The Ham at 20 poster project celebrates the 20th anniversary of Hamilton Wood Type and Printing Museum in Two Rivers, Wisconsin, and was coordinated by Jennifer Farrell of Starshaped Press. This collaborative venture featured a poster (or three) released each month of 2019, resulting in a collection of 28 posters by end of year. You can see my poster, designed and printed in collaboration with Brian Bagdonas, in Print Work. The edition was 50 for each poster, 25 of which were reserved for complete portfolios. You can purchase individual posters, year-end portfolios, and a catalog documenting the project from the Hamilton website.
C.C. Stern Type Foundry Rent Increase
The end of another year has crept up to the finish line, and the C.C. Stern Type Foundry is faced with a major rent increase starting January 1st, 2020. We have been so thankful for all the support we’ve received, and the low-cost programming we have been able to offer over the last decade. The Type Foundry is all-volunteer run, and depends on individual donations to fund the operations of the working museum and related educational activities. Please consider making an end of year donation to this vital part of our print community.
Announcing ... Marfa Community Print!
I’m very pleased to be involved in the formation of another community-based art space, this time in Marfa, Texas. The brain-child of Laura Thoms, Marfa Community Print (a non-profit organization) will provide much needed affordable access to space to create artwork, offer educational workshops, and help to bolster the creative community in this remote area of the country. She has planned a vibrant roster of visiting printers and artists for the year ahead, with most programming to commence in Spring 2020 when work on the space is complete and equipment can be moved out of storage. The organization is actively fundraising now, and your support is needed!
Kaba
A few years ago Brian and I made a trip to Amsterdam to see a friend and were also able to visit Thomas Gravemaker at Letterpress Amsterdam. The tour of his building revealed a lovely old canal house with an interesting history, many winding staircases & sets of doors. Thomas has a few hundred square meters in the front of the building, where he takes on commission printing and also teaches workshops. One recent workshop focused on Bram de Does’ Kaba ornament, and he pulled out examples of student prints along with the actual metal casting. As a part of the Drukwerk in de Marge organization, Thomas has possession of de Does’ process sketches for patterns and layouts with the Kaba ornament. I was captivated by what he showed us and set out to learn a little more about the story behind it.
Kaba was initially designed as a 6 piece ornament with 3 positive figures and 3 negative ones. Ultimately, de Does had just four pieces cast, and then discarded two of those as failures, leaving him with only the “a” and “b” designs. For nearly 30 years, Bram de Does worked on his Kaba design, sketching for a half hour every morning, playing with patterns, borders & vignettes. In the end, he became more fascinated with the possibilities of combinations than the ornament itself. Not only was de Does working with the idea of mathematical symmetry groups, he was also building on his method for composition on the Monophoto typesetting machine (circa 1970). He devised a key for setting the ornaments, with each possible position numbered 1 to 8. In this way, he could build a grid for each pattern or border and follow that guide when setting the ornaments themselves.
Bram de Does was employed at Johhannes Enschedé printing office in Haarlem, The Netherlands for much of his career, repeatedly taking a break to sustenance farm, and then returning to print. Beginning in 1958, de Does worked under Sem Hartz (Art Director) and the noted type designer, Jan Van Krimpen, and is probably best known for his work on the volume entitled Typefoundries of the Netherlands produced in 1978 (the last book at Enschedé printed entirely in letterpress). He continued to work at Enschedé through the transition from metal to cold type, and distinguished himself by designing one of the first company faces made specifically for the new technology of phototypesetting machines. Trinité (1979-1982) is a humanist serif face, created with three variants in length of the ascenders and descenders (hence the name).
de Does studied a number of solutions for harmony on the printed page and decided that “systematic sloppiness” was key, to show the influence of the hand, the absence of straight lines, and give a sense of what he called “functional swing” to the letterform. In 1989, de Does was commissioned once again to design a face for phototype, this time for Van Dale’s Dictionary of the Dutch Language. The result was Lexicon, released in 1992, a face meant to be legible at a very small size, which was issued in two versions.
