Of Copying
82. The two last-mentioned sources
of excellence in the work produced by machinery depend
on a principle which pervades a very large portion
of all manufactures, and is one upon which the cheapness
of the articles produced seems greatly to depend.
The principle alluded to is that of copying, taken
in its most extensive sense. Almost unlimited
pains are, in some instances, bestowed on the original,
from which a series of copies is to be produced; and
the larger the number of these copies, the more care
and pains can the manufacturer afford to lavish upon
the original. It may thus happen, that the instrument
or tool actually producing the work, shall cost five
or even ten thousand times the price of each individual
specimen of its power.
As the system of copying is of so
much importance, and of such extensive use in the
arts, it will be convenient to classify a considerable
number of those processes in which it is employed.
The following enumeration however is not offered as
a complete list; and the explanations are restricted
to the shortest possible detail which is consistent
with a due regard to making the subject intelligible.
Operations of copying are effected
under the following circumstances:
by printing from cavities by stamping
by printing from surface by punching
by casting with elongation
by moulding with altered dimensions
Of printing from cavities
83. The art of printing, in all
its numerous departments, is essentially an art of
copying. Under its two great divisions, printing
from hollow lines, as in copperplate, and printing
from surface, as in block printing, are comprised
numerous arts.
84. Copperplate printing.
In this instance, the copies are made by transferring
to paper, by means of pressure, a thick ink, from
the hollows and lines cut in the copper. An artist
will sometimes exhaust the labour of one or two years
upon engraving a plate, which will not, in some cases
furnish above five hundred copies in a state of perfection.
85. Engravings on steel.
This art is like that of engraving on copper, except
that the number of copies is far less limited.
A bank-note engraved as a copperplate, will not give
above three thousand impressions without a sensible
deterioration. Two impressions of a bank-note
engraved on steel were examined by one of our most
eminent artists,(1) who found it difficult to pronounce
with any confidence, which was the earliest impression.
One of these was a proof from amongst the first thousand,
the other was taken after between seventy and eighty
thousand had been printed off.
86. Music printing. Music
is usually printed from pewter plates, on which the
characters have been impressed by steel punches.
The metal being much softer than copper, is liable
to scratches, which detain a small portion of the
ink. This is the reason of the dirty appearance
of printed music. A new process has recently
been invented by Mr Cowper, by which this inconvenience
will be avoided. The improved method, which give
sharpness to the characters, is still an art of copying;
but it is effected by surface printing, nearly in
the same manner as calico-printing from blocks, to
be described hereafter, 96. The method of printing
music from pewter plates, although by far the most
frequently made use of, is not the only one employed,
for music is occasionally printed from stone.
Sometimes also it is printed with moveable type; and
occasionally the musical characters are printed on
the paper, and the lines printed afterwards.
Specimens of both these latter modes of music-printing
may be seen in the splendid collection of impressions
from the types of the press of Bodoni at Parma:
but notwithstanding the great care bestowed on the
execution of that work, the perpetual interruption
of continuity in the lines, arising from the use of
moveable types, when the characters and lines are
printed at the same time, is apparent.
87. Calico printing from cylinders.
Many of the patterns on printed calicos are copies
by printing from copper cylinders about four or five
inches in diameter, on which the desired pattern has
been previously engraved. One portion of the
cylinders is exposed to the ink, whilst an elastic
scraper of very thin steel, by being pressed forcibly
against another part, removes all superfluous ink
from the surface previously to its reaching the cloth.
A piece of calico twenty-eight yards in length rolls
through this press, and is printed in four or five
minutes.
88. Printing from perforated
sheets of metal, or stencilling. Very thin brass
is sometimes perforated in the form of letters, usually
those of a name; this is placed on any substance which
it is required to mark, and a brush dipped in some
paint is passed over the brass. Those parts which
are cut away admit the paint. and thus a copy of the
name appears on the substance below. This method,
which affords rather a coarse copy, is sometimes used
for paper with which rooms are covered, and more especially
for the borders. If a portion be required to
match an old pattern, this is, perhaps the most economical
way of producing it.
89. Coloured impressions of leaves
upon paper may be made by a kind of surface printing.
Such leaves are chosen as have considerable inequalities:
the elevated parts of these are covered, by means
of an inking ball, with a mixture of some pigment
ground up in linseed oil; the leaf is then placed between
two sheets of paper, and being gently pressed, the
impression from the elevated parts on each side appear
on the corresponding sheets of paper.
90. The beautiful red cotton
handkerchiefs dyed at Glasgow have their pattern given
to them by a process similar to stencilling, except
that instead of printing from a pattern, the reverse
operation that of discharging a part of the colour
from a cloth already dyed—is performed.
A number of handkerchiefs are pressed with very great
force between two plates of metal, which are similarly
perforated with round or lozenge-shaped holes, according
to the intended pattern. The upper plate of metal
is surrounded by a rim, and a fluid which has the
property of discharging the red dye is poured upon
that plate. This liquid passes through the holes
in the metal, and also through the calico; but, owing
to the great pressure opposite all the parts of the
plates not cut away, it does not spread itself beyond
the pattern. After this, the handkerchiefs are
washed, and the pattern of each is a copy of the perforations
in the metal-plate used in the process.
Another mode by which a pattern is
formed by discharging colour from a previously dyed
cloth, is to print on it a pattern with paste; then,
passing it into the dying-vat, it comes out dyed of
one uniform colour But the paste has protected the
fibres of the cotton from the action of the dye or
mordant; and when the cloth so dyed is well washed,
the paste is dissolved, and leaves uncoloured all
those parts of the cloth to which it was applied.
Printing from surface
91. This second department of
printing is of more frequent application in the arts
than that which has just been considered.
92. Printing from wooden blocks.
A block of box wood is, in this instance, the substance
out of which the pattern is formed: the design
being sketched upon it, the workman cuts away with
sharp tools every part except the lines to be represented
in the impression. This is exactly the reverse
of the process of engraving on copper, in which every
line to be represented is cut away. The ink,
instead of filling the cavities cut in the wood, is
spread upon the surface which remains, and is thence
transferred to the paper.
93. Printing from moveable types.
This is the most important in its influence of all
the arts of copying. It possesses a singular
peculiarity, in the immense subdivision of the parts
that form the pattern. After that pattern has
furnished thousands of copies, the same individual
elements may be arranged again and again in other
forms, and thus supply multitudes of originals, from
each of which thousands of their copied impressions
may flow. It also possesses this advantage, that
woodcuts may be used along with the letterpress, and
impressions taken from both at the same operation.
94. Printing from stereotype.
This mode of producing copies is very similar to the
preceding. There are two modes by which stereotype
plates are produced. In that most generally adopted
a mould is taken in plaster from the moveable types,
and in this the stereotype plate is cast. Another
method has been employed in France: instead of
composing the work in moveable type, it was set up
in moveable copper matrices; each matrix being in fact
a piece of copper of the same size as the type, and
having the impression of the letter sunk into its
surface instead of projecting in relief. A stereotype
plate may, it is evident, be obtained at once from
this arrangement of matrices. The objection to
the plan is the great expense of keeping so large a
collection of matrices.
