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A different kind of frustration characterizes the reliance upon ornamental stock as a means of identifying printers and detecting shared printing. Despite the fact that ornamental stock has long served as the primary evidence of a printer's work, a comprehensive catalogue has yet to be published and probably never will be. Hence, scanning the standard references to identify the owner of a particular ornament frequently (or usually, in my experience) ends in failure.[10] This seems to have happened to STC researchers as well since, in some instances, a printer has not been supplied for books in which ornamental stock appears. Likewise, shared printing has been overlooked when the stock of a second printer appears along with that of the printer given in the imprint. Furthermore, the reliability of ornamental stock as evidence of printer identity is somewhat lessened by the common practice of borrowing and the existence of duplicate castings and copies. The printer assignments in new STC that are based upon the identification of ornamental stock are thus considered tentative and are cited in brackets; these must eventually be verified by font identification.

Oversights of shared printing and incorrect identification of printers in the new STC seems reason enough to discuss in detail the difficulties associated with the reliance upon ornamental stock. The basic flaw in previous printer-research has been the sole reliance upon ornamental stock.[11] However,


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a more accurate and trustworthy conclusion both about the sharing issue and the identity of a sharing printer can result if the appearance of ornamental stock is understood as an initial clue to the possibility of shared printing that must be followed up by font analysis and identification. A discussion of the various patterns of ornamental appearances seen in shared books will contribute to a more effective use of this kind of evidence.