Throughout his working years, Bram de Does continued his designs for the Kaba ornament as he sat at his kitchen table each morning, planning for what he thought would be three volumes he would print at his own private press, Spectatorpers. Inspired by the design of the Monotype Recorder, Max Cafisch’s writings, and the Granjon ornaments, he worked to create adornment based on the square unit (Ka’ba is the arabic word for cube) that would have some of the same humanistic harmony as Trinité. An early version was engraved and test cast by Henk Drost at Enschedé, but proved to be too tricky to set with the corner of the ornament coming right up to the edge of the type body. Overnight, de Does redesigned Kaba so that the positive didn’t come all the way to the edge, and had a slight calligraphic curve to the point. Ultimately this version was cast in a small font.
In 2012 Bram de Does finished his first book using Kaba, 56 pages of hand set type and ornaments printed in five colors, 90 forms, edition of 240. We set off to visit the Special Collections at the University of Amsterdam to find this book, and hoped to delve farther into the archives and working papers of de Does. We only got as far as the bookstore. They had copies of both his handset limited edition letterpress printed books and a larger edition offset litho book published by the University Press entitled The Kaba ornament in vignettes borders and patterns, which shows sketches, pattern development, and reproductions of letterpress work. It also contains essays by Bram de Does illuminating his approach to this particular ornament design, a large part of which is based on mathematical “symmetry groups” (particularly translation, reflection, rotation, and glide reflection as defined by E.H. Lockwood and R.H. Macmillan in Geometric Symmetry). This interest in patterning seemed to engross de Does until the end of his life in 2015. He never stopped exploring the overlap in artistic and scientific symmetry through sketches and writing.
Photos: (Above) Thomas Gravemaker at Letterpress Amsterdam holding Kaba ornament A and B; (Below) sketches and layout grid for book design, handwritten notes on ornament design, letterpress book pages using Kaba printed at Spectatorpers, Kaba ornament design archive and cast pieces.
moving along
In mid-June I started a new part-time, entry-level position at the Oregon Historical Society as an archivist assistant, working on a temporary project to move the research library. I’m lucky enough to be working under experienced archivists and librarians, learning a bit more about the field and about standard procedures. The materials in the library will be relocated to another facility while the library is renovated, but most materials will still be accessible. This means we are methodically combing through the existing collections and making sure they are properly housed and catalogued in order to move them. New shelving units will be ordered for storage off-site, so there is plenty of measuring and calculating of linear feet required to shelf the materials being moved. Of course, there are many diagrams on graph paper and a multitude of spreadsheets to coordinate all this. But there is also a lot of time handling paper and books and getting a hands-on experience of the Oregon Historical Society’s library collection. A few of my favorite finds so far are pictured.
Los Ultimos (Endless Letterpress)
This documentary about the past, present and future of letterpress in Argentina is currently circulating the world at public screenings, and showed to a small audience in Portland this past month. Filmmakers Pablo Pivetta and Nicolas Rodriguez Fuchs were in attendance, and patiently answered our questions about the evolution of print in Buenos Aires and surrounding areas. Shot over a period of 6 years, the story weaves together those who are forced to give up the trade and a small group of people who are just discovering the wonders of printing from hand set type. Perhaps this film will help shed light on the interest of newer generations in letterpress printing, and to connect traditional practitioners in Argentina with those eager to learn.
Endings and beginnings ...
As of February 2019, we have ceased the commercial operations of Stumptown Printers Worker Cooperative, so for the past couple months I’ve been reassessing how I spend my working hours. For the last 20 years my identity has been wrapped up in the collective operations of our business and the print trade, with all other activities playing second fiddle. While I don’t have the means to take a sabbatical from work altogether, I am able to refocus the work that I’m doing.
The majority of our printing equipment is in storage, but we set up two presses in our new garage studio and started in printing right away. Despite the fact that we’re not completely unpacked yet, it promises to be an efficient little space (180 square feet!) once we’ve organized all the tools and supplies and type and cuts and paper and dies and …. well, you get the idea. I’ve been taking on some commission printing from past customers, in addition to doing a bit of consulting and instruction with printers in their own studios.
The opportunity to increase my project management work has been very satisfying as well. Look for future entries about the specific projects as they move ahead! With this shift I am also continuing to build my skills as a consulting archivist through courses and volunteer time (at the C.C. Stern Type Foundry and in the Special Collections at the Multnomah County Library). So I have faith that I will gradually piece together a new routine to build upon my skills and also move towards new ones.
