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The Unit Charge
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The Unit Charge

The nature of Strahan's standard scale of prices can be determined from examination of entries from Ledger A, made during Strahan's early years in business when he recorded more information than was really necessary for bookkeeping and thereby left vital evidence for the reconstruction of his scale of prices to the customer. In the reconstructed scale which follows, the abbreviation "L.P." has been used for Long Primer type face.

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There are several gaps and some anomalies in this scale of prices, for Strahan, of course, did not realize that his scale would some day be reconstructed from the ledgers; he undoubtedly had it available for daily use in written or printed form. However, it is apparent from the reconstruction above that a regular scale was the standard method of fixing the unit charge for any job. We see that the unit charge was a certain price for each sheet. The price for this unit was determined by (1) the size of the sheet, (2) the size of the type, and (3) the press run of copies.

The Size of the Sheet

The scale shows that octavo was the usual sheet size for English, Pica and Small Pica type, but large octavo was also popular. Duodecimo was the usual size for smaller type, especially Long Primer. The price did not necessarily vary simply with the size of the sheet, but with the relationship between the sheet and the type used.

The Size of the Type

On the one hand, if a small type were used for a large sheet, the price was higher for any run of copies than if a large type were used: more typesetting was involved in using small type. On the other hand, even if a small type were used, the charge would depend on the exact relationship between the type size and the sheet. For example, if a job were set in Small Pica and run as octavo, it would involve less type-setting than if it were set in Small Pica and run as a large octavo, because the line measure of large octavo is longer than regular octavo if the margin of white space around the type is not changed. This same Small Pica, if run in duodecimo, would have less work than octavo sheets in some respects: the line measure would be shorter and there would be fewer lines to the page; but, in other respects, more furniture and spacing would have to be handled because there would be eight more pages to set to complete the sheet than in octavo even if the line measure were shorter. Thence the price for a duodecimo in Small Pica could easily be more than for a large octavo on one occasion and less on another occasion, according to the Master Printer's opinion of the difficulty and quantity of the typesetting, which would include his figuring ahead of time the line measure and the number of lines per page — in other words, the unit price would always depend on the results of "casting off copy" before the job was begun. This practice resulted in Strahan's fixing more than one price for a unit charge. For example, 1000 copies of Small Pica duodecimo could cost as little as


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£1.4.0 per sheet, or as much as £1.12.0, depending on the results of the casting-off process.

Strahan's casting-off must have been standardized to conform to his scale of prices with little deviation of line measure or margin, for the anomalies in the scale above are few, once the relationship between the kind of work, the type face, and the sheet size has been accepted as causing slight fluctuations for any given run.

The Press Run of Copies

The information from the scale above, supplemented by other information from later periods in Strahan's career, shows that from 1738 to 1785 the most frequently ordered press run was 500 copies, and that a run of 1000 was second in frequency. Runs of 500 or 1000 copies account for more than half of the press runs which I tabulated as typical of entries in Ledgers A, B, D and F.

               
Copies   Instances  
500  175 
1000  139 
750  77 
1500  43 
250  37 
2000  28 
3000  15 
All of these most frequently requested runs were multiples of a "token" (250 copies) rather than "bastard" runs of less than an even token, such as 400 or 800. It is notable that longer runs of 2000 and 3000 are much more frequent than has generally been supposed true in eighteenth-century printing.

It can be proved that the unit price for work increased in direct proportion to the increase in the press run, by using the scale of unit prices above and information from later periods in Strahan's career to reconstruct a scale of unit prices charged for each of the seven most frequently used press runs. These prices fall naturally into three ranges for each run; in the scale below I have attributed these three price ranges to the use of specific type faces and sheet sizes, but it should be remembered that my attribution is hypothetical, since the exact relationship between the press run and the type and sheet cannot be known with absolute certainty. The scale was constructed from 406 instances of unit charges for press runs between 1738 and 1785 ("No.") and indicates the possibility of a higher top price in the price ranges marked "+."


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The scale shows that Strahan's customers where charged a unit price in an ascending scale according to the press runs they ordered, as well as according to the type face and sheet size. If the exact relationship of these factors in the unit price were known, we could reconstruct the pressmen's wage scale; but even with the simple scale above it is possible to infer, from the regular patterns of increase, that the pressmen did have a regular scale of wages throughout Strahan's career.

The longer runs cost proportionately much more than the shorter runs, because type in the eighteenth century did not last as long as type does today; consequently, a long run in Strahan's business could easily mean that he would have to restock on the particular face because of wear. Further, each additional token resulted in more pressmen's wages, more ink and other material, more washing of the form (especially if the job ran to a second day), and, of course, less flexibility for press scheduling of small or "rush" jobs when one or more presses were occupied with long runs. Today, long runs cost proportionately less than shorter runs, because of the high speed of continuously operating electrical presses printing solidly cast linotype or plates. Even today it is true, however, that hand-set type is charged at a premium if it is ordered for a long run rather than being plated; many shops refuse to use certain hand-set type for anything but "reproduction proof."