Monday, May 31, 2010

Head Liquidmatal Fire

great historical value, value and image of our old newspapers

Many original copies of newspapers we could recover over the years and currently have in our large warehouse located behind our shop in Barcelona. That is why we are obliged to maintain a conservation system that ensures maintaining its original condition best.
Newsprint is made from wood pulp, and is not just a material thought to have a long but quite the opposite, since it is the idea that the life of a newspaper will one day, and with regard to something that is produced in large quantities, can not be of high quality by the increase that would entail.
However, newspapers, its news, its history have been shaped over time by different trends that have represented, and above all be an ephemeris of everything that happened in a bygone era, many of whom have ended up stored in newspaper archives , archives and individuals. In short, those designed for perishable consumer publications have finished temporal becoming museum pieces permanent conservation order or even a great value.
For us, all copies of original papers retrieved in their original condition are valuable because each is unique and unrepeatable, and when you sell a unit will become increasingly difficult (and in many cases impossible) to get them back.

Noting our newspapers, since their format, design, lyrics, images, his head, his articles and ads among other things, reflects the mindset of every period of our history and the way they lived then. This is one of the many values \u200b\u200bthat is old news. As modern newspapers, so conventional that now seem to see them every day at kiosks, a day will also have the value so special.
Conserving our original copies of newspapers place in a large warehouse with optimal temperature conditions to avoid moisture, light and air, three great enemies of the newspaper. All copies must be straight, never bent, and his classification has been established by fortnights of months within plastic bags to prevent entry of dust.
When a client requests a copy, if this is in fair condition, conservation, restoration will proceed immediately to a minimum, of removing wrinkles using a steam iron for ironing clothes, but obviously dry to avoid spoiling. Although it may seem strange, good ironed miracles and makes a newspaper very wrinkled and haggard pages have a much better looking than the last. As for broken parts, such as the spine, it is then fixed by rice paper strips attached with spray glue. The rice paper is often transparent and even practically invisible, so just be seen patches that have served to reinforce it and prevent future degradation.

As for another kind of restoration procedures are concerned, as the bleaching of paper, we have never been keen to use them as do, for example, archives and documentation centers in ancient records. That is not our If not our aim, but we offer more authentic and original copy was provided in their original conditions of natural aging that has suffered over the years as we have been able to recover. That fading newsprint due to the passage of time, those typical stains caused by moisture and the general image of "old" is what gives an authentic touch old one and only the customer has the privilege of acquiring and must understand. You can not expect at all an old publication that is flawless and intact as if it were fresh out of print. Even that is the case of people who did not want him arreglásemos the newspaper in order that this offered a more aged and older and less neat.
Once purchased, our folders from different models and sizes we offer ensures proper preservation of specimens, as well as offering a more attractive image along with its certificate of authenticity and a short history of the newspaper to the appropriate copy.

Monday, May 24, 2010

Framed Seating Chart Wedding

LEAF MONDAY: Monday did not go out when the press

The balance of the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera, so that the press is concerned, was rather mixed. So while on one hand cards were issued to journalists with all kinds of ways to control and even institutionalized censorship and theorized by the dictator, on the other side finally earned rest on Sunday by a Royal Order was established on March 24, 1924. This decree was achieved after the year 1919 it would produce a strike by journalists who claimed, among other measures, the rest on Sunday and the conversion of the Associated Press in a union. These are mostly grouped in a Federation of Associations of Newspapers, chaired by José Francos Rodríguez.
To replace the newspapers on Monday, the central government created an Officer of the Province Road for most cities English, the issue of which corresponded then to the Provincial Councils through a new Royal Decree of May 1, 1926 with which it could pay attention to the financing needs of these associations.
However, Pamplona was a pioneer and a precursor to this decree, as the first sheet of Monday the English territory was published in that city in 1915.

