Monotype 'D' Keyboard
Year
Object Number
Provenance
Monotype 'D' Keyboard
Description
Part of a two-machine hot-metal casting system with the Monotype Composition Caster. The keyboard operator would type the text on the keyboard. When each letter key was struck, a hole was punched on a roll of paper tape. Instructions regarding the size of the type and font to be used were hand-written on the tape. The tape was then passed on to the caster. The Monotype system was invented in the late 1890s by Tolbert Lanston (1844–1913). Each of the two machines, the keyboard and the caster, was operated by a different person.
Object Name(s): hot-metal composing keyboards
Object Category: TYPE COMPOSITION MACHINERY AND EQUIPMENT
Creator: Monotype Keyboard Made in England THE MONOTYPE CORPORATION LIMITED London, England
Production date: 1968
Linear Dimensions Depth: 67
Materials: metal
Material Part: body
Provenance Summary: Donated by Conrad Devlin, 1993.
Credit Line: National Print Museum, Dublin
On view: x