As the original composition does not
readily admit of change, stereotype plates can only
be applied with advantage to cases where an extraordinary
number of copies are demanded, or where the work consists
of figures, and it is of great importance to ensure
accuracy. Trifling alterations may, however, be
made in it from time to time; and thus mathematical
tables may, by the gradual extirpation of error, at
last become perfect. This mode of producing copies
possesses, in common with that by moveable types,
the advantage of admitting the use of woodcuts:
the copy of the woodcut in the stereotype plate being
equally perfect. with that of the moveable type.
This union is of considerable importance, and cannot
be accomplished with engravings on copper.
95. Lettering books. The
gilt letters on the backs of books are formed by placing
a piece of gold leaf upon the leather, and pressing
upon it brass letters previously heated: these
cause the gold immediately under them to adhere to
the leather, whilst the rest of the metal is easily
brushed away. When a great number of copies of
the same volume are to be lettered, it is found to
be cheaper to have a brass pattern cut with the whole
of the proper title: this is placed in a press,
and being kept hot, the covers, each having a small
bit of leaf-gold placed in the proper position, are
successively brought under the brass, and stamped.
The lettering at the back of the volume in the reader’s
hand was executed in this manner.
96. Calico printing from blocks.
This is a mode of copying, by surface printing, from
the ends of small pieces of copper wire, of various
forms, fixed into a block of wood. They are all
of one uniform height, about the eighth part of an
inch above the surface of the wood, and are arranged
by the maker into any required pattern. If the
block be placed upon a piece of fine woollen cloth,
on which ink of any colour has been uniformly spread,
the projecting copper wires receive a portion, which
they give up when applied to the calico to be printed.
By the former method of printing on calico, only one
colour could be used; but by this plan, after the
flower of a rose, for example, has been printed with
one set of blocks, the leaves may be printed of another
colour by a different set.
97. Printing oilcloth. After
the canvas, which forms the basis of oilcloth, has
been covered with paint of one uniform tint, the remainder
of the processes which it passes through, are a series
of copyings by surface printing, from patterns formed
upon wooden blocks very similar to those employed by
the calico printer. Each colour requiring a distinct
set of blocks, those oilcloths with the greatest variety
of colours are most expensive.
There are several other varieties
of printing which we shall briefly notice as arts
of copying; which, although not strictly surface printing,
yet are more allied to it than that from copperplates.
98. Letter copying. In one
of the modes of performing this process, a sheet of
very thin paper is damped, and placed upon the writing
to be copied. The two papers are then passed through
a rolling press, and a portion of the ink from one
paper is transferred to the other. The writing
is, of course, reversed by this process; but the paper
to which it is transferred being thin, the characters
are seen through it on the other side, in their proper
position. Another common mode of copying letters
is by placing a sheet of paper covered on both sides
with a substance prepared from lamp-black, between
a sheet of thin paper and the paper on which the letter
to be despatched is to be written. If the upper
or thin sheet be written upon with any hard pointed
substance, the word written with this style will be
impressed from the black paper upon both those adjoining
it. The translucency of the upper sheet, which
is retained by the writer, is in this instance necessary
to render legible the writing which is on the back
of the paper. Both these arts are very limited
in their extent, the former affording two or three,
the latter from two to perhaps ten or fifteen copies
at the same time.
99. Printing on china. This
is an art of copying which is carried to a very great
extent. As the surfaces to which the impression
is to be conveyed are often curved, and sometimes even
fluted, the ink, or paint, is first transferred from
the copper to some flexible substance, such as paper,
or an elastic compound of glue and treacle. It
is almost immediately conveyed from this to the unbaked
biscuit, to which it more readily adheres.
100. Lithographic printing.
This is another mode of producing copies in almost
unlimited number. The original which supplies
the copies is a drawing made on a stone of a slightly
porous nature, the ink employed for tracing it is
made of such greasy materials that when water is poured
over the stone it shall not wet the lines of the drawing.
When a roller covered with printing ink, which is
of an oily nature, is passed over the stone previously
wetted, the water prevents this ink from adhering to
the uncovered portions; whilst the ink used in the
drawing is of such a nature that the printing ink
adheres to it. In this state, if a sheet of paper
be placed upon the stone, and then passed under a
press, the printing ink will be transferred to the
paper, leaving the ink used in the drawing still adhering
to the stone.
101. There is one application
of lithographic printing which does not appear to
have received sufficient attention, and perhaps further
experiments are necessary to bring it to perfection.
It is the reprinting of works which have just arrived
from other countries. A few years ago one of the
Paris newspapers was reprinted at Brussels as soon
as it arrived by means of lithography. Whilst
the ink is yet fresh, this may easily be accomplished:
it is only necessary to place one copy of the newspaper
on a lithographic stone; and by means of great pressure
applied to it in a rolling press, a sufficient quantity
of the printing ink will be transferred to the stone.
By similar means, the other side of the newspaper
may be copied on another stone, and these stones will
then furnish impressions in the usual way. If
printing from stone could be reduced to the same price
per thousand as that from moveable types, this process
might be adopted with great advantage for the supply
of works for the use of distant countries possessing
the same language. For a single copy might be
printed off with transfer ink, and thus an English
work, for example, might be published in America from
stone, whilst the original, printed from moveable
types, made its appearance on the same day in England.
102. It is much to be wished
that such a method were applicable to the reprinting
of facsimiles of old and scarce books. This,
however, would require the sacrifice of two copies,
since a leaf must be destroyed for each page.
Such a method of reproducing a small impression of
an old work, is peculiarly applicable to mathematical
tables, the setting up of which in type is always
expensive and liable to error, but how long ink will
continue to be transferable to stone, from paper on
which it has been printed, must be determined by experiment.
The destruction of the greasy or oily portion of the
ink in the character of old books, seems to present
the greatest impediment; if one constituent only of
the ink were removed by time, it might perhaps be
hoped, that chemical means would ultimately be discovered
for restoring it: but if this be unsuccessful,
an attempt might be made to discover some substance
having a strong affinity for the carbon of the ink
which remains on the paper, and very little for the
paper itself.(2)
103. Lithographic prints have
occasionally been executed in colours. In such
instances a separate stone seems to have been required
for each colour, and considerable care, or very good
mechanism, must have been employed to adjust the paper
to each stone. If any two kinds of ink should
be discovered mutually inadhesive, one stone might
be employed for two inks; or if the inking-roller
for the second and subsequent colours had portions
cut away corresponding to those parts of the stone
inked by the previous ones, then several colours might
be printed from the same stone: but these principles
do not appear to promise much, except for coarse subjects.
104. Register printing.
It is sometimes thought necessary to print from a
wooden block, or stereotype plate, the same pattern
reversed upon the opposite side of the paper.
The effect of this, which is technically called Register
printing, is to make it appear as if the ink had penetrated
through the paper, and rendered the pattern visible
on the other side. If the subject chosen contains
many fine lines, it seems at first sight extremely
difficult to effect so exact a super position of the
two patterns, on opposite sides of the same piece of
paper, that it shall be impossible to detect the slightest
deviation; yet the process is extremely simple.