Since 1930, when the newspaper came out for the first time in Madrid, claimed the issue to the press associations, who found a new and stable source of income. After the death of Francos Rodríguez, the Federation Press and, therefore, the provincial editions of the Road Monday, were under the chairmanship of the Radical Party leader Alexander Lerroux, whom he appointed in December 1933, a Charitable Journalists to ensure the payment of pensions for members and pensions widows and orphans in their families to their death. In April 1935, Lerroux was replaced by Alfonso Rodríguez Santamaría, deputy director of ABC, and whose mandate was celebrated the 40th anniversary of the establishment of the first Association of Newspapers, which in this case was from Madrid. During the Second Republic in 1932 came the first issue of the Road Monday in Bilbao on April 22, 1935 did in Santander, on May 4, 1936 did in Vigo and this year it did in Zaragoza.

the outbreak of the English Civil War, it proceeded to the collectivization of these newspapers that became the union spokesmen and Republican side, passing the so-called Professional Association of Journalists, which was integrated into UGT. He immediately proceeded to the removal of the board of the Association, many of whose members supported the military uprising against the Republican government. In Catalonia newspapers Monday of each province is united in calling on the Government Official Full, published in Catalan. In 1937 he published the first sheet of Monday in Granada La Coruna and then land belonging to the national side. After the arrival of the troops of General Franco in Barcelona, \u200b\u200bexceptionally, and probably the only time he has given out a copy of the Road from Monday 27 January 1939 to announce the release of the territory, with the peculiarity that that day was Friday and not Monday.

After the war, the publications returned again to their former owners across the country. During the Franco regime remained the only newspaper authorized to be published on Monday as remained compulsory Sunday rest of the press. Due to restrictions on paper, this newspaper became literally a "road" bent written by both sides, no photographs and very brief news. Apart from the inevitable patriotic exaltation to the new regime, highlighted the news about the sport. On January 25, 1943 was published for the first time Monday Leaf in Murcia, in 1947 in Valladolid, on 6 March 1950 in Burgos, in the same year appeared in Orense, and January 3, 1966, and the full development, very late in Cadiz. Monday
Leaf was not the only newspaper that came out Monday, because by that time there some exceptions. For example, until the 1960 ABC edited the newspaper every day, and publications such as the Catalans El Noticiero Universal, La Prensa, Madrid and information and people also came out on Monday and made the evening editions. The same happened with the sports press, as was the case of newspapers Marca and Mundo Deportivo and Sport Life weekly, and a magazine, like the American Life in an edition in Castilian in Spain and Latin American countries and was acquired by subscription .
During the 1950's increased the number of pages and included photographs, and by the 1960 and 1970 added a special sports supplement summarizing the conference sports, especially soccer and bullfighting, the previous weekend. Arrival
the 1980, with a small and simple format that promised its gradual decline during the years of transition, the Road Monday was gradually stopped publishing in all the English cities by the pressure of big business of newspapers from April 19, 1982 decided to end Sunday rest of the journalists and also out Monday.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

A Good Slogan For Cancer

JOURNAL OF BARCELONA: 217-year history of the dean of the continental press

The Diario de Barcelona Notices and News was a periodical founded in Barcelona, \u200b\u200bSpain's oldest and one of the oldest in Europe. Its creation was due by the grace of the printer Pedro Pablo Husson of Lapaz, a Neapolitan who came to the court of Charles III in 1759. Drawing on foreign models, designed to combine an official journal of unofficial news. By granting the government permission for the first issue came to light on October 1, 1792.
In 1809 the Higher Council of Catalonia gave the privilege of this newspaper to a new owner, printer and journalist Antoni Brusi i Miravent (Barcelona 1779-1821).
Between the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century, in the pages of the newspaper picked up the controversy over the spelling and grammar Catalan among readers of the publication. Of special note the views of Josep Pau i Batot, which were instrumental during the Napoleonic government, between 1810 and 1814, first published in Catalan but always bilingual French, under the new name of the Govern of Diari Barcelona i Catalunya .

starting after the War of Independence, on June 6, 1814, the Journal recovered its former name, the owner was again Brusi i Miravent Antoni, who left the newspaper's management to their families for years after his death, hence since the Journal of Barcelona has been popularly known as The Brusi.
During the course of the nineteenth century, the newspaper adopted a monarchical ideology and liberal-conservative, a position that guaranteed a long continuity but also lost influence. The publication, like much of the press at the time, was Castilian, except for some poems in Catalan. However, the prevalence sociolinguistic Catalan at that time forced the writing team to explain the meaning of some English words.
late nineteenth century, the emergence of new newspapers such as El Correo Catalán (1876), La Vanguardia (1881), El Universal News (1888) and The Veu (1899), Journal of Barcelona was gradually losing its former predominantly due to this new and highly competitive. Parallel to the newspaper, also published annual almanacs and pamphlets, becoming the first mainland newspaper to publish stories and novels in installments.

