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  2. Gelatin silver process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gelatin_silver_process

    Gelatin silver process. The gelatin silver process is the most commonly used chemical process in black-and-white photography, and is the fundamental chemical process for modern analog color photography. As such, films and printing papers available for analog photography rarely rely on any other chemical process to record an image.

  3. Thermal paper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_paper

    Thermal paper (often supplied in roll form, and sometimes referred to as an audit roll) is a special fine paper that is coated with a material formulated to change color locally when exposed to heat. It is used in thermal printers , particularly in inexpensive devices such as adding machines , cash registers , and credit card terminals and ...

  4. African American newspapers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_American_newspapers

    African American newspapers (also known as the Black press or Black newspapers) are news publications in the United States serving African American communities. Samuel Cornish and John Brown Russwurm started the first African American periodical, Freedom's Journal, in 1827.

  5. Thermal printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_printing

    Thermal printing (or direct thermal printing) is a digital printing process which produces a printed image by passing paper with a thermochromic coating, commonly known as thermal paper, over a print head consisting of tiny electrically heated elements. The coating turns black in the areas where it is heated, producing an image.

  6. Photographic paper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photographic_paper

    Panchromatic black-and-white photographic printing papers are sensitive to all wavelengths of visible light. They were designed for the printing of full-tone black-and-white images from colour negatives; this is not possible with conventional orthochromatic papers.

  7. Rich black - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rich_black

    Rich black. Rich black, in printing, is an ink mixture of solid black over one or more of the other CMYK colors, [1] resulting in a darker tone than black ink alone generates in a printing process. [2] [3] A typical rich black mixture might be 100% black, 50% of each of the other three inks.