Answer:
During much of the letterpress era, movable type was composed by hand for each page. Cast metal sorts were composed into words, then lines, then paragraphs, then pages of text and tightly bound together to make up a form, with all letter faces exactly the same “height to paper”, creating an even surface of type. The form was placed in a press, inked, and an impression made on paper.
Previous Question | Next Question |
What is your greatest weakness as Typesetter? What are you doing to improve it? | What is typesetting? |