Already in the twentieth century, during the decade of 1920 significantly changed the paper format, through to double its size and number of pages and adding photos for the first time, specifically an image occupying the entire front page accompanied by an explanatory caption, and that was related to a prominent news . Inside ads abound drawn from commercial advertising and posters of shows. During the regime of General Primo de Rivera established the Royal Order of 24 March 1924 Sunday forcing the rest of most newspaper publishers, so that Monday would come only some newspapers as the Official Provincial Road ( Sheet after Monday) and some issues evening such as El Noticiero Universal. Since then and over the next 58 years, the Diario de Barcelona would stop going out every Monday.
In late 1935 the format changed slightly by adopting a design that would remain virtually intact until 1960.
the outbreak of the Civil War, the July 19, 1936, Barcelona's Journal ceased publication and was seized and transformed into Estat Català party organ, published in Catalan by the guerrilla and journalist Marcel • lí Perelló i Domingo (Barcelona 1897 ? - Mexico City 1961).

Of the eighteen existing newspapers in the city of Barcelona, \u200b\u200bduring the war could only return four newspapers and El Mundo Deportivo. The Brusi never see the light until November 24, 1940, being returned to their former owners.
During the early postwar years, in the 1940's due to restrictions on paper, copies of newspaper had very few pages, with brief reports outlined in columns. In the second half of the decade the situation began to improve slightly, and it was not until the 1950's would return to their former volume. Since then, joined prominent op-eds and chronic Barcelona (called "Notes of a voyeur," "News of the city" and "Things such as") and is particularly known paragraphs written by the beloved city official chronicler Avel • lí Artís Andreu Tomàs i "Sempronius" . It also introduced its central pages of current graphic notes, some of Gradec taking into account that the newspapers of that time just took photographs inside. El Diario de Barcelona, \u200b\u200bdespite the inevitable connotations of commitment to the Franco regime, has always tended to offer as far as possible a more close and friendly towards the people of Catalonia, Unlike other newspapers.

Between 1961 and 1964 changed its format slightly and in 1965 it was completely going to have a large size paper with a new modern design of both the top and inside. Retained the same paragraphs of sections and opinion articles and notes graphs of the centrefold, but made significant and outstanding features, including thematic Sunday supplements were devoted mainly to Barcelona, \u200b\u200bCatalonia, economics, women, education, political and Art, among others. In dates of the year, appeared covers the first color image. Were the years of "development" and the newspaper, like most newspapers, speeches slowed even more patriotic devotion to the Franco regime and made a turn "localist" now more focused on the city of Barcelona and its region metropolitan, without abandoning the national and international information.
Since late Franco, had the audacity to be critical of municipal management, especially given the problems that the city suffered as a result of rapid urban development. Thus, unlike the English newspaper La Vanguardia, bourgeois clearly and openly sympathetic to the Franco regime, the Diario de Barcelona was ranked as the Journal of the middle and lower classes, taking a character "Catalan" and "left" to the extent permitted.

Mr. Santacreu in 1974 became the sole owner of the newspaper. Since 1977 the format changed again but this time worse, reducing its size and quality of losing that last 20 years. Were the beginnings of decay.
In October 1980 the newspaper ceased publication temporarily, but was rescued in 1982 by former employees it published in a self-managed, with a very poor format and bilingual (articles in Catalan and Castilian). The result was a failure and the Diario de Barcelona disappeared in 1984, was acquired by the city of Barcelona in 1985 and transferred to Zeta Group, publishers of the newspaper El Periódico de Catalunya, Sport and the sports magazine Interviu. Under this new editorial, completely renovated in 1986 reappeared with a new modern format entirely written in Catalan, under the name of Diari de Barcelona. Since then the Sunday supplements were outstanding, collectible fascicles which were books (such as the Barcelona the Brusi) and books devoted to the Barcelona Olympics in 1992, and that changed the design of the head.

