Anastatic lithography is a method of printing developed by 1840 in Erfurt. [1] The technique provided a means for facsimile reproduction, which was developed and promoted by Werner and William Siemens. Whereas the reproduction of the four pages of the 25th September 1841 issue of The Athenaeum, a London scientific and literary journal, was so true to the original that it caused concerns expressed in an article "Printing and Piracy–New Discovery" which was published in the issue No. 736 published December 4, 1841.[2]

Advert for Samuel Cowell's pamphlet describing the process

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Rougeux, Nicholas. "Anastatic printing - A Brief Visual Exploration of A Dictionary of Typography". www.c82.net. Rougeux.
  2. ^ Norman, Jeremy. "The Invention of Anastatic Printing Enables Inexpensive Facsimiles and Pirated Editions : History of Information". www.historyofinformation.com. Retrieved 14 November 2022.