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This man of many parts is 38 years old and the son of a photoengraver.
Weed concluded his career by working as a photoengraver.
After training to be a photoengraver, she found work at a photography studio and a Stockholm newspaper.
To achieve the offset color scheme on a redesigned $20 face, for example, the photoengraver burns two plates.
Take me about thirty seconds to fire eleven aimed shots the retired photoengraver with fourteen grandchildren decided.
He was briefly employed as a photographer and a photoengraver for The Ottawa Times.
He was a photoengraver there.
The photoengraver receives the master design from the bank note designer and "steps" (duplicates) the images over a plate layout.
Behnke was a photoengraver for the Saint Louis Post-Dispatch newspaper.
"It was clean, efficient and was always on time," he recalled as he spoke of commuting to his photoengraver's job on 25th Street in Manhattan.
He emigrated to the United States in 1877, settled in New York and worked as an artist, painter, and photoengraver.
The photoengraver takes great care to make sure the images are perfectly aligned on both plates, or else the images will not line up properly when printed on the bills.
The New York City photoengravers won their strike, but the lack of ITU support led most of the union's photoengraver locals to seek disaffiliation.
To support himself he worked for seven years as a photoengraver on The Wellington Evening-Post, a job that helped finance his first film, a dark science-fiction comedy called "Bad Taste."
In 1894, the International Typographical Union (ITU) chartered its first photoengraver's affiliate, New York Photo-Engravers' Union No. 1.
The author spent some time with a photoengraver in Manhattan who "gave me some pointers on steel-plate engraving," and with an eonomist at New York University for advice on international banking.
James Bryant Conant was born in Dorchester, Massachusetts, on March 26, 1893, the third child and only son of James Scott Conant, a photoengraver, and his wife Jennett Orr née Bryant.
Mrs. Nagler, whose father was the first deaf person to become a photoengraver, and whose mother was one of the first deaf women to work in a museum (at the Hispanic Society of America), grew up in Valley Stream.