed on the printing press. Modern technology has re- placed the Linotype process through a method called phototypesetting. The page is laid out with slight adjustments allowed. The final version of the page is then approved by the editor on duty and sent for processing There, the page is taken in its computer format and transferred onto film in an image setter. The film is then taken to a processor who develops it and adjusts it for its final look. Photo- graphs are scanned into another computer and inserted into the page layout. The pages that are set to be printed together are then taped down onto a device called a “stripper.” The strippers are then put into frames on light-sensitive film, and the image of each page is burned onto the film. A negative is then made of the whole page, photographs and text. The film of the page, usually done two pages at a time, is then placed on a lighted box. Next, an aluminum plate containing a light-sensitive coating is placed on top of the image of the pages. The light box is then switched on, and ultraviolet light develops the image of the pages onto the aluminum plate. The aluminum plate is then bent at the edges so that it will fit into a press, and is fitted onto plate cylinders. The aluminum plates of each page next move on to the actual printing press. The plate cylinders then press the image of the page onto a blanket cylinder, leaving a version of the page’s image on the cylinder’s soft material. When the paper runs through the press, the blanket cylinder presses the image onto it. The chemical reaction of the ink, which contains oil, and jets of water into the process result in the actual newspaper page of black or colored images on a white background. Since oil and water do not mix, the areas where ink should adhere to the page are black or colored, and water washes away the parts where ink is not needed. Next, the large sheets of printed newsprint move on to another large piece of machinery called a folder. There, the pages are cut individually and folded in order. This entire printing process can move as fast as 60,000 copies per hour. **from madehow.com 200th l 13