
The bulk of our signs had pounce pattern layouts. Occasionally I did some floral or decorative designs right on the Anchor Stencil while it was on the sign panel. I would sketch it, erase it, fine tune it and eventually cut one side, peeling out the necessary background areas. If the sign was symetrical, I taped a piece of white butcher paper at the center line of the sign and then did a "rubbing" of the completed side using a graphite stick. It would be easy to perforate the design and pounce it, but there was a shortcut. If the paper was folded over at the center line, all I had to do was burnish the back side of the paper with a tongue depressor or plastic burnishing tool. The graphic from the original rubbing would transfer to the soft Anchor Stencil, giving a good reflected design. I used that technique numerous times, but it would only work with Anchor stencil. Hartco was too hard and didn't accept the graphite the same.