"   On a piece of patent plate glass lay down by means of paste or
other suitable mountant a piece of paper, tinfoil, or other 
material; on this lay in the same manner a second piece a-quarter 
of an inch shorter, and so on until a scale of sufficient range 
is formed.  This being done cut neatly round the edges of the 
"scale" to form a clean square or oblong, and paste round this 
a frame composed of a number of thicknessess of the same material -
paper or tinfoil - greater by one thickness than the largest 
number employed in the scale itself.  If tinfoil be used the 
scale so produced is ready for employment as a printing surface.
If paper be the material adopted it will be necessary to face it 
with tinfoil first before employing it for that purpose.
     
    We have now a matrix from which any number of photometer or 
sensitomer scales can be produced by means of gelatinous ink and 
ordinary Woodbury printing; and we have, further, this 
advantage - that by modifying the quantity of colouring matter in 
the ink the scales can be arranged to suit negatives or 
transparencies of any degree of intensity.  Such scales printed 
upon thin plate glass or even paper may be cut into strips, and 
each printing-frame in the establishment may be provided at a 
very small cost with its own photometer.  "
British Journal of Photography, March 7, 1884 
hope you find this interesting,
Oh yes, when Woodbury was demonstrating the principal involved 
in his printmaking process, he used a glass wedge trough filled 
with the "gelatinous ink" to show that: when the gelatin dried,
it created a continuous transition of tone determined by the 
thickness of the gelatin.
-Phillip Murphy
dag39@goplay.com
....