The block which gives the impression is always accurately
brought down to the same place by means of a hinge;
this spot is covered by a piece of thin leather stretched
over it; the block is now inked, and being brought
down to its place, gives an impression of the pattern
to the leather: it is then turned back; and being
inked a second time, the paper intended to be printed
is placed upon the leather, when the block again descending,
the upper surface of the paper is printed from the
block, and its undersurface takes up the impression
from the leather. It is evident that the perfection
of this mode of printing depends in a great measure
on finding some soft substance like leather, which
will take as much ink as it ought from the block,
and which will give it up most completely to paper.
Impressions thus obtained are usually fainter on the
lower side; and in order in some measure to remedy
this defect, rather more ink is put on the block at
the first than at the second impression.
Of copying by casting
105. The art of casting, by pouring
substances in a fluid state into a mould which retains
them until they become solid, is essentially an art
of copying; the form of the thing produced depending
entirely upon that of the pattern from which it was
formed.
106. Of casting iron and other
metals.—Patterns of wood or metal made
from drawings are the originals from which the moulds
for casting are made: so that, in fact, the casting
itself is a copy of the mould; and the mould is a
copy of the pattern. In castings of iron and
metals for the coarser purposes, and, if they are
afterwards to be worked even for the finer machines,
the exact resemblance amongst the things produced,
which takes place in many of the arts to which we
have alluded, is not effected in the first instance,
nor is this necessary. As the metals shrink in
cooling, the pattern is made larger than the intended
copy; and in extricating it from the sand in which
it is moulded, some little difference will occur in
the size of the cavity which it leaves. In smaller
works where accuracy is more requisite, and where
few or no after operations are to be performed, a
mould of metal is employed which has been formed with
considerable care. Thus, in casting bullets, which
ought to be perfectly spherical and smooth, an iron
instrument is used, in which a cavity has been cut
and carefully ground; and, in order to obviate the
contraction in cooling, a jet is left which may supply
the deficiency of metal arising from that cause, and
which is afterwards cut off. The leaden toys
for children are cast in brass moulds which open,
and in which have been graved or chiselled the figures
intended to be produced.
107. A very beautiful mode of
representing small branches of the most delicate vegetable
productions in bronze has been employed by Mr Chantrey.
A small strip of a fir-tree, a branch of holly, a
curled leaf of broccoli, or any other vegetable production,
is suspended by one end in a small cylinder of paper
which is placed for support within a similarly formed
tin case. The finest river silt, carefully separated
from all the coarser particles, and mixed with water,
so as to have the consistency of cream, is poured
into the paper cylinder by small portions at a time,
carefully shaking the plant a little after each addition,
in order that its leaves may be covered, and that no
bubbles of air may be left. The plant and its
mould are now allowed to dry, and the yielding nature
of the paper allows the loamy coating to shrink from
the outside. When this is dry it is surrounded
by a coarser substance; and, finally, we have the
twig with all its leaves embedded in a perfect mould.
This mould is carefully dried, and then gradually
heated to a red heat. At the ends of some of
the leaves or shoots, wires have been left to afford
airholes by their removal, and in this state of strong
ignition a stream of air is directed into the hole
formed by the end of the branch. The consequence
is, that the wood and leaves which had been turned
into charcoal by the fire, are now converted into
carbonic acid by the current of air; and, after some
time, the whole of the solid matter of which the plant
consisted is completely removed, leaving a hollow
mould, bearing on its interior all the minutest traces
of its late vegetable occupant. When this process
is completed, the mould being still kept at nearly
a red heat, receives the fluid metal, which, by its
weight, either drives the very small quantity of air,
which at that high temperature remains behind, out
very through the airholes, or compresses it into the
pores of very porous substance of which the mould
is formed.
108. When the form of the object
intended to be cast is such that the pattern cannot
be extricated from its mould of sand or plaster, it
becomes necessary to make the pattern with wax, or
some other easily fusible substance. The sand
or plaster is moulded round this pattern, and, by
the application of heat, the wax is extricated through
an opening left purposely for its escape.
109. It is often desirable to
ascertain the form of the internal cavities, inhabited
by molluscous animals, such as those of spiral shells,
and of the various corals. This may be accomplished
by filling them with fusible metal, and dissolving
the substance of the shell by muriatic acid; thus a
metallic solid will remain which exactly filled all
the cavities. If such forms are required in silver,
or any other difficulty fusible metal, the shells
may be filled with wax or resin, then dissolved away;
and the remaining waxen form may serve as the pattern
from which a plaster mould may be made for casting
the metal. Some nicety will be required in these
operations; and perhaps the minuter cavities can only
be filled under an exhausted receiver.
110. Casting in plaster.
This is a mode of copying applied to a variety of
purposes: to produce accurate representations
of the human form—of statues—or
of rare fossils—to which latter purpose
it has lately been applied with great advantage.
In all casting, the first process is to make the mould;
and plaster is the substance which is almost always
employed for the purpose. The property which
it possesses of remaining for a short time in a state
of fluidity, renders it admirably adapted to this object,
and adhesion, even to an original of plaster, is effectually
prevented by oiling the surface on which it is poured.
The mould formed round the subject which is copied,
removed in separate pieces and then reunited, is that
in which the copy is cast. This process gives
additional utility and value to the finest works of
art. The students of the Academy at Venice are
thus enabled to admire the sculptured figures of Egina,
preserved in the gallery at Munich; as well as the
marbles of the Parthenon, the pride of our own Museum.
Casts in plaster of the Elgin marbles adorn many of
the academies of the Continent; and the liberal employment
of such presents affords us an inexpensive and permanent
source of popularity.
111. Casting in wax. This
mode of copying, aided by proper colouring, offers
the most successful imitations of many objects of
natural history, and gives an air of reality to them
which might deceive even the most instructed.
Numerous figures of remarkable persons, having the
face and hands formed in wax, have been exhibited
at various times; and the resemblances have, in some
instances been most striking. But whoever would
see the art of copying in wax carried to the highest
perfection, should examine the beautiful collection
of fruit at the house of the Horticultural Society;
the model of the magnificent flower of the new genus
Rafflesia—the waxen models of the internal
parts of the human body which adorn the anatomical
gallery of the Jardin des Plantes at Paris, and the
Museum at Florence—or the collection of
morbid anatomy at the University of Bologna. The
art of imitation by wax does not usually afford the
multitude of copies which flow from many similar operations.
This number is checked by the subsequent stages of
the process, which, ceasing to have the character
of copying by a tool or pattern, become consequently
more expensive. In each individual production,
form alone is given by casting; the colouring must
be the work of the pencil, guided by the skill of
the artist.
Of copying by moulding
112. This method of producing
multitudes of individuals having an exact resemblance
to each other in external shape, is adopted very widely
in the arts. The substances employed are, either
naturally or by artificial preparation, in a soft or
plastic state; they are then compressed by mechanical
force, sometimes assisted by heat, into a mould of
the required form.