Hamilton Wayzgoose
From November 2-4, 2018 the Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum will be hosting their tenth annual Wayzgoose in Two Rivers, WI. The museum has grown into a vital organization that not only preserves the legacy of wood type but also passes on the knowledge of it’s manufacturing processes. It’s also now the home for the legendary Silver Buckle Press, formerly at the University of Wisconsin – Madison. For many years I’ve heard from friends and colleagues that the Wayzgoose is one of their favorite gatherings, so I’m excited to attend this year. Along with my partner, Brian, I’ll be presenting during the breakout sessions about the C.C. Stern Type Foundry. It’s an honor to be on the schedule with so many people doing inspirational work in the fields of design, print and preservation from all over the world.
American Typecasting Conference 2018
Photos (l-r, clockwise): The foundry at M&H Type, Lewis Mitchell and Brian Bagdonas looking at M&H specimen books; presentations in the gallery at M&H Type; casting room at Patrick Reagh Printers; casting spec at Patrick Reagh Printers; Brian Ferrett, Bill Welliver and Mark Sarigianis at Prototype Press.
The American Typecasting Fellowship held its 40th anniversary conference at M&H Type in San Francisco from August 23-26th, 2018. M&H is the oldest working typecasting business in the United States, currently employing two journeymen casters and one apprentice. They service the fine press book work of Arion Press as well as casting type to order for customers. We were lucky enough to catch a short visit from Lewis Mitchell, who came by to donate some materials to the conference auction and say hello. He was employed at M&H for more than 60 years but retired about 4 years ago.
As always, the ATF Conference included technical sessions, with hands-on work opportunities. I signed up to get an overview of the Monotype Composition casters which they have running with the Welliver interface, since we have just acquired an interface for the C.C. Stern Type Foundry. The programming seems to make sense so long as one can operate the caster! That will be a good winter project.
Tech sessions were followed by a field trip to the Letterform Archive and then a reception at The Box. Both institutions are worth spending some time at, and both have collected more items than one can browse easily. It’s best to rely on the expertise of their archivists and curators, and asking for items relating to one’s own area of interest. A brief stop at the Book Club of California was also inspirational — the special collections library is now well catalogued and searchable online, so with more time one could embark on some great research within the stacks.
A full day of presentations at M&H included a great mix of reports on hands-on projects, machine restoration, research visits around the world, apprentice reports, and a particularly challenging thesis on the Pantograph presented by Dr. Documento. A small group then gathered at Prototype Press in West Oakland to turn over the casters and generally enjoy being in Mark’s book printing studio. On Sunday, Pat Reagh hosted the whole group up in Sebastapol at his print shop. We’ve visited Pat before, but it still awes me to see the body of typographically rich work he has produced over the years.
So, after a full four days, we returned home with our bundle of keepsakes and plenty to consider.
Stumptown Printers could use a hand ....
For nearly 20 years as a co-owner and worker at Stumptown Printers I’ve been collecting ink underneath my fingernails in pursuit of a commercial printing career. As things change with technology and the industry as a whole, our business is feeling the pressure and having to adjust rapidly. We’ve been actively working to create more opportunities to further the craft of printing through Stumptown Printers and related volunteer activities at the C.C. Stern Type Foundry, but we need a boost from the community to make this venture a continued success. Please take a moment to read our post and consider a gesture of support.
Summer Intensive Letterpress Course
PNCA is offering a set of summer intensive courses from June 18-23rd that I’m pleased to take part in. Registrants can choose from seven different tracks, including a letterpress class that I will teach. I will be working on a small edition broadside print, using it as a teaching tool for demonstrations and discussion. In turn, students will design and print their own editioned poster, broadside, or simple folded book structure. The focus will be on hand set type and creative image making. Participants will receive instruction on how to trouble-shoot challenges involved in printing: we will discuss how to achieve fine printing through exact make-ready and packing techniques, careful typesetting and registration, ink mixing for color matching, foolproof lockups, and proper impression on the Vandercook Proofing Press.