In the same summer of 1992 the Zeta Group disposed of its publication due to lack of profitability, after several changes in the shareholding, the newspaper was briefly held by the ONCE, entity then disposed of their holdings by selling the symbolic price of one peseta brothers and Emili Carles Dalmau (Lleida editors of The Morning), which took control of the newspaper under a deal that saw the newspaper workers fraudulent. Then changed its name to Nou Diari and made different editions for each province of Catalonia. The declaration of insolvency of the Dalmau brothers left the number of payroll employees without pay or any compensation. It was not until 2007 that the courts ordered the previous owners of Diari de Barcelona to pay their old debts to workers.
finally disappeared as a magazine in 1994, and then the City of Barcelona, \u200b\u200bwhich has always owned a small stake, bought the head and went on to be published as online electronic journal ( www.diaridebarcelona.com ) focused exclusively on providing daily news only from the city of Barcelona, \u200b\u200bwith sections on articles, videos, districts and general information. And had nothing to do with the classic newspaper. Since July 31, 2009, this site has been converted into www.btvnoticies.cat under the control of the municipal television station Barcelona Televisió (BTV). There is also a blog: http://diaridebarcelona.blogspot.com .

Monday, May 3, 2010

Urologist Vs Dermatologist

FATE Magazine: Liberalism, Catalan and articles mind under the shadow of Franco

Destination Magazine Burgos was founded during the Civil War, specifically in May 1937 by Xavier Salas and Jose Maria Fontana i Tarrats, both founding supporters of the English Falange. The format of this new publication was still being weekly newspaper, and became the vehicle of expression for intellectuals refugees Catalan national side. The name of the magazine refers to a phrase of José Antonio Primo de Rivera said that "Spain is a destination drive in the universal."

Soon after, in 1939, the editorial went to the workshops of the newspaper La Vanguardia in Barcelona. Ignasi Agustí Josep Vergés and supported by Joan Ramon Masoliver could resume publication of the magazine, which began reissued. Over the years concurrently with the Second World War, which runs until 1945, the magazine is called "Destination: politics of unity." Ended the war and under the Franco regime's interest to change its orientation towards an authoritarian regime, the later editions changed both its format and content, more moderate and liberal character, general information and interesting opinion articles . In early 1940 he became a great contributor to the writer Josep Empordà Pla, the magazine became a landmark liberal and democratic Catalan despite the difficulties imposed by the Franco dictatorship.

During the decade of 1950 the magazine changed its format, going to have more pages and opinion about world news, national and local level and covers some very unique photo.
From the 1960's began a policy shift, initiated a period of cultural openness, civic and religious. The newly acquired leadership soon resulted in fines, disciplinary proceedings and even suspension, as close to who underwent the magazine and its chief legal process Néstor Luján, by a spurious letter entitled "Catalan ends", episode paradoxical cynicism which set out the views of the extreme English right, treated by air Catalan national liberal and cataloging to the journal.

In 1975, Josep Vergés, also the publisher of Ediciones Destino, dissociated itself from the magazine with the Conde de Godo and he became sole owner, moving their studios to the Consell de Cent Catalan newspaper El Correo. In fact, a year earlier, the magazine Destino and became the property of the hegemonic group Banca Catalana, coinciding with the creation of Convergence Democratic Union of Catalonia.
The magazine disappeared in 1980. The years of transition were the poorest, since the specimens reduced their format, content and significantly so it had nothing to do with its former splendor stage. In addition, most of its reporters had stopped working. In 1985 he tried to revive the magazine, but the attempt failed and ceased publication forever.

Among others great writers such as Josep Pla, Castanys Valenti, Manuel Brunet, Joan Estelrich Juan Ramon Masoliver, Josep Palau i Fabre, Sebastian Gasch, Miquel Porter i Moix, Jaume Vicens Vives, Azorín, Nestor Lujan, James Christmas, Sebastian Gasch, Sempronio Josep Maria Sagarra Badosa Enrique Camilo Jose Cela Carles Soldevila, Miguel Delibes, Juan Fuster Ana Maria Matute, Joan Perucho, Alvaro Cunqueiro, Baltasar Porcel, Manuel Jiménez de Parga, Juan Goytisolo, Joseph Melia, Peter Gimferrer, Carmen Mayor Pedro J. Ramirez and Francisco Umbral.