113. Of bricks and tiles.
An oblong box of wood fitting upon a bottom fixed
to the brickmaker’s bench, is the mould from
which every brick is formed. A portion of the
plastic mixture of which the bricks consist is made
ready by less skilful hands: the workman first
sprinkles a little sand into the mould, and then throws
the clay into it with some force; at the same time
rapidly working it with his fingers, so as to make
it completely close up to the corners. He next
scrapes off, with a wetted stick, the superfluous
clay, and shakes the new-formed brick dexterously out
of its mould upon a piece of board, on which it is
removed by another workman to the place appointed
for drying it. A very skilful moulder has occasionally,
in a long summer’s day, delivered from ten to
eleven thousand bricks; but a fair average day’s
work is from five to six thousand. Tiles of various
kinds and forms are made of finer materials, but by
the same system of moulding. Among the ruins
of the city of Gour, the ancient capital of Bengal,
bricks are found having projecting ornaments in high
relief: these appear to have been formed in a
mould, and subsequently glazed with a coloured glaze.
In Germany, also, brickwork has been executed with
various ornaments. The cornice of the church
of St Stephano, at Berlin, is made of large blocks
of brick moulded into the form required by the architect.
At the establishment of Messrs Cubitt, in Gray’s
Inn Lane, vases, cornices, and highly ornamented capitals
of columns are thus formed which rival stone itself
in elasticity, hardness, and durability.
114. Of embossed china.
Many of the forms given to those beautiful specimens
of earthenware which constitute the equipage of our
breakfast and our dinner-tables, cannot be executed
in the lathe of the potter. The embossed ornaments
on the edges of the plates, their polygonal shape,
the fluted surface of many of the vases, would all
be difficult and costly of execution by the hand;
but they become easy and comparatively cheap, when
made by pressing the soft material out of which they
are formed into a hard mould. The care and skill
bestowed on the preparation of that mould are repaid
by the multitude it produces. In many of the
works of the china manufactory, one part only of the
article is moulded; the upper surface of the plate,
for example, whilst the under side is figured by the
lathe. In some instances, the handle, or only
a few ornaments, are moulded, and the body of the
work is turned.
115. Glass seals. The process
of engraving upon gems requires considerable time
and skill. The seals thus produced can therefore
never become common. Imitations, however, have
been made of various degrees of resemblance.
The colour which is given to glass is, perhaps, the
most successful part of the imitation. A small
cylindrical rod of coloured glass is heated in the
flame of a blowpipe, until the extremity becomes soft.
The operator then pinches it between the ends of a
pair of nippers, which are formed of brass, and on
one side of which the device intended for the seal
has been carved in relief. When the mould has
been well finished and care is taken in heating the
glass properly, the seals thus produced are not bad
imitations; and by this system of copying they are
so multiplied, that the more ordinary kinds are sold
at Birmingham for three pence a dozen.
116. Square glass bottles.
The round forms which are usually given to vessels
of glass are readily produced by the expansion of
the air with which they are blown. It is, however,
necessary in many cases to make bottles of a square
form, and each capable of holding exactly the same
quantity of fluid. It is also frequently desirable
to have imprinted on them the name of the maker of
the medicine or other liquid they are destined to
contain. A mould of iron, or of copper, is provided
of the intended size, on the inside of which are engraved
the names required. This mould, which is used
in a hot state, opens into two parts, to allow the
insertion of the round, unfinished bottle, which is
placed in it in a very soft state before it is removed
from the end of the iron tube with which it was blown.
The mould is now closed, and the glass is forced against
its sides, by blowing strongly into the bottle.
117. Wooden snuff boxes.
Snuff boxes ornamented with devices, in imitation
of carved work or of rose engine turning, are sold
at a price which proves that they are only imitations.
The wood, or horn, out of which they are formed, is
softened by long boiling in water, and whilst in this
state it is forced into moulds of iron, or steel,
on which are cut the requisite patterns, where it
remains exposed to great pressure until it is dry.
118. Horn knife handles and umbrella
handles. The property which horn possesses of
becoming soft by the action of water and of heat,
fits it for many useful purposes. It is pressed
into moulds, and becomes embossed with figures in
relief, adapted to the objects to which it is to be
applied. If curved, it may be straightened; or
if straight, it may be bent into any forms which ornament
or utility may require; and by the use of the mould
these forms may be multiplied in endless variety.
The commoner sorts of knives, the crooked handles
for umbrellas, and a multitude of other articles to
which horn is applied, attest the cheapness which
the art of copying gives to the things formed of this
material.
119. Moulding tortoise-shell.
The same principle is applied to things formed out
of the shell of the turtle, or the land tortoise.
From the greatly superior price of the raw material,
this principle of copying is, however, more rarely
employed upon it; and the few carvings which are demanded,
are usually performed by hand.
120. Tobacco-pipe making.
This simple art is almost entirely one of copying.
The moulds are formed of iron, in two parts, each
embracing one half of the stem; the line of junction
of these parts may generally be observed running lengthwise
from one end of the pipe to the other. The hole
passing to the bowl is formed by thrusting a long
wire through the clay before it is enclosed in the
mould. Some of the moulds have figures, or names,
sunk in the inside, which give a corresponding figure
in relief upon the finished pipe.
121. Embossing upon calico.
Calicoes of one colour, but embossed all over with
raised patterns, though not much worn in this country,
are in great demand in several foreign markets.
This appearance is produced by passing them between
rollers, on one of which is figured in intaglio the
pattern to be transferred to the calico. The
substance of the cloth is pressed very forcibly into
the cavities thus formed, and retains its pattern
after considerable use. The watered appearance
in the cover of the volume in the reader’s hands
is produced in a similar manner. A cylinder of
gun-metal, on which the design of the watering is
previously cut, is pressed by screws against another
cylinder, formed out of pieces of brown paper which
have been strongly compressed together and accurately
turned. The two cylinders are made to revolve
rapidly, the paper one being slightly damped, and,
after a few minutes, it takes an impression from the
upper or metal one. The glazed calico is now
passed between the rollers, its glossy surface being
in contact with the metal cylinder, which is kept
hot by a heated iron enclosed within it. Calicoes
are sometimes watered by placing two pieces on each
other in such a position that the longitudinal threads
of the one are at right angles to those of the other,
and compressing them in this state between flat rollers.
The threads of the one piece produce indentations
in those of the other, but they are not so deep as
when produced by the former method.
122. Embossing upon leather.
This art of copying from patterns previously engraved
on steel rollers is in most respects similar to the
preceding. The leather is forced into the cavities,
and the parts which are not opposite to any cavity
are powerfully condensed between the rollers.
123. Swaging. This is an
art of copying practised by the smith. In order
to fashion his iron and steel into the various forms
demanded by his customers, he has small blocks of steel
into which are sunk cavities of different shapes; these
are called swages, and are generally in pairs.
Thus if he wants a round bolt, terminating in a cylindrical
head of larger diameter, and having one or more projecting
rims, he uses a corresponding swaging tool; and having
heated the end of his iron rod, and thickened it by
striking the end in the direction of the axis (which
is technically called upsetting), he places its head
upon one part of the lage; and whilst an assistant
holds the other part on the top of the hot iron, he
strikes it several times with his hammer, occasionally
turning the head one quarter round. The heated
iron is thus forced by the blows to assume the form
of the mould into which it is impressed.
124. Engraving by pressure.
This is one of the most beautiful examples of the
art of copying carried to an almost unlimited extent;
and the delicacy with which it can be executed, and
the precision with which the finest traces of the
graving tool can be transferred from steel to copper,
or even from hard steel to soft steel, is most unexpected.
We are indebted to Mr Perkins for most of the contrivances
which have brought this art at once almost to perfection.