As part of the class, students will be able to opt in to two special add ons:
A private weekday visit to Stumptown Printers to see the workings of a small “job shop”, and a guided tour of the C.C. Stern Type Foundry on June 16th to witness the process of metal type casting.
Register here: http://ce.pnca.edu/adult
Marfa Myths 2018
Thanks to Anthology Editions for including Stumptown Printers as part of Peter Coffin’s Imaginary Concerts exhibit at Marfa Myths 2018! Peter had worked with Colby Poster Company previously to commission a number of custom split fountain prints which were on display. We replicated three of the color combinations in a very limited quantity as part of this project, then set and shipped two complete type forms to Marfa for the event. Each composition was an invented lineup, one curated by Eileen Myles and another by Mark Scott, and we locked them up on site using a sign press borrowed from Red Press Printing. Brian and I had great fun helping locals and festival goers pull commemorative prints over the course of three days. We marveled at how quickly the ink cured in the dry desert atmosphere!
Photos are from Marfa Studio of Art gallery space.
You can also check out the Marfa Myths unofficial keepsake we made to bring with us on the print work page.
The Slow Read →
Over the past year I have been assisting as a project manager to local artist and educator, Barb Tetenbaum, with an incredible public art project called The Slow Read. It is a summer-long viewing of page spreads of Willa Cather’s novel, My Antonia, in celebration of its Centenary. Barb has been working with this novel for nearly a decade, creating art installations and printing artists books inspired by the literary work. This transformation of the novel into a nationwide daily visual simulcast is designed to be experienced with others in community spaces like libraries, town centers, schools, and art centers. It’s an opportunity to appreciate the value and beauty of the novel, and to discuss some of the timeless issues addressed in the work — immigration, women’s rights, and land conservation. I hope you will take a moment to watch the Kickstarter and consider a contribution to the campaign.
Printing Business Course at PNCA
Feb 28, 2018 - Mar 14, 2018
6:30PM - 8:30PM
This offering is a conversation for printers about decisions to make and things to consider before launching a company or taking on commission jobs. Covers professional practices in the trade, experience & education, business plans & financial resources, legal and moral responsibilities, client management, vendor sourcing, operations, pricing and equipment.
Register on the PNCA Continuing Education site
Guild Card No. 5
Letterpress, hand-set metal type
2.5" x 3.5"
The C.C. Stern Type Foundry issues new cards annually to supporters of the museum. Each guild card is printed in a small edition.
Type is hand-set 12pt. and 18pt. Centaur, designed by Bruce Rogers. The Monotype caster and keyboard ornaments were purchased from Stichting Lettergieten 1983, in Westzaan, The Netherlands. The backside pattern was built from Monotype ornaments cast at the C.C. Stern Type Foundry, the number five is Franklin Gothic Condensed.
Pressing On at Clinton Street Theater
The C.C. Stern Type Foundry is presenting a screening of Pressing On: The Letterpress Film this coming Tuesday, the 19th at The Clinton Street Theater. You can see the post about the event and get details here. It’s a beautifully shot film that interviews multiple generations of the letterpress community in the Midwest. Some of my favorite printers and type casters are featured, including a few that we visited in their home shops just a couple weeks ago!
I printed the poster at Stumptown Printers — a form constructed entirely of hot metal composition. A real treat! Ludlow, Linotype and a Monotype Sorts Caster were all used to cast the type and ornamentation, which we printed in two colors on Fabriano Rosapina. The particulars are in that red arrow, if you truly want to geek out about which type face is which. A limited amount of posters will be for sale at the event, helping to support the costs of the film screening.
Looking forward to gathering at the theater!
Portland Letterpress Fair
The Portland Letterpress Fair is this weekend!
Presented by the Portland Printers Alliance as part of Design Week Portland. We’ll be there and look forward to seeing you!
11 a.m.-5 p.m
Sunday, April 23, 2017
at The Redd
831 SE Salmon, Portland, OR 97214
Codex Book Fair 2017
Back in February, Brian and I ventured down to the SF Bay Area to peek in on the 2017 Codex Book Fair. It was our first visit to this biennial event, and proved to be just as eye opening as promised. The Craneway Pavillion was filled with over 200 people showcasing their artists books & fine press publications, and hundreds of visitors strolling the aisles to peruse the offerings. Exhibitors were there from all over the world, with a focus on Chinese Book Arts and notable international contributions from Germany, South Korea, Italy and the UK.
