Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Unprintable. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Unprintable Quotes And Sayings by 97 Authors including Ruth Ozeki,Ian Mckellen,John Lothrop Motley,Friedrich Kellner,Mark Barrowcliffe for you to enjoy and share.
Print is predictable and impersonal, conveying information in a mechanical transaction with the reader's eye. Handwriting, by contrast, resists the eye, reveals its meaning slowly, and is as intimate as skin.
I'm the sort of person who doesn't write in ink. I only write in pencil, so it can be rubbed out.
History shows how feeble are barriers of paper.
Gutenberg, your printing press has been violated by this evil book, Mein Kampf!
Actually 'bad' doesn't do justice to my handwriting. Neither does 'handwriting.' 'Desecration of paper' about covers it.
The printing press is either the greatest blessing or the greatest curse of modern times, sometimes one forgets which it is.
Digital data are more fragile than printed material.
Ink was not invented to express our real feelings.
Who knew paper and ink could be so vicious
How do you tell when you're out of invisible ink?
We printed all the words out because otherwise nobody would be able to understand them.
This was a manuscript of the night we couldn't read.
It is always the unreadable that occurs.
When the ink runs dry, you're most likely writing at the wrong angle.
I can't answer the door with Sharpie on my face!
University printing presses exist, and are subsidised by the Government for the purpose of producing books which no one can read; and they are true to their high calling.
With a face like mine, I do better in print.
The unread is always better than the unreadable.
In print, people can do anything to you. Everything you do is picked apart. People love it; they're waiting for you to make a mistake.
Fingerprints are like values
you leave them all over everything you do
In the printed page the only real things are the paper and the ink; the white spaces play the same part in aiding the eye to take in the meaning of the print as do the black letters.
Startled, I accidently knock over my inkwell. A black tsunami of ink sprawls out across the page, engulfing the tiny village of my words. They are swept away into the midnight sea. Gone forever. I am bereft.
A bad handwriting is as annoying to a reader ... as an irritating voice is to a listener.
My blood ran with this ink...
Words, once they are printed, have a life of their own.
Ink is the transcript of thought.
See what is invisible and you will see what to write
Printing mistakes adds value because of the probability calculus, which makes their intrusion into something problematic and almost impossible, even when everything's conceived, precisely, to avoid the intrusion of human error.
Our lives are written in disappearing ink.
Dont confuse legibility with communication. Just because something is legible doesnt mean it communicates and, more importantly, doesnt mean it communicates the right thing.
I have both exploited and been exploited in the print field.
Then print this. If you report something that irresponsible, I will kick your arse so hard you'll be able to finger yourself and clean your teeth at the same time.
I never saw a worse paper in my life. One of those sprawling flamboyant patterns committing every artistic sin.
Leave the pages bloody
All art is but dirtying the paper delicately.
The palest ink will endure beyond the memories of man
His cock is inked.
How quiet the writing, how noisy the printing.
Her life in ink.
The Text is not a definitive object.
Everything in life is writable ...
A book unopened alters not the ink on its pages. What is there is there.
Though an angel should write, still 'tis devils must print
The Unbookables are supposed to be unbookable. That's what it's all about.
I don't want to give too much ink to foolish men.
As any reader knows, a printed page creates its own reading space, its own physical landscape in which the texture of the paper, the colour of the ink, the view of the whole ensemble acquire in the reader's hands specific meanings that lend tone and context to the words.
They say my prints are bad, darling they should see my negatives
If print was invented tomorrow, it would be the death of digital.
There is nothing outside the text
Por que en las epocas oscuras
se escribe con tinta invisible?
Why in the darkest ages
do they write with invisible ink?
We were working with this lousy print and it just wasn't going to be good enough. I said that we should get the original negative and do it from that. Well, a couple guys pointed out that the negative was locked up over at Deluxe.
I don't see the world unless I see it in ink.
We're not militant, but there are certain things that are absolutely secret. There was a pilot printed on red paper, and I read everything on my iPad and have a scanner on my desk for these purposes. I scanned in the script, and red paper script scans in perfectly fine.
Made by Hand is impossible to set down once you start reading it.
Digital files cannot be made uncopyable, any more than water can be made not wet.
Never put lettering in your photos unless you want it read.
