Home / Brinton, Willard C. Graphic Presentation. New York: Brinton Associates, 1939. Internet Archive: graphicpresentat00brinrich. Brinton's 526-page magnum opus. Page 162 reproduces his own 1921 postcard map lobbying for the Briarcliff-Peekskill Parkway crossing Croton Dam, with a caption crediting the map with helping secure the route's adoption. / Passage

Graphic Presentation

Brinton, Willard C. Graphic Presentation. New York: Brinton Associates, 1939. Internet Archive: graphicpresentat00brinrich. Brinton's 526-page magnum opus. Page 162 reproduces his own 1921 postcard map lobbying for the Briarcliff-Peekskill Parkway crossing Croton Dam, with a caption crediting the map with helping secure the route's adoption. 258 words

Indicate the division of the circle into its parts by a protractor and draw the dividing

lines in ink.

3. Type in the names of the sectors.

4. With the compass set as it was to draw the original circle, draw another circle exactly

like it on a sheet of thin typewriter second paper. By running the sharp point of the compass around the circle several times on the thin paper, the circle will drop out and leave a hole in the second sheet.

5. Place the copy in the machine with the second sheet over it so that all of the copy

excepting the circle itself is covered.

6. Roll the copy up in the machine and place a strip of second sheet along one of the

dividing lines and another strip along the adjacent dividing line. The two strips of paper will cross at the center of the circle and will cover all of th* circle but one sector.

7. Beginning at the bottom of the exposed sector, make rows of the desired character to

make the "all over" pattern for that sector, allowing the rows to extend beyond the edge of the sector a few spaces. The excess typing will fall on the second sheets and a very sharp edge of the pattern will appear on the copy. Adjust the strips of paper each time to expose one sector and fill in each sector, running the pattern carefully around the lettering.

8. It takes as long to describe it as it does to do it.