Though many methods of production are being used in contemporary book work, there was, of course, a lot of overlap with our typecasting community. The progress that Ed Rayer (Swamp Press & Letterfoundry) and Barbara Henry (Harsimus Press) have been making with their Kliluk asemic typeface is impressive, and Barbara had both spec sheets for the first castings and also an example of her book in progress. “The Seaweed Journal” uses the Kliluk typeface to tell the story of an alien mermaid experiencing the underwater world on earth.
Portland-transplant, Andres Chaves of Clinker Press had his fine books for sale, most of which focus on the Arts & Crafts movement or relate to printing arts specifically. The majority are cast in Intertype and Ludlow composition. The folks from M&H Type were roaming the pavilion, though they didn’t have a table set up. And Russell Maret was displaying some of his newer books, featuring type he designed, one cast at the Type Archive and another from Swamp Press.
We had the chance to visit with Mark Sarigianis of Prototype Press while in the Bay Area, and to take a quick peek at his studio where work is in progress on “Ham on Rye”, the Bukowski classic. The prospectus is out, the book uses hand made paper from St. Armand and is set in Goudy Powell. Nearly all the type is cast, initial proofs have been pulled, some final pages already printed. All this in a very bare bones studio space — when we visited, the building roof was leaking and the studio was covered in fireproof tarps which had to be emptied of water puddles daily. It’s amazing & heartening to see that Mark is driven to carry on the work that David Johnston and he started, with true passion for the printing of finely crafted books from metal type.
A Smooth Sea ...
Letterpress, hand-set metal type
Found image
4" x 6"
Created as a New Year's card to send to friends and family.
Type is Monotype Bulmer Italic and ATF Spartan. Printed in one color.
Hallwyler Printing Company
In a random internet search for some printing related items, I came upon a listing on the UK eBay site for a “Dated 1960 Cover Portland Hallwyler Printing Company” envelope. The image above is what turned up — quite a specimen of composition work, with its presses and people built out of type! This particular company has been on my list of print shops to research, as it has been mentioned by others as a major player in the print scene in Portland during the mid-1900s.
Hallwyler Printing Company was founded in 1926 by Fred O. Hallwyler (1901-1978). Fred was the son of Swiss immigrants who came to the US when they were in their mid-twenties. Shortly thereafter Fred was born. He began his printing career at the Portland Daily News Telegram, and worked through the ranks to become a master typographer. Not much information on the early years of the Hallwyler company is available, but it is noted that Fred’s father, Gottlieb, also worked at the shop. By the mid-1950s business seemed to have been thriving, and in 1955 an expansion added 10,000 sq feet to their existing facility at 1020 E. Burnside. The building extension filled out the block to 10th Avenue, ultimately changing their address to 10 SE Tenth.
A feel-good story in the Oregonian in 1957 tells the tale of a high school student who recovers a fire-proof safe from an overgrown lot in North Portland. It turns out to belong to Hallwyler Printing and had been stolen from the shop in the middle of the night, hauled away in the company truck by an opportunistic burglar. The safe contained only the company records and no money, but was returned unopened anyway. The boy who found it and turned it in was rewarded with $50 which he used to rent a tux for his Junior prom at Roosevelt high school. Fred and his wife, Alice, apparently delivered the check in person.
At this time Fred’s son Robert was working for the company in a management role. Hallwyler was a well-respected job shop in Portland, and both Fred and Robert were elected as officers for the Oregon Printing Industry professional association at various times. Fred served as secretary in 1956, and Robert held the office of president in 1961.
In 1966, the Hallwyler Printing Company announced a merger with Agency Lithograph Company, and stock was exchanged between the two companies. Later in that same year, the firms took part in the historic expansion of the Graphic Arts Center, wherein they joined with Abbott Kerns & Bell, Paul O. Giesey Adcrafters, and Meredith Type Founders at a newly constructed facility at 20th and NW Wilson. This combination formed one of the most historically renowned job & advertising print organizations in Portland.