3,634 research outputs found
Conference Proceedings of the Second International Conference on: Preservation and Conservation Issues Related to Digital Printing and Digital Photography
The research is in the field of conservation of digitally printed materials. In order to accurately edit these proceedings the editors required detailed knowledge in all research aspects covered during the conference.
The conference was held on 24th & 25th March 2003 at Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh as part of the Institute of Physics Annual Physics Congress 2003. The conference was jointly organised by the Institute of Physics 3Ps Group and The London College of Printing, The London Institute. The conference was organised by Andrew Manning, Robert Thompson and Anthony Smith.
The conference proceedings were edited and compiled by Andrew Manning and Robert Thompson.
The conference was the second international event, the first being held in 2000. The conference was unique in attracting speakers from industry and academic institutions as well as standards organisations. There were four sessions; session one dealt with the concerns of the artists and printmakers, session two with materials, processes and permanence issues, session three dealt with standards and the last session with digital photography. At the end of each session there was a panel discussion, these has been reproduced in the proceedings. The second panel, which dealt with Materials, Processes and Permanence Issues, was chaired by the researcher. As well as the printed papers there is an accompanying CD showing additional material which again was compiled by the editors.
The proceedings are a unique collection of research papers and discussions on the topics of conservation and preservation of digitally produced material. They are to be found in many libraries throughout the world. The Institute of Physics were still reporting a demand for these proceedings in 2005, at the subsequent conference held in 2006 all the remaining copies were sold
Interview with Moon Knight Cinematographer Andrew Droz Palermo
GWU student and film critic Thomas Manning recently interviewed cinematographer Andrew Droz Palermo about his work on the Marvel Studios series Moon Knight.
The video is available by clicking here.https://digitalcommons.gardner-webb.edu/gwu-today/1639/thumbnail.jp
Interview with Martha Manning - OH 297
Martha Joyce Richardson Manning (1936-) is a 1973 Winthrop College graduate (Masters Degree) who was enrolled to further her career as a reading teacher at the suggestion of parents and school board members. Mrs. Manning was married the Reverend Jesse Franklin “Frank” Manning (1933-2006) and has three children at the time of her enrollment. Mrs. Manning discusses her professional life as well as her experience as a student in the education program at Winthrop. She talks about her professors, her rigorous class load, and the College president, Dr. Charles B. Vail (president from 1973-1982). Mrs. Manning graduated with a “Reading Teacher Award,” and took a test to receive a certification that allowed her to teach reading from elementary to college levels in South Carolina. She discusses how Winthrop helped her to further her passion for education.
Martha Manning is the author of her autobiography My Angel and Me (2017)https://digitalcommons.winthrop.edu/oralhistoryprogram/1153/thumbnail.jp
Bob Manning & son: soul, inheritance, and forgotten stories
Bob Manning & Son is a long-form multimedia nonfiction essay based on interviews, historical research, and personal accounts. The essay documents the life of Swedish-American soul singer, Bob Manning, and explores the familial inheritance of his children, primarily through the perspective of his son, Matthew Manning (author)
Conference Proceedings: 1st International Conference on Preservation and Conservation Issues related to Digital Printing
The area of research is conservation with particular interest in the factors affecting digital printing
These Conference Proceedings were edited and subsequently published in March 2001. The lead organiser and editor was Professor Robert Thompson. The author liaised with the speakers to produce the final papers that are published here.
The conference was novel in bringing together speakers and an audience of conservation and preservation scientists, chemists, physicists, artists; conservators from galleries, museums and libraries as well as suppliers of ink, paper and printing technologies. The aim of the conference was to explore the issues affecting the longevity of artefacts produced using the new digital printing technologies and their associated materials. Unlike established artists and author media, the substrates and colorants used with digital printing technologies are now known to be unstable under a range of conditions and artefacts so produced are threatened during display and storage.
However, the use of digital printing by artists and publishing houses is increasing rapidly and with them the potential for degradation of original works. Accordingly there is growing international concern about the future of such materials and the ability to conserve them for posterity.
Many interesting and useful conclusions were drawn regarding the state of the stability and longevity of digitally printed artefacts. Factors affecting the stability of prints were found to be complex. It was established that there was a dearth of information relating to specification and standardisation of test procedures and storage criteria. Work is under way with the International Standards Organisation and is a subject to be pursued by subsequent conferences.
The speakers were drawn from an international pool of expertise from the US, Germany, Canada, Denmark, France, as well as the UK.
The author’s knowledge in such a range of subjects ensured that these proceedings have appeared in print
Editor's inscription in Valentine Duval : an autobiography of the last century
Editor Anne Manning's gift inscription to author William Stebbing (1832–1926), "To William Stebbing from his affectionate friend the editor Nov. 2, 1860".Manning, Anne, 1807-1879
The Plant Size-Place Effect: Agglomeration and Monopsony in Labour Markets
This paper shows, using data from both the US and the UK, that average plant size is larger in denser markets. However, many popular theories of agglomeration - spillovers, cost advantages and improved match quality - predict that establishments should be smaller in cities. The paper proposes a theory based on monopsony in labour markets that can explain the stylized fact - that firms in all labour markets have some market power but that they have less market power in cities. It also presents evidence that the labour supply curve to individual firms is more elastic in larger markets.Agglomeration, Labour Markets, Monopsony
Manning, Andrew Frederick. (Birth, 1911-07-29)
Address: 620 Burns St.4168/1911Original record filed in drawer labeled 'MANNING-MARSHALL, M'
Manning and Dymphna Clark with (left to right) Axel, Andrew, Katerina and Sebastian, Melbourne ca 1953 [picture]
Title from caption list provided by family member.; Original held by D. Clark. Access to family photographs is unrestricted.; Part of the collection: Portraits of Manning and Dymphna Clark and family.; Also available in electronic version via the Internet at: http://nla.gov.au/nla.pic-vn4300218
Thomas Henry Manning (1911-1998)
Dr. Thomas Henry Manning, Officer of the Order of Canada, former Vice-Chairman and Executive Director of the Arctic Institute of North America, and famed Canadian Arctic expert, died on 8 November 1998 at Smiths Falls, Ontario, after a long illness. He was the author of more than fifty scholarly papers and reports, about half of them on zoological subjects, but he was probably best known for his record as an exceptional Arctic traveller on land and sea. ... Manning was awarded the Bruce Medal of the Scottish Geographical Society and Royal Philosophical Society of Edinburgh in 1944; the Patron\u27s Medal of the Royal Canadian Geographical Society in 1948; and the Massey Medal of the Royal Society of Canada in 1977. He was appointed an Officer in the Order of Canada in 1974 and awarded an honorary doctorate of literature by McMaster University in 1979. Manning was exceptionally tough, vigorous, fearless, patient, hard-working and resourceful, qualities that made him the matchless Arctic traveller and scientist that he was, and earned him respect among Inuit and Southerners alike
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