Leeds nostalgia: First colour used on Yorkshire Post in June 1971
The way newspapers were produced then was a far cry from how they are today.
Nigel Hudson began working for the Yorkshire Post in 1963 and by 1967 he was working nights in the stereo department, where they made lead plates before sending them to the printing presses. Now retired, he recalled: “When colour was introduced, it meant you had four different colours: black, magenta, cyan and yellow. We used to use something called ‘hot metal’. All the type was made up on something called a linotype, which was like a big typewriter with about 90 keys, it was then put into a metal frame called a ‘chase’. After that, a mould was made and it was sent to the presses.”