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Westminster Press

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The Imprint was a periodical aimed at the printing trade, published in 9 issues from January to November 1913. The publishers were the Imprint Publishing Company, of 11 Henrietta Street, Covent Garden , London. Editors were F. Ernest Jackson , Edward Johnston , J. H. Mason , and Gerard Meynell of the Westminster Press , London, which was also the printer of the journal.

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5-470: Westminster Press may refer to: Westminster Press (London) was a printing company in London run by Gerard Meynell, printer of The Imprint Westminster Press (Philadelphia) , merged with John Knox Press to form Westminster John Knox Press ; published science fiction and other material aimed at younger readers from at least 1954 to 1980. Westminster Press,

10-597: A defunct regional newspaper company in the United Kingdom owned by Pearson Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Westminster Press . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Westminster_Press&oldid=1162879219 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

15-492: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages The Imprint (printing trade periodical) In addition to the editors, several notable printing practitioners wrote for the magazine, including Stanley Morison . The issues are dated thus: Reproductions by Photogravure and Offset The name of the journal lives on in the typeface Imprint Old Face . This sturdy design, Caslon —like but with more regularity in its letterforms,

20-606: The fine careless flavour, which their omission gives, after we have recovered from the first shock inevitable to us typographical precisians”. Perhaps Imprint’s most notable use since then has been for the entire setting of the Second Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary (1989), 22,000 pages of precisely structured typography in 20 volumes. It is available today as a digital OpenType font from Monotype's successor, Monotype Imaging . In 1972

25-557: Was produced for the magazine (on a non-exclusive basis) in 1912 by the Monotype Company as Series 101 for automatic composition on the Monotype caster. When delivered to the journal's printers on December 31, 1912, it was still incomplete — the accents had not yet been made — so the editors asked in the first issue: “Will readers kindly insert them for themselves, if they find their omission harsh? For ourselves, we rather like

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