Synopsis :
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Présentation de l'éditeur:
Color and I ts Application to Printing appeared serially in The Inland Printer during 1910 and 1911, under the title Scientific Color in Printing. The careful research and accuracy of statement evidenced in these articles received the warm commendation of the most eminent authorities in America on the problems of color. The author, Mr. E. C. A ndrews, brings a special fitness and experience to the work he has undertaken. A student at Princeton and a graduate of the University of Chicago, Mr. Andrews specialized in chemistry, and, though not officially on the faculty roll, was for a time in effect assistant instructor in chemistry in the University of Chicago. Entering commercial life, he was chemist for the Corn Products Refining Company, and thereafter connected himself with Philip Ruxton, I nc., of which organization he is the second vice-president. Mr. Andrews has been unusually successful in simplifying the processes of arrival at color selection. His specialty has brought him in immediate contact with the difficulties that commonly beset the printer in obtaining cohesion and contrast in colorwork. In this way, the present work is not theoretical in its application, but eminently a practical work, in which all that has been set down in this connection has been proved and tested. The student of color will find in these pages foundation principles accepted by modern authority. The analyses of the phenomena of the disintegration of white light into its color components and their representation by pigmentation open up a field of study which is not only deeply interesting but of the greatest value and importance to all manufacturers and users of color in the arts. THE INLAND PRINTER COMPANY, Publishers, Chicago.
(Typographical errors above are due to OCR software and don't occur in the book.)
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