Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Prelude to the Invention of the Rubber Stamping Industry

Today I cam across this interesting tidbit on Rubber Stamp History 

This informaiton is from the book The Rubber Stamp Album by Joni K. Miller & Lowry Thompson

Have you ever wondered about the origin of rubber stamps, or why it's even called rubber?  How about where the term vulcanisation came from?  Read on and enjoy a stirring historical documentary on the origins of the rubber stamping industry, as it weaves its way from the Amazonian jungles through Charles Goodyear's kitchen to the American Civil War and finally to three men, each who claim to be the (American) inventors of the rubber stamping industry.

Along time ago, in a jungle far far away.....Charles Marie de la Condamine, French scientist and explorer of the scenic Amazon River, had no idea there would ever be such a thing as a rubber stamp when he sent a sample of "India" rubber to the Institute de France in Paris in 1736.

Prior to de la Condamine, Spanish explorers had noted that certain South American Indian tribes had a light-hearted time playing ball with a substance that was sticky and bounced, but it failed to rouse their scientific curiosity. Some tribes had found rubber handy as an adhesive when attaching feathers to their person; and the so-called "head-hunting" Antipas, who were fond of tattooing, used the soot from rubber that had been set on fire. They punctured skin with thorns and rubbed in the soot to achieve the desired cosmetic effect. The June 1918 issue of Stamp Trade News indicates that "rubber stamps were made hundreds of years ago...by South American Indians for printing on the body the patterns which they wished to tattoo," but we have been unable to verify this was actually the case. In New Zealand today, a version of such tattooing is making a hit in the form of rubber stamp "skin markers" which bear intricate figures of birds, snakes, flowers, tribal symbols, etc.

It wasn't until some thirty-four years after de la Condamine sent his rubber care package home that Sir Joseph Priestley, the discoverer of oxygen, noted: "I have seen a substance excellently adapted to the purpose of wiping from paper the mark of black lead pencil."  In 1770 (some time before the Cosa Nostra) it was a novel idea to rub out (hence the name rubber) pencil marks with the small cubes of rubber, called "peaux de negres" by the French. Alas, the cubes were both expensive and scarce, so most folks continued to rub out their errors with bread crumbs. Rubber limped along, since attempts to put the substance to practical use were thwarted by its natural tendency to become a rotten, evil-smelling mess the instant the temperature changed.    (So nothing new then??)

Enter Charles Goodyear. Upon hearing of the unsolvable rubber dilemma (from the Roxbury Rubber Company), Goodyear became obsessed with solving the whole sticky question once and for all.

During his lifetime, Goodyear was judged to be a crackpot of epic proportions.  Leaving his hardware business, he began working on the problem in his wife's kitchen, spending hours mixing up bizarre brews of rubber and castor oil, rubber and pepper, rubber and salt, rubber and heaven knows what.  Daily life intruded on his experiments in the form of recurring bankruptcy and sporadic imprisonment for failure to pay his debts.  At one point, Goodyear actually sold his children's' school books for the cash required to embark on the next experiment.   Goodyear's persistence and single-mindedness were legion.

In 1839 while fooling around in a kitchen, Goodyear accidentally dropped some rubber mixed with sulphur on top of a hot stove. Instead of turning into a gooey mess, the rubber "cured".   It was still flexible the next day.  The process, involving a mixture of gum elastic, sulphur, and heat was dubbed vulcanization, after Vulcan, the Roman god of fire.  Vulcanized, rubber lost its susceptibility to changes in temperature.  The discovery paved the way for hundreds of practical applications of rubber.  In June 1844, Goodyear patented for his process. Never one to rest on his laurels, Goodyear turned his formidable energies to developing a multiplicity of uses for rubber.  These continuing experiments were costly and bless his soul, in 1860 Goodyear died two hundred thousand dollars in debt.   His last words reflected the pattern of his life: "I die happy, others can get rich." (Again – nothing new then!!)

Prelude to the Invention of the Rubber Stamping Industry

The word "stamp," as used in historical documents, is not particularly explanatory.  Neither is its cousin phrase "hand stamp."  Early historical references to either can easily be mistaken for references to rubber stamps and this is not always correct.  A basic assumption must be made that if the word "stamp" is used to refer to a marking device prior to 1864, it does not refer to a rubber one.

The early days of rubber stamping and their creation are inextricably entwined with those of early dentistry. Around the same time that Goodyear received his patent on vulcanizing, anaesthesia was patented by a fellow named Wells.  Relatively speaking, Wells's discovery made getting your teeth pulled a moderately painless experience, so teeth were being pulled left and right.  This meant, of course, that the demand for false teeth was rising proportionately.  Before vulcanization, denture bases had been made primarily of gold and were both costly and difficult to make.  After vulcanization, denture bases could be made of vulcanized rubber set in plaster moulds.  This process did not demand a great deal of skill, and soon scores of dentists had small, round vulcanisers with which to ply their trade.   These were called "dental pot" vulcanisers and would be used eventually to manufacture the first rubber stamps.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

DATE STAMPS - SAVES TIME

Using date stamps for all of your important documents can save you valuable time. 

Staying organized at home with a date stamp is sure to keep you on top of all kinds of things from the date you paid certain bill to the date you sent off an important document.

Companies can use a date stamp to log all incoming and outgoing mail thus a record is kept that will prove the date a document was received and returned.

Along with the date, other pertinent information can be added  such as received, void, cancelled, approved, billed, paid, entered, filed, shipped, delivered, and completed.  Personal information such as your name or company name can be included also.  

Another bit of information that can be added with the date is routing information.  Not only will it save the person time that is dating the document but also farther down the line to others that need to know these dates. This saves time, when trying to find where the document is along the path and when it should arrive at its final destination.

As you can see, almost any information you may need can be included with the date.

Date stamps save so much time you will not believe it until you begin to use them in your business or at home. Once you start, you will always have your date stamp ready for action.