Thanks,,
Our cam was fitted with a high grade Ziess lens that cost a fortune even then,

Rod



On 09/03/2016 18:03, couryho...@aol.com wrote:
""The cameras (they were huge) and the darkend rooms they worked
in no  longer exist.""
These cameras you speak of were wonderful.... I rode a Robetson for
part of a summer  making halftones and line  shots  for a print shop in  AZ
here.  In my off time  I was  allowed  to  shoot  all the old  docs  and old
  Eastman Kodak camera catalogs  I wanted to and print them  up as
posters!  The  lens was a Goerz Red Dot  Artar and the  sharpest  flat  field  
lens
  I  had ever  used!!
Back to computer panels.... Rod thanks for doing the work to create
these!
ed# _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org) In a message dated 3/2/2016 3:32:48 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
rodsmallwoo...@btinternet.com writes:

Hi  Guys
Having  got  8/e (A & B)  plus 8/f and  8/m into
production its  time I made a few comments.

The aim has always been to reproduce the  original panels using the
process DEC used all those years  ago.
Needless to say we had to go through the learning curve with only
photographs, scans and one 8/m original
panel to go on.

In the  interests of origiality I have kept what we used call 'features'
as found  in the documentation and the sample we had.
I'm trying to reproduce the  original, not produce an improved or fixed
version.

The only  process deviations I have allowed myself are as  follows:

1. The original versions would have been drawn twice full size by
hand on matt paper in indian ink.
One sheet per colo(u)r would have been requred. They would
then have used  a process camera
to reduce to one to one  positive masters on clear acetate film.
The cameras (they were huge) and the darkend rooms they worked
in no  longer exist.

I used to do  just that in the early '70's but whats weird is
where I worked is less  than 50 yards
from the silk screen  studio doing the work now.

Now  I use Inkscape and its layers to do the same thing. The
screeners have an  Epson printer
the size of a piano  to print my layers in black onto clear
film. After that the process is the  same as it was.
They take a fine  meshed cloth streched onto a frame. Its
coated (by hand) with a photo  sensitive
emulsion, when dry it  gets exposed through the master using
a UV light source.
The the parts proteced by black on the master are  water
soluable and get washed out  and hence
let the ink through. So one screen per layer is  required


2.      DEC would have printed the images  first and routed or milled the
holes using some kind jig later.
As long as the hole stayed inside the white  line that was
deemed to be OK.
We drill (laser cut) first and screen  afterwards.

Regards
Rod









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