An engraving is first made upon soft steel, which is
hardened by a peculiar process without in the least
injuring its delicacy. A cylinder of soft steel,
pressed with great force against the hardened steel
engraving, is now made to roll very slowly backward
and forward over it, thus receiving the design, but
in relief. The cylinder is in its turn hardened
without injury., and if it be slowly rolled to and
fro with strong pressure on successive plates of copper,
it will imprint on a thousand of them a perfect facsimile
of the original steel engraving from which it was
made. Thus the number of copies producible from
the same design may be multiplied a thousand-fold.
But even this is very far short of the limits to which
the process may be extended. The hardened steel
roller, bearing the design upon it in relief may be
employed to make a few of its first impressions upon
plates of soft steel, and these being hardened become
the representatives of the original engraving, and
may in their turn be made the parents of other rollers,
each generating copperplates like their prototype.
The possible extent to which facsimiles of one original
engraving may thus be multiplied, almost confounds
the imagination, and appears to be for all practical
purposes unlimited.
This beautiful art was first proposed
by Mr Perkins for the purpose of rendering the forgery
of bank notes a matter of great difficulty; and there
are two principles which peculiarly adapt it to that
object: first, the perfect identity of all the
impressions, so that any variation in the minutest
line would at once cause detection; secondly, that
the original plates may be formed by the united labours
of several artists most eminent in their respective
departments; for as only one original of each design
is necessary, the expense, even of the most elaborate
engraving, will be trifling, compared with the multitude
of copies produced from it.
125. It must, however, be admitted
that the principle of copying itself furnishes an
expedient for imitating any engraving or printed pattern,
however complicated; and thus presents a difficulty
which none of the schemes devised for the prevention
of forgery appear to have yet effectually obviated.
In attempting to imitate the most perfect banknote,
the first process would be to place it with the printed
side downwards upon a stone or other substance, on
which, by passing it through a rolling-press, it might
be firmly fixed. The next object would be to discover
some solvent which should dissolve the paper, but
neither affect the printing-ink, nor injure the stone
or substance to which it is attached. Water does
not seem to do this effectually, and perhaps weak
alkaline or acid solutions would be tried. If,
however, this could be fully accomplished, and if
the stone or other substance, used to retain the impression,
had those properties which enable us to print from
it, innumerable facsimiles of the note might obviously
be made, and the imitation would be complete.
Porcelain biscuit, which has recently been used with
a black lead pencil for memorandum books, seems in
some measure adapted for such trials, since its porosity
may be diminished to any required extent by regulating
the dilution of the glazing.
126. Gold and silver moulding.
Many of the mouldings used by jewellers consist of
thin slips of metal, which have received their form
by passing between steel rollers, on which the pattern
is embossed or engraved; thus taking a succession of
copies of the devices intended.
127. Ornamental papers.
Sheets of paper coloured or covered with gold or silver
leaf, and embossed with various patterns, are used
for covering books, and for many ornamental purposes.
The figures upon these are produced by the same process,
that of passing the sheets of paper between engraved
rollers.
Of copying by stamping
128. This mode of copying is
extensively employed in the arts. It is generally
executed by means of large presses worked with a screw
and heavy flywheel. The materials on which the
copies are impressed are most frequently metals, and
the process is sometimes executed when they are hot,
and in one case when the metal is in a state between
solidity and fluidity.
129. Coins and medals. The
whole of the coins which circulate as money are produced
by this mode of copying. The screw presses are
either worked by manual labour, by water, or by steam
power. The mint which was sent a few years since
to Calcutta was capable of coining 200,000 pieces
a day. Medals, which usually have their figures
in higher relief than coins, are produced by similar
means; but a single blow is rarely sufficient to bring
them to perfection, and the compression of the metal
which arises from the first blow renders it too hard
to receive many subsequent blows without injury to
the die. It is therefore, after being struck,
removed to a furnace, in which it is carefully heated
red-hot and annealed, after which operation it is again
placed between the dies, and receives additional blows.
For medals, on which the figures are very prominent,
these processes must be repeated many times.
One of the largest medals hitherto struck underwent
them nearly a hundred times before it was completed.
130. Ornaments for military accoutrements,
and furniture. These are usually of brass, and
are stamped up out of solid or sheet brass by placing
it between dies, and allowing a heavy weight to drop
upon the upper die from a height of from five to fifteen
feet.
131. Buttons and nail heads.
Buttons embossed with crests or other devices are
produced by the same means; and some of those which
are plain receive their hemispherical form from the
dies in which they are struck. The heads of several
kinds of nails which are portions of spheres, or polyhedrons,
are also formed by these means.
132. Of a process for copying,
called in France clichee. This curious method
of copying by stamping is applied to medals, and in
some cases to forming stereotype plates. There
exists a range of temperature previous to the melting
point of several of the alloys of lead, tin, and antimony,
in which the compound is neither solid, nor yet fluid.
In this kind of pasty state it is placed in a box
under a die, which descends upon it with considerable
force. The blow drives the metal into the finest
lines of the die, and the coldness of the latter immediately
solidifies the whole mass. A quantity of the half-melted
metal is scattered in all directions by the blow,
and is retained by the sides of the box in which the
process is carried on. The work thus produced
is admirable for its sharpness, but has not the finished
form of a piece just leaving the coining-press:
the sides are ragged, and it must be trimmed, and
its thickness equalized in the lathe.
Of copying by punching
133. This mode of copying consists
in driving a steel punch through the substance to
be cut, either by a blow or by pressure. In some
cases the object is to copy the aperture, and the
substance separated from the plate is rejected; in
other cases the small pieces cut out are the objects
of the workman’s labour.
134. Punching iron plate for
boilers. The steel punch used for this purpose
is from three-eighths to three-quarters of an inch
in diameter, and drives out a circular disk from a
plate of iron from one-quarter to five eighths of
an inch thick.
135. Punching tinned iron.
The ornamental patterns of open work which decorate
the tinned and japanned wares in general use, are
rarely punched by the workman who makes them.
In London the art of punching out these patterns in
screw-presses is carried on as a separate trade; and
large quantities of sheet tin are thus perforated
for cullenders, wine-strainers, borders of waiters,
and other similar purposes. The perfection and
the precision to which the art has been carried are
remarkable. Sheets of copper, too, are punched
with small holes about the hundredth of an inch in
diameter, in such multitudes that more of the sheet
metal is removed than remains behind; and plates of
tin have been perforated with above three thousand
holes in each square inch.
136. The inlaid plates of brass
and rosewood, called buhl work, which ornament our
furniture, are, in some instances, formed by punching;
but in this case, both the parts cut out, and those
which remain, are in many cases employed. In the
remaining illustrations of the art of copying by punching,
the part made use of is that which is punched out.
137. Cards for guns. The
substitution of a circular disk of thin card instead
of paper, for retaining in its place the charge of
a fowling-piece, is attended with considerable advantage.
It would, however, be of little avail, unless an easy
method was contrived of producing an unlimited number
of cards, each exactly fitting the bore of the barrel.
The small steel tool used for this purpose cuts out
innumerable circles similar to its cutting end, each
of which precisely fills the barrel for which it was
designed.
