draft printing - определение. Что такое draft printing
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Что (кто) такое draft printing - определение

Printing privilege; Printing license; Printing licence

Textile printing         
  • Woodblock printing in [[Jaipur]], [[Rajasthan]], [[India]].
  • ''Evenlode'' block-printed fabric.
  • Design for a hand woodblock printed textile, showing the complexity of the blocks used to make repeating patterns.  ''Evenlode'' by [[William Morris]], 1883.
  • A Perrotine printing block
  • Woman doing block printing at Halasur village, [[Karnataka]], India.
METHOD FOR APPLYING PATTERNS TO CLOTH USING PRINTING TECHNIQUES
Textileprinting; Resist Printing; Roller Printing; Print fabric; Printed fabric; Printed textiles; Fabric printing; History of textile printing
Textile printing is the process of applying color to fabric in definite patterns or designs. In properly printed fabrics the colour is bonded with the fibre, so as to resist washing and friction.
3D food printing         
  • 3D-printed chocolate
  • Binder Jetting Process
  • The cost of raising 1kg of cricket meat compared to 1kg of cow meat
  • 227x227px
  • Computer Render of Extrusion Based Printing with Multi-Material printing
  • CandyFab
  • Selective Laser Sintering Process
3D PRINTING TECHNIQUE TO MAKE FOOD.
3D-printed food; User:FM1418/sandbox; Draft:3D Food Printing; 3D Food Printing
3D food printing is the process of manufacturing food products using a variety of additive manufacturing techniques. Most commonly, food grade syringes hold the printing material, which is then deposited through a food grade nozzle layer by layer.
Draft (sports)         
PROCESS USED TO ALLOCATE CERTAIN PLAYERS TO SPORTS TEAMS
Draft pick; Draft choice; Sports draft; Entry draft; Draft (sport); Draft blunder; Draft picks; Draft bust; Draft steal; Draft Bust; Draft mechanism
A draft is a process used in some countries (especially in North America) and sports (especially in closed leagues) to allocate certain players to teams. In a draft, teams take turns selecting from a pool of eligible players.

Википедия

Printing patent

The printing patent or printing privilege was a precursor of modern copyright. It was an exclusive right to print a work or a class of works.

The earliest recorded printing privilege dates from 1469, giving John of Speyer a five-year monopoly on all printing in Venice. In 1495, the city-state granted another monopoly on all Greek works to Aldus as a reward for his investments in a Greek font for his press.

In France, the royal Code de la librairie of 1723 codified existing practice. It stated that there was no property in ideas or texts. Ideas, it was argued, were a gift from God, revealed through the writer. God's first representative, the French king had the exclusive right to determine what could be printed by whom. Only members of the royal guild of publishers could apply for a "printing privilege", a permission and an exclusive right to print a work. Authors wishing to see their manuscript printed had no choice but to sell it to guild members. Most printing privileges were owned by the guild and automatically renewed over generations. In 1789, the National Assembly created by the French Revolution brought an end to all royal privileges.

English monarchs granted printing patents based on the Royal Prerogative, with patents falling into one of two categories: particular patents gave an exclusive right to print a single work – often popular, classic works written centuries earlier – for a limited time, usually seven or ten years. General patents were usually granted for life and covered a class of works, such as law books or almanacs. Printing patents were independent of the private copyright system established by the Stationers' Company, even though most printing patents were granted to members of the Company. The importance of printing privileges decreased over time, but they still existed after the Statute of Anne was enacted. The royal prerogative relating to printing patents was not removed until 1775.