Process Work and the Printer
Subtitle: “A Journal for All Up-to-Date Process Workers”
Start Date(s)
End Date(s)
- 1929 (Willison)
- 1924 (Ulrich and Kup)
Editor(s)
City
Type of Content
• "All matters of current interest to Process Workers and Electrotypers are dealt with month by month, and both British and Foreign ideas as to theory and practice are intelligently and comprehensively dealt with. Special columns devoted to Questions and Answers, for which awards are given. It is also the official organ of the Penrose Employment Bureau" ("Process Work" 672)Notes
- "Up to this point [1921] the journal had been the house organ of Penrose & Co., it then changed its name back to the original title of Process Work & The Printer, and was published by Messrs. Percy Lund, Humphries & Co., Ltd. as an independent quarterly journal. . . . All 30 volumes werre edited by Mr. W. Gamble and it forms an important story of trade news and technical progress for the period" (Catalogue 29)
- A "little house organ issued by Penrose & Co., London" that contains "every month a number of questions and answers for the exchange of ideas among the workmen" ("Offset Negatives" 226)
- "All matters of current interest to Process Workers and Electrotypers are dealt with month by month, and both British and Foreign ideas as to theory and practice are intelligently and comprehensively dealt with. Special columns devoted to Questions and Answers, for which awards are given. It is also the official organ of the Penrose Employment Bureau" ("Process Work" 672)
- "House organ, A. W. Penrose and Co" (Ulrich 61)
- Was called Process Work and Electrotyping from 1904-01 thru 1921 (with other slight variations) (Ulrich 61)(Willison 81)
Subject Categories
Sources that Discuss this Journal
- "Offset Negatives" 226; 81; 61, 90, 208; 672; 3:608
Works Cited
- "Offset Negatives." The Printing Art, vol. 20, no. 3, Nov. 1912, pp. 226-27. Google Books.