138. Ornaments of gilt paper.
The golden stars, leaves, and other devices, sold
in shops for the purpose of ornamenting articles made
of paper and pasteboard, and other fancy works, are
cut by punches of various forms out of sheets of gilt
paper.
139. Steel chains. The chain
used in connecting the mainspring and fusee in watches
and clocks, is composed of small pieces of sheet steel,
and it is of great importance that each of these pieces
should be of exactly the same size. The links
are of two sorts; one of them consisting of a single
oblong piece of steel with two holes in it, and the
other formed by connecting two of the same pieces
of steel, placed parallel to each other, and at a
small distance apart, by two rivets. The two kinds
of links occur alternately in the chain: each
end of the single pieces being placed between the
ends of two others, and connected with them by a rivet
passing through all three. If the rivet holes
in the pieces for the double links are not precisely
at equal distances, the chain will not be straight,
and will, consequently, be unfit for its purpose.
Copying with elongation
140. In this species of copying
there exists but little resemblance between the copy
and the original. It is the cross-section only
of the thing produced which is similar to the tool
through which it passes. When the substances to
be operated upon are hard, they must frequently pass
in succession through several holes, and it is in
some cases necessary to anneal them at intervals.
141. Wire drawing. The metal
to be converted into wire is made of a cylindrical
form, and drawn forcibly through circular holes in
plates of steel: at each passage it becomes smaller.
and, when finished, its section at any point is a precise
copy of the last hole through which it passed.
Upon the larger kinds of wire, fine lines may sometimes
be traced, running longitudinally. these arise from
slight imperfections in the holes of the draw-plates.
For many purposes of the arts, wire, the section of
which is square or half round, is required: the
same method of making it is pursued, except that the
holes through which it is drawn are in such cases
themselves square, or half-round, or of whatever other
form the wire is required to be. A species of
wire is made, the section of which resembles a star
with from six to twelve rays; this is called pinion
wire, and is used by the clockmakers. They file
away all the rays from a short piece, except from
about half an inch near one end: this becomes
a pinion for a clock; and the leaves or teeth are
already burnished and finished, from having passed
through the draw-plate.
142. Tube drawing. The art
of forming tubes of uniform diameter is nearly similar
in its mode of execution to wire drawing. The
sheet brass is bent round and soldered so as to form
a hollow cylinder; and if the diameter outside is that
which is required to be uniform, it is drawn through
a succession of holes, as in wire drawing: If
the inside diameter is to be uniform, a succession
of steel cylinders, called triblets, are drawn through
the brass tube. In making tubes for telescopes,
it is necessary that both the inside and outside should
be uniform. A steel triblet, therefore, is first
passed into the tube, which is then drawn through
a succession of holes, until the outside diameter
is reduced to the required size. The metal of
which the tube is formed is condensed between these
holes and the steel cylinder within; and when the
latter is withdrawn the internal surface appears polished.
The brass tube is considerably extended by this process,
sometimes even to double its first length.
143. Leaden pipes. Leaden
pipes for the conveyance of water were formerly made
by casting; but it has been found that they can be
made both cheaper and better by drawing them through
holes in the manner last described. A cylinder
of lead, of five or six inches in diameter and about
two feet long, is cast with a small hole through its
axis, and an iron triblet of about fifteen feet in
length is forced into the hole. It is then drawn
through a series of holes, until the lead is extended
upon the triblet from one end to the other, and is
of the proper thickness in proportion to the size
of the pipe.
144. Iron rolling. When
cylinders of iron of greater thickness than wire are
required, they are formed by passing wrought iron
between rollers, each of which has sunk in it a semi-cylindrical
groove; and as such rollers rarely touch accurately,
a longitudinal line will usually be observed in the
cylinders so manufactured. Bar iron is thus shaped
into all the various forms of round, square, half-round,
oval, etc. in which it occurs in commerce.
A particular species of moulding is thus made, which
resembles, in its section, that part of the frame of
a window which separates two adjacent panes of glass.
Being much stronger than wood, it can be considerably
reduced in thickness, and consequently offers less
obstruction to the light; it is much used for skylights.
145. It is sometimes required
that the iron thus produced should not be of uniform
thickness throughout. This is the case in bars
for railroads, where greater depth is required towards
the middle of the rail which is at the greatest distance
from the supports. This form is produced by cutting
the groove in the rollers deeper at those parts where
additional strength is required, so that the hollow
which surrounds the roller would, if it could be unwound,
be a mould of the shape the iron is intended to fit.
146. Vermicelli. The various
forms into which this paste is made are given by forcing
it through holes in tin plate. It passes through
them, and appears on the other side in long strings.
The cook makes use of the same method in preparing
butter and ornamental pastry for the table, and the
confectioner in forming cylindrical lozenges of various
composition.
Of copying with altered dimensions
147. Of the pentagraph.
This mode of copying is chiefly used for drawings
or maps: the instrument is simple; and, although
usually employed in reducing, is capable of enlarging
the size of the copy. An automaton figure, exhibited
in London a short time since, which drew profiles
of its visitors, was regulated by a mechanism on this
principle. A small aperture in the wall, opposite
the seat in which the person is placed whose profile
is taken, conceals a camera lucida, which is placed
in an adjoining apartment: and an assistant,
by moving a point, connected by a pentagraph with
the hand of the automaton, over the outline of the
head, causes the figure to trace a corresponding profile.
148. By turning. The art
of turning might perhaps itself be classed amongst
the arts of copying. A steel axis, called a mandril,
having a pulley attached to the middle of it, is supported
at one end either by a conical point, or by a cylindrical
collar, and at the other end by another collar, through
which it passes. The extremity which projects
beyond this last collar is formed into a screw, by
which various instruments, called chucks, can be attached
to it. These chucks are intended to hold the
various materials to be submitted to the operation
of turning, and have a great variety of forms.
The mandril with the chuck is made to revolve by a
strap which passes over the pulley that is attached
to it, and likewise over a larger wheel moved either
by the foot, or by its connection with steam or water
power. All work which is executed on a mandril
partakes in some measure of the irregularities in
the form of that mandril; and the perfect circularity
of section which ought to exist in every part of the
work, can only be ensured by an equal accuracy in the
mandril and its collar.
149. Rose engine turning.
This elegant art depends in a great measure on copying.
Circular plates of metal called rosettes, having various
indentations on the surfaces and edges, are fixed
on the mandril, which admits of a movement either end-wise
or laterally: a fixed obstacle called the ‘touch’,
against which the rosettes are pressed by a spring,
obliges the mandril to follow their indentations,
and thus causes the cutting tool to trace out the
same pattern on the work. The distance of the
cutting tool from the centre being usually less than
the radius of the rosette, causes the copy to be much
diminished.
150. Copying dies. A lathe
has been long known in France, and recently been used
at the English mint for copying dies. A blunt
point is carried by a very slow spiral movement successively
over every part of the die to be copied, and is pressed
by a weight into all the cavities; while a cutting
point connected with it by the machine traverses the
face of a piece of soft steel, in which it cuts the
device of the original die on the same or on a diminished
scale. The degree of excellence of the copy increases
in proportion as it is smaller than the original.
The die of a crown-piece will furnish by copy a very
tolerable die for a sixpence. But the chief use
to be expected from this lathe is to prepare all the
coarser parts, and leave only the finer and more expressive
lines for the skill and genius of the artist.