Just because something's legible doesn't means it communicates. More importantly, it doesn't mean it communicates the right thing. So, what is the message sent before somebody actually gets into the material? And I think that's sometimes an overlooked area.
If that shit is a Hawaiian print, I'm going to kill you.
The understanding eye sees the maker's fingerprints. They are evident in every detail ... Leave Fingerprints.
We write frankly and freely, but then we modify before we print.
Unix in particular is very poor at network printing.
The broken spine of the book shows the webbing of binder's string, and my fingers have worn white spots in the cover.
On paper it's perfect.
But the thing about paper is: It burns.
His features were smudged and indistinct, as though a thumb had smeared itself across an ink drawing of a face. His
But since printing came in no one wants illustrated works, they are happy with these cheap books with their ugly, square letters all squashed together.
Our bodies were printed as blank pages
to be filled with the ink of our hearts
I wanted to buy a T-shirt that read: I AM UNKNOWABLE.
The digital print is becoming the look of our time, and it makes the C-print start to look like a tintype.
The ink shall flow as long as the blood.
If you do big things they print your face, and if you do little things they print only your thumbs.
You've seen yourself how difficult the writing is to decipher with your eyes, but our man deciphers it with his wounds.
It's not really much good tearing out a page because you can see the place where it's been torn. [ ... ] You can pull a stamp out,' she said with terrible youthful clarity, 'and you don't know that it's ever been there.
An author should leave fingerprints not on the page but on the reader.
A beautiful print is a thing in itself, not just a halfway house on the way to the page.
Written pages are something that can be returned to, reclaimed, and when they are marvelous, never lose their power.
Remember that you must never sell your soul. Never accept payment in advance ... Never give a work to the printer before it is finished. This is the worst thing you can do ... It constitutes the murder of your own ideas.
Writing is like a sculpture where you remove, you eliminate, in order to make the work visible. Even those pages you remove somehow remain
The distortion of a text resembles a murder: the difficulty is not in perpetrating the deed, but in getting rid of its traces.
I wrote my friend a letter using a highlighting pen. But he could not read it, he thought I was trying to show him certain parts of a piece of paper.
I've never read an ebook. Print every time.
Dipping a cockroach in ink and having it scamper around the page would have left more legible traces to the average reader.
Next to me she seems like a clean blackboard, whereas I am full of crossed-out scribbles that I can no longer decipher.
I once wrote deduceable instead of deducible in a book, though nobody then or since has taken me up on it. A small point as they go, perhaps, but Rule I of writing acceptably is to get everything right as far as you can, and in this case I had neglected to.
There is nothing more valuable than the printed word.
( ... ) my problem with paper is that all communication dies with it. It holds no possibility of continuity.
the flip side of the paper." Quaere enim avis replaced the image on the screen, handwritten in blue ink.
Lolita, Lolita, Lolita, Lolita, Lolita, Lolita, Lolita, Lolita, Lolita. Repeat till the page is full, printer.
If all printers were determined not to print anything till they were sure it would offend nobody, there would be very little printed.
Ink, thinks Jacob, you most fecund of liquids...
My work is being destroyed almost as soon as it is printed. One day it is being read; the next day someone's wrapping fish in it.
I didn't have any money or ID. I didn't have a credit card. Hell, I didn't have a business card.
What would it say? 'Harry Dresden, Winter Knight, Targets Slain, No Barbecues, Waterslides, or Fireworks Displays.
While the art of printing is left to us science can never be retrograde; what is once acquired of real knowledge can never be lost.
I don't care if you make a print on a bath mat, just as long as it is a good print.
To call that writing, madam, is an insult to quills and ink across the world.
With the development of the printing press, not only could text be mass-produced quickly, it could also be mass-produced quickly and incorrectly.
When you print out your manuscript and read it, marking up with a pen, it sometimes feels like a criminal returning to the scene of a crime.
There is nothing simple or dull in achieving the transparent page. Vulgar ostentation is twice as easy as discipline. When you realise that ugly typography never effaces itself, you will be able to capture beauty as the wise men capture happiness by aiming at something else.
The condemned social order has not been built up on paper and ink, and I don't fancy that a combination of paper and ink will ever put an end to it.
I specialize in what the French call la petite histoire. I am interested in the individual thumbprint.
Basically, any material you can squeeze, melt or generate into a powder, you can print.