#color printing

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These colorful chromolithographs from Raphael Tuck & Sons are part of a 193 piece collection of These colorful chromolithographs from Raphael Tuck & Sons are part of a 193 piece collection of These colorful chromolithographs from Raphael Tuck & Sons are part of a 193 piece collection of

These colorful chromolithographs from Raphael Tuck & Sons are part of a 193 piece collection of color prints and clippings collected for scrapbooking during the late 19th and early 20 century. As hinted at in the bottom two examples, these shaped prints were sold in sheets connected by little paper tabs. While this post features children, other common subjects included insects, animals, flowers, story book characters, costumes, and Christmas.

Raphael Tuck, a Prussian immigrant, founded his printing company in 1866 in England.  At first the business focused on selling art reproductions, but soon expanded to postcards, paper toys, children’s books, and Christmas cards. In the early 1900s, as postcards continued to grow in popularity, the company held multiple contests for postcard designs open to the general public. Much of the company’s color printing was done in Germany, even into the 20th century. The company’s English headquarters were destroyed during the Blitz, and the business never fully recovered, combining with two other companies in 1959 to form the British Printing Corporation.


Newberry call number: Case Wing folio NE2540 .E54


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Prost! This paper sample from Deutsches Kunstdruckpapier shows potential buyers how appetizing their

Prost! This paper sample from Deutsches Kunstdruckpapier shows potential buyers how appetizing their color printing will look.

Newberry call number: Case Wing folio TS1220 .N49, Deutsches Kunstdruckpapier


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