151. Shoe-last making engine.
An instrument not very unlike in principle was proposed
for the purpose of making shoe lasts. A pattern
last of a shoe for the right foot was placed in one
part of the apparatus, and when the machine was moved,
two pieces of wood, placed in another part which had
been previously adjusted by screws, were cut into
lasts greater or less than the original, as was desired;
and although the pattern was for the right foot, one
of the lasts was for the left, an effect which was
produced by merely interposing a wheel which reversed
the motion between the two pieces of wood to be cut
into lasts.
152. Engine for copying busts.
Many years since, the late Mr Watt amused himself
with constructing an engine to produce copies of busts
or statues, either of the same size as the original,
or in a diminished proportion. The substances
on which he operated were various, and some of the
results were shewn to his friends, but the mechanism
by which they were made has never been described.
More recently, Mr Hawkins, who, nearly at the same
time, had also contrived a similar machine, has placed
it in the hands of an artist, who has made copies
in ivory from a variety of busts. The art of
multiplying in different sizes the figures of the
sculptor, aided by that of rendering their acquisition
cheap through the art of casting, promises to give
additional value to his productions, and to diffuse
more widely the pleasure arising from their possession.
153. Screw cutting. When
this operation is performed in the lathe by means
of a screw upon the mandril, it is essentially an
art of copying, but it is only the number of threads
in a given length which is copied; the form of the
thread, and length as well as the diameter of the
screw to be cut, are entirely independent of those
from which the copy is made. There is another
method of cutting screws in a lathe by means of one
pattern screw, which, being connected by wheels with
the mandril, guides the cutting point. In this
process, unless the time of revolution of the mandril
is the same as that of the screw which guides the
cutting point, the number of threads in a given length
will be different. If the mandril move quicker
than the cutting point, the screw which is produced
will be finer than the original; if it move slower,
the copy will be more coarse than the original.
The screw thus generated may be finer or coarser—
it may be larger or smaller in diameter—it
may have the same or a greater number of threads than
that from which it is copied; yet all the defects
which exist in the original will be accurately transmitted,
under the modified circumstances, to every individual
generated from it.
154. Printing from copper plates
with altered dimensions. Some very singular specimens
of an art of copying, not yet made public, were brought
from Paris a few years since. A watchmaker in
that city, of the name of Gonord, had contrived a method
by which he could take from the same copperplate impressions
of different sizes, either larger or smaller than
the original design. Having procured four impressions
of a parrot, surrounded by a circle, executed in this
manner, I shewed them to the late Mr Lowry, an engraver
equally distinguished for his skill, and for the many
mechanical contrivances with which he enriched his
art. The relative dimensions of the several impressions
were 5.5, 6.3, 8.4, 15.0, so that the largest was
nearly three times the linear size of the smallest;
and Mr Lowry assured me, that he was unable to detect
any lines in one which had not corresponding lines
in the others. There appeared to be a difference
in the quantity of ink, but none in the traces of
the engraving; and, from the general appearance, it
was conjectured that the largest but one was the original
impression from the copperplate.
The means by which this singular operation
was executed have not been published; but two conjectures
were formed at the time which merit notice. It
was supposed that the artist was in possession of
some method of transferring the ink from the lines
of a copperplate to the surface of some fluid, and
of retransferring the impression from the fluid to
paper. If this could be accomplished, the print
would, in the first instance, be of exactly the same
size as the copper from which it was derived; but
if the fluid were contained in a vessel having the
form of an inverted cone, with a small aperture at
the bottom, the liquid might be lowered or raised
in the vessel by gradual abstraction or addition through
the apex of the cone; in this case, the surface to
which the printing-ink adhered would diminish or enlarge,
and in this altered state the impression might be
retransferred to paper. It must be admitted, that
this conjectural explanation is liable to very considerable
difficulties; for, although the converse operation
of taking an impression from a liquid surface has
a parallel in the art of marbling paper, the possibility
of transferring the ink from the copper to the fluid
requires to be proved.
Another and more plausible explanation
is founded on the elastic nature of the compound of
glue and treacle, a substance already in use in transferring
engravings to earthenware. It is conjectured,
that an impression from the copperplate is taken upon
a large sheet of this composition; that this sheet
is then stretched in both directions, and that the
ink thus expanded is transferred to paper. If
the copy is required to be smaller than the original,
the elastic substance must first be stretched, and
then receive the impression from the copperplate:
on removing the tension it will contract, and thus
reduce the size of the design. It is possible
that one transfer may not in all cases suffice; as
the extensibility of the composition of glue and treacle,
although considerable, is still limited. Perhaps
sheets of India rubber of uniform texture and thickness,
may be found to answer better than this composition;
or possibly the ink might be transferred from the
copper plate to the surface of a bottle of this gum,
which bottle might, after being expanded by forcing
air into it, give up the enlarged impression to paper.
As it would require considerable time to produce impressions
in this manner, and there might arise some difficulty
in making them all of precisely the same size, the
process might be rendered more certain and expeditious
by performing that part of the operation which depends
on the enlargement or diminution of the design only
once; and, instead of printing from the soft substance.
transferring the design from it to stone: thus
a considerable portion of the work would be reduced
to an art already well known, that of lithography.
This idea receives some confirmation from the fact,
that in another set of specimens, consisting of a
map of St Petersburgh, of several sizes, a very short
line, evidently an accidental defect, occurs in all
the impressions of one particular size, but not in
any of a different size.
155. Machine to produce engraving
from medals. An instrument was contrived, a long
time ago, and is described in the Manuel de Tourneur,
by which copperplate engravings are produced from
medals and other objects in relief. The medal
and the copper are fixed on two sliding plates at
right angles to each other, so connected that, when
the plate on which the medal is fixed is raised vertically
by a screw, the slide holding the copperplate is advanced
by an equal quantity in the horizontal direction.
The medal is fixed on the vertical slide with its
face towards the copperplate, and a little above it.
A bar, terminating at one end in a
tracing point, and at the other in a short arm, at
right angles to the bar, and holding a diamond point,
is placed horizontally above the copper; so that the
tracing point shall touch the medal to which the bar
is perpendicular, and the diamond point shall touch
the copperplate to which the arm is perpendicular.
Under this arrangement, the bar being
supposed to move parallel to itself, and consequently
to the copper, if the tracing point pass over a flat
part of the medal, the diamond point will draw a straight
line of equal length upon the copper; but, if the
tracing point pass over any projecting part of the
medal, the deviation from the straight line by the
diamond point, will be exactly equal to the elevation
of the corresponding point of the medal above the
rest of the surface. Thus, by the transit of
this tracing point over any line upon the medal, the
diamond will draw upon the copper a section of the
medal through that line.
A screw is attached to the apparatus,
so that if the medal be raised a very small quantity
by the screw, the copperplate will be advanced by
the same quantity, and thus a new line of section
may be drawn: and, by continuing this process,
the series of sectional lines on the copper produces
the representation of the medal on a plane: the
outline and the form of the figure arising from the
sinuosities of the lines, and from their greater or
less proximity. The effect of this kind of engraving
is very striking; and in some specimens gives a high
degree of apparent relief. It has been practised
on plate glass, and is then additionally curious from
the circumstance of the fine lines traced by the diamond
being invisible, except in certain lights.
