Discover the inner workings of a historic printing house with a rare specimen book.
This nonfiction artifact presents a detailed look at Norwood Press and its work in printing and bookbinding. It showcases the range of type, electrotyping, and press technology used in a major mid‑20th century American printer. The pages offer a window into how a full-service shop described its capabilities, from large editions to school and college text work, and how it presented itself to clients.
What you’ll experience:
- A look at the kinds of type, headpieces, initials, and other printing elements a working shop considers essential.
- Insights into electrotyping, plate preparation, proofs, and the care taken to ensure typographical accuracy.
- Details on the Press Room’s scale, machinery, and capacity for large editions and illustrated work.
- Clear descriptions of services for educational publishing, catalog printing, and book production.
Ideal for readers of printing history, book design, and the evolution of commercial publishing, this edition offers concrete, era‑specific context about North American book production practices.