Many autotype prints were produced and the process was popular well into the 20th century, particularly since autotype prints are very long lasting ( it is said that an autotype could last up to 500 years without fading ).
12.
Many autotype prints were produced and the process was popular well into the 20th century, particularly since autotype prints are very long lasting ( it is said that an autotype could last up to 500 years without fading ).
13.
His " British Mezzotinto Portraits & with Biographical Notes " ( London, 1878 84, 4 pts . ) consists of a full catalogue of plates executed before 1820, with 125 autotypes from plates in Smith's possession.
14.
The term may also apply to the Autotype Company, founded in London in 1868 as the " Autotype Fine Art Company ", which was one of the pioneers in the carbon print and autotype reproduction process and which still exists as a supplier of coated films.
15.
The term may also apply to the Autotype Company, founded in London in 1868 as the " Autotype Fine Art Company ", which was one of the pioneers in the carbon print and autotype reproduction process and which still exists as a supplier of coated films.
16.
The term may also apply to the Autotype Company, founded in London in 1868 as the " Autotype Fine Art Company ", which was one of the pioneers in the carbon print and autotype reproduction process and which still exists as a supplier of coated films.
17.
Cloisterham " given here would have been engraved as illustrations to the story . " Hull also drew some of the illustrations to John Parsons Earwaker's " East Cheshire, Past and Present " ( 1877 81 ), and his drawings of the mill at Ambleside and Wythburn Church were reproduced in autotype.
18.
Macdermid Autotype, the last manufacturer of the gelatin pigment paper ( tissue ) needed to make traditional copper plate photogravure, announced the end of their production in August 2009 . Since then, other manufacturers, including Bostick & Sullivan, Phoenix Gravure, and others in India, Taiwan, and Japan have begun supplying gelatin pigment paper ( resist tissue ) to the market.
19.
In 1905 " The Strand Magazine " noted that it was the most popular picture in the Tate Gallery, and remarked that " there are few print-sellers who fail to exhibit it in their windows . " After Watts's death the Autotype Company purchased from Mary Seton Watts the rights to make carbon print copies of " Hope ", making reproductions of the image affordable for poorer households, and in 1908 engraver Emery Walker began to sell full-colour photogravure prints of " Hope ", the first publicly available high-quality colour reproductions of the image.