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Low to paper

When the impression of a type does not appear distinctly, from not being of the same height as the body of a page or line, it is termed “low to paper.” This is caused sometimes by the typefounder’s dresser planing too much off the foot of a stick of type; it is also observable when new sorts are mixed with an old fount, the new sorts being, in that case, “high to paper.”

Low to paper

When the impression of a type does not appear distinctly, from not being the same height as the body of a page or line, it is termed “low to paper.” This is caused sometimes by the typefounder’s dresser planing too much off the foot of a stick of type; it is also observable when new sorts are mixed with an old fount, the new sorts being, in that case, “high to paper.”

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