The Printers’ International Specimen Exchange

Subtitle: “With an Introduction by the Editor of The Paper and Printing Trades’ Journal [A. W. Tuer]”

Start Date(s)

  • 1880 (journal itself)

End Date(s)

  • 1898 (Stewart)
  • 1896 (Shattock)

Editor(s)

City

  • London, England (journal itself)

Type of Content

  • "Circulated a selection of various printers’ best designs and typography as technical models and inspiration for its subscribers. As each copy consisted of 200 hand-mounted examples, this project was no doubt made viable by Tuer's ‘Stickphast’ glue, which he had invented at the end of the 1860s" (Peltz)

Notes

  • "In some interesting and characteristic communications from Mr. Ruskin on the subject of the Printers' International Specimen Exchange he writes: 'I assure you again how gladly I hear of an association of printers who will sometimes issue work in a form worthy of their own craft and shewing to the uttermost the best of which it is capable. It seems to me also that a lovely field of design is open in the treatment of decorative type, not in the mere big initials in which one cannot find the letters but in delicate and variably fantastic ornamentation of capitals, and filling of blank spaces or musically divided periods of sentences and breadths of margin. Paper that won't break or won't mildew would be literally a 'godsend' to me. I scarcely care to design an engraving to go on to modern paper. I have the most entire sympathy with your objects, but believe that people will have had paper nowadays, bad printing nowadays, and bad painting nowadays and nothing else. The public have, perhaps almost without knowing it, the technical education of printers at heart, for good typography concerns every man, woman, and child who can read. Printers would do well to recollect that in technically educating themselves they are educating the masses for printing is closely allied to the fine arts, and by the production of better work the national taste is elevated and society at large benefitted" ("Introduction," vol. 1, 1880, p. 5)
  • "The Printers' International Specimen Exchange was established in England in 1880. Organised by the typographer, Andrew White Tuer, editor of the Paper and Printing Trades Journal. Each subscriber at a cost of one shilling provided a certain number of typographic specimens representing their best work. These were then collected into sets so that each subscriber received 200 incoming specimens, all different, in place of his own 200 outgoing specimens, all the same" (Jury qtd. in COPAC)
  • "An interesting collection of 'jobbing display' material by English, French, German, and other European printers of the second half of the nineteenth century. Instructive for the student of style and design" (Ulrich and Kup p. 24)
  • Hilton took over the editorship in 1888, and the journal was moved with him to Raithby, Lawrence, & Co. (Young)
  • Publisher's address (before 1888, Field and Tuer/Leadenhalle Presse): 50 Leadenhall St., London (journal itself)
  • Publisher's address (in 1888 and after, Raithby, Lawrence, & Co.): 1 Imperial Buildings, Ludgate Circus, and Queen St., Leicester

Subject Categories

Sources that Discuss this Journal

  • COPAC
  • Horrocks pp. 339-67
  • NSTC
  • Peltz
  • Shattock p. 52
  • Stewart vol. 3, p. 604
  • Ulrich and Kup p. 24, 47, 133, 186
  • Wikipedia, "Printers"
  • Young passim

Works Cited

  • COPAC: Consortium of Online Public Access Catalogues. Library Hub Discover, JISC.
  • Horrocks, Jamie. "The Grammar of Typography: The Printers’ International Specimen Exchange and Victorian Letterpress Design Reform." Early Popular Visual Culture, vol. 20, no. 4, pp. 339-67. Taylor & Francis Online.
  • NSTC (Nineteenth-Century Short Title Catalogue), in C19: The Nineteenth-Century Index, Chadwyck-Heaney, 2020. ProQuest.
  • Peltz, Lucy. "Tuer, Andrew White (1838–1900), printer, publisher, and author." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, 23 Sept. 2004.
  • Shattock, Joanne. The Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature. Vol. 4: 1800-1900. Edited by Frederick W. Bateson. 3rd ed. Cambridge UP. 1999.
  • Stewart, James D., editor. British Union-Catalogue of Periodicals. 4 vols. Butterworths, 1968.
  • Ulrich, Carolyn F., and Karl Kup. Books and Printing: A Selected List of Periodicals, 1800-1942. W. E. Rudge, 1943.
  • Wikipedia contributors. "Printers' International Specimen Exchange." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 7 Jun. 2018.
  • Young, Matthew McLennan. The Rise and Fall of the Printers' International Specimen Exchange. Oak Knoll P, 2012.
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