Hi, I am still looking for simple ways to put lyrics on piano rolls.
I haven't had any luck with computer printers. For one thing, the
advance on the printer is incompatible with the advance on the rolls.
Also, I do not know of a program that would support such a long "page".
In most programs, the "next page" throws off the timing.
There is a way of doing it, though. If a stencil belt could be made
from plain heavy brown wrapping paper, the roll could be laid flat on
a long table. The oversize wrapping paper could be laid down over the
roll, masking it. The stenciling could then be applied with spray ink
from a air brush, or an ink roller.
The problem with this is that it would require a punch that would make
a hole in the wrapping paper, in the form of a letter; there are lots
of cardboard stencils, but it would take the machine that actually
punched them out. My search of the web has turned up nothing.
Any ideas?
Andy Taylor
[ John Malone had a commercially-made stencil cutter machine for
[ Play-Rite, with a standard typewriter keyboard. It was fast!
[
[ The inherent paper advance of a dot matrix computer printer is
[ 72 lines per inch or finer. You can "write a little program"
[ in BASIC to send 'escape codes' to the printer, and then you can
[ create anything you want. This is how Jody and others have made
[ templates of any length for marking book music and music rolls.
[ I wrote a program for the Macintosh printer which made an image
[ of a piano roll and also printed the lyrics on the edge.
[
[ To get all that precision means you must use sprocket-feed paper.
[ When I tried piano roll paper (without sprocket holes) it wandered
[ impossibly, and the ink in the ribbon wouldn't stick to the waxy
[ paper. (I'm still hoping I can adapt a laser printer! :)
[
[ -- Robbie
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