From this description, it will have
been seen that the engraving on copper must be distorted;
that is to say, that the projection on the copper
cannot be the same as that which arises from a perpendicular
projection of each point of the medal upon a plane
parallel to itself. The position of the prominent
parts will be more altered than that of the less elevated;
and the greater the relief of the medal the more distorted
will be its engraved representation. Mr John
Bate, son of Mr Bate, of the Poultry, has contrived
an improved machine, for which he has taken a patent,
in which this source of distortion is remedied.
The head, in the title page of the present volume,
is copied from a medal of Roger Bacon, which forms
one of a series of medals of eminent men, struck at
the Royal Mint at Munich, and is the first of the
published productions of this new art.(3)
The inconvenience which arises from
too high a relief in the medal, or in the bust, might
be remedied by some mechanical contrivance, by which
the deviation of the diamond point from the right
line (which it would describe when the tracing point
traverses a plane), would be made proportional not
to the elevation of the corresponding point above
the plane of the medal, but to its elevation above
some other parallel plane removed to a fit distance
behind it. Thus busts and statues might be reduced
to any required degree of relief.
156. The machine just described
naturally suggests other views which seem to deserve
some consideration, and, perhaps, some experiment.
If a medal were placed under the tracing point of
a pentagraph, an engraving tool substituted for the
pencil, and a copperplate in the place of the paper;
and if, by some mechanism, the tracing point, which
slides in a vertical plane, could, as it is carried
over the different elevations of the medal, increase
or diminish the depth of the engraved line proportionally
to the actual height of the corresponding point on
the medal, then an engraving would be produced, free
at least from any distortion, although it might be
liable to objections of a different kind. If,
by any similar contrivance, instead of lines, we could
make on each point of the copper a dot, varying in
size or depth with the altitude of the corresponding
point of the medal above its plane, than a new species
of engraving would be produced: and the variety
of these might again be increased, by causing the
graving point to describe very small circles, of diameters,
varying with the height of the point on the medal
above a given plane; or by making the graving tool
consist of three equidistant points, whose distance
increased or diminished according to some determinate
law, dependent on the elevation of the point represented
above the plane of the medal. It would, perhaps,
be difficult to imagine the effects of some of these
kinds of engraving; but they would all possess, in
common, the property of being projections, by parallel
lines, of the objects represented, and the intensity
of the shade of the ink would either vary according
to some function of the distance of the point represented
from some given plane, or it would be a little modified
by the distances from the same plane of a few of the
immediately contiguous points.
157. The system of shading maps
by means of lines of equal altitude above the sea
bears some analogy to this mode of representing medals,
and if applied to them would produce a different species
of engraved resemblance. The projections on the
plane of the medal, of the section of an imaginary
plane, placed at successive distances above it, with
the medal itself, would produce a likeness of the
figure on the medal, in which all the inclined parts
of it would be dark in proportion to their inclination.
Other species of engraving might be conceived by substituting,
instead of the imaginary plane, an imaginary sphere
or other solid, intersecting the figure in the medal.
158. Lace made by caterpillars.
A most extraordinary species of manufacture, which
is in a slight degree connected with copying, has
been contrived by an officer of engineers residing
at Munich. It consists of lace, and veils, with
open patterns in them, made entirely by caterpillars.
The following is the mode of proceeding adopted:
he makes a paste of the leaves of the plant, which
is the usual food of the species of caterpillar(4)
he employs, and spreads it thinly over a stone, or
other flat substance. He then, with a camel-hair
pencil dipped in olive oil, draws upon the coating
of paste the pattern he wishes the insects to leave
open. This stone is then placed in an inclined
position, and a number of the caterpillars are placed
at the bottom. A peculiar species is chosen,
which spins a strong web; and the animals commencing
at the bottom, eat and spin their way up to the top,
carefully avoiding every part touched by the oil, but
devouring all the rest of the paste. The extreme
lightness of these veils, combined with some strength,
is truly surprising. One of them, measuring twenty-six
and a half inches by seventeen inches, weighed only
1.51 grains; a degree of lightness which will appear
more strongly by contrast with other fabrics.
One square yard of the substance of which these veils
are made weighs 4 1/3 grains, whilst one square yard
of silk gauze weighs 137 grains, and one square yard
of the finest patent net weighs 262 1/2 grains.
The ladies’ coloured muslin dresses, mentioned
in the table subjoined, cost ten shillings per dress,
and each weigh six ounces; the cotton from which they
are made weighing nearly six and two-ninth ounces
avoirdupois weight.
Weight of one square yard of each
of the following articles(5*)
Weight of
Weight cotton used
Value finished of in waking
per yard one square one square
Description of goods measure yard yard
s. d.
Troy grains Troy grains
Caterpillar veils —
4 1/3 — Silk gauze 3-4
wide 1 0 137 —
Finest patent net — 262
1/2 — Fine cambric muslin
— 551 —
6-4ths jaconet muslin 2 0 613
670 Ladies’ coloured muslin dresses 3 0
788 875 6-4ths cambric
1 2 972 1069 9-8ths calico
0 9 988 1085 1/2-yard
nankeen 0 8 2240 2432
159. This enumeration, which
is far from complete, of the arts in which copying
is the foundation, may be terminated with an example
which has long been under the eye of the reader; although
few, perhaps, are aware of the number of repeated
copyings of which these very pages are the subject.
1. They are copies, by printing,
from stereotype plates.
2. These stereotype plates are
copied, by the art of casting, from moulds formed
of plaster of Paris.
3. These moulds are themselves
copied by casting the plaster in a liquid state upon
the moveable types set up by the compositor.
[It is here that the union of the
intellectual and the mechanical departments takes
place. The mysteries, however, of an author’s
copying, form no part of our enquiry, although it may
be fairly remarked, that, in numerous instances, the
mental far eclipses the mechanical copyist.]
4. These moveable types, the
obedient messengers of the most opposite thoughts,
the most conflicting theories, are themselves copies
by casting from moulds of copper called matrices.
5. The lower part of those matrices,
bearing the impressions of the letters or characters,
are copies, by punching, from steel punches on which
the same characters exist in relief.
6. These steel punches are not
themselves entirely exempted from the great principle
of art. Many of the cavities which exist in them,
such as those in the middle of the punches for the
letters a, b, d, e, g, etc., are produced from
other steel punches in which these parts are in relief.
We have thus traced through six successive
stages of copying the mechanical art of printing from
stereotype plates: the principle of copying contributing
in this, as in every other department of manufacture,
to the uniformity and the cheapness of the work produced.
Notes:
1. The late Mr Lowry.
2. I posses a lithographic reprint
of a page of a table, which appears, from the from
of the type, to have been several years old.
3. The construction of the engraving
becomes evident on examining it with a lens of sufficient
power to show the continuity of the lines.
4. The Phalaena pardilla, which
feeds on the Prunus padus.
5. Some of these weights and
measures are calculated from a statement in the Report
of the Committee of the House of Commons on Printed
Cotton Goods; and the widths of the pieces there given
are presumed to be the real widths, not those by which
they are called in the retail shops.