Subject: Impressions from stamping dies
I have a research project on the horizon, part of which involves binders cover stamping dies. I want to make sharp dark impressions of these dies for scanning into a computer. I want to do this, if possible, without heating them up individually in a hot stamping press. Heating takes too long and there are over 1,000 dies requiring impressions. It would take weeks if not months to proceed in this fashion. And I don't know if I can get black or dark blue foil in wide widths, like maybe 6-7", in order to take impressions from the largest dies. My preferred method is cold stamping. I have tried putting similar dies (as would be used on a printing press) in various types of small bookpresses, using linoleum blocks and several types of carbon and transfer papers. The results have been pitiful: no sharp dark impressions here. I have thought about inking the dies and then taking impressions using a bookpress or tabletop proof press, but this is messy because of the space and ventilation requirements, due to solvent cleanup of the ink. Also, I don't want to have to lug around a lot of equipment. A scanner and laptop are my ideal limits. I have also thought about direct scanning of the dies and then using outlining software to create the image, but haven't yet tried this because of my lack of experience doing this sort of thing. Does anyone have any bright ideas that would help me out, including refinements of the methods I have already failed at? Thanks in advance, Robert J. Milevski Preservation Librarian Princeton University Library One Washington Road Princeton, NJ 08544 609-258-5591 Fax: 609-258-4105 *** Conservation DistList Instance 12:47 Distributed: Wednesday, November 25, 1998 Message Id: cdl-12-47-011 ***Received on Tuesday, 24 November, 1998