Mimeograph
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Birth and death years unknown
A mimeograph machine (the term often being abbreviated to mimeo), sometimes called a stencil duplicator or stencil machine, is a low-cost duplicating machine that works by forcing ink through a stencil onto paper. The process is called mimeography, and a copy made by the process is a mimeograph. Mimeographs, along with spirit duplicators and hectographs, were common technologies for printing small
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Accuracy is not guaranteed.
| Pintadera | 10,000 BC |
|---|---|
| Woodblock printing | 200 |
| Movable type | 1040 |
| Intaglio (printmaking) | 1430 |
| Printing press | c. 1440 |
| Etching | c. 1515 |
| Mezzotint | 1642 |
| Relief printing | 1690 |
| Aquatint | 1772 |
| Lithography | 1796 |
| Chromolithography | 1837 |
| Rotary press | 1843 |
| Hectograph | 1860 |
| Offset printing | 1875 |
| Hot metal typesetting | 1884 |
| Mimeograph | 1885 |
| Daisy wheel printing | 1889 |
| Photostat and rectigraph | 1907 |
| Screen printing | 1911 |
| Spirit duplicator | 1923 |
| Dot matrix printing | 1925 |
| Xerography | 1938 |
| Spark printing | 1940 |
| Phototypesetting | 1949 |
| Inkjet printing | 1950 |
| Dye-sublimation | 1957 |
| Laser printing | 1969 |
| Thermal printing | c. 1972 |
| Solid ink printing | 1972 |
| Thermal-transfer printing | 1981 |
| 3D printing | 1986 |
| Digital printing | 1991 |
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