I have heard that labels from "our" period are black ink on off-white or colored paper. I have seen merchants specializing in paper products selling very colorful and almost lithographic labels, claiming they are from "our" period.
What's the story? If the colorful labels are "new" then what would be the situations they should correctly be used? If the colorful labels are correct too, how did the "only B&W" myth get started? If the colorful labels are not correct, why would merchants who are otherwise very well researched market them as correct? (..and I'm not trying to "call anyone out" just get to the bottom of what I've been told vs. what I'm seeing)
Thanks for adding your thoughts. :-)
What's the story? If the colorful labels are "new" then what would be the situations they should correctly be used? If the colorful labels are correct too, how did the "only B&W" myth get started? If the colorful labels are not correct, why would merchants who are otherwise very well researched market them as correct? (..and I'm not trying to "call anyone out" just get to the bottom of what I've been told vs. what I'm seeing)
Thanks for adding your thoughts. :-)
Comment