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Forest & Bird covers were usually printed in black and white with a coloured panel during the 1950s, when membership was too small to sustain the regular use of expensive colour printing. The green, and occasionally red, panels were used for some 25 years on a fairly utilitarian journal. Editors of the time worked on a largely voluntary basis.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/FORBI20010501.2.29.9

Bibliographic details

Forest and Bird, Issue 300, 1 May 2001, Page 35

Word Count
58

Forest & Bird covers were usually printed in black and white with a coloured panel during the 1950s, when membership was too small to sustain the regular use of expensive colour printing. The green, and occasionally red, panels were used for some 25 years on a fairly utilitarian journal. Editors of the time worked on a largely voluntary basis. Forest and Bird, Issue 300, 1 May 2001, Page 35

Forest & Bird covers were usually printed in black and white with a coloured panel during the 1950s, when membership was too small to sustain the regular use of expensive colour printing. The green, and occasionally red, panels were used for some 25 years on a fairly utilitarian journal. Editors of the time worked on a largely voluntary basis. Forest and Bird, Issue 300, 1 May 2001, Page 35

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