Monday, April 23, 2012

Update From the Studio/ Shop.








So, what have I been up to in the past few weeks?  Well . . . 

Firstly, my Golding Pearl O.S. Model 3 has a new owner, and now resides in the beautiful Commonwealth of Virginia.  The new owner is Emily.

I've also been doing some stand-in bindery work at Mama's Sauce, holding the fort while a couple of the guys go off, get married and go on their respective honeymoons.  Gives me a chance to get up front and personal with their 12 x 18 Kluge.  It's been a lot of fun working with Joey, Hogan and the Brookster.  

Keep an eye out for a new friend and former student of mine (work-shop student, that is!) Isabel, with 9th Letter Press,  of Winter Park.  Isabel has a lot of talent, and it will be great to see her work go 'main stream', especially in the Winter Park Rolling College / Park Avenue area.  I will be posting a link to her site soon. 

I've also been working on my new web site.  I have added some flash pages, which are serving as portfolio viewers. The nice thing about these flash sub-programs is that a picture is worth a thousand words.  So, what does that make ten pictures?  So far, I have my main portfolio page done, with an active link to my business card portfolio page.  Soon to be active will be a Wedding Stationery page, a Coaster page, and a general Ephemera page.  Check them out, tell me what you think!

Also, what do you think of my sorta-kinda Logo?  It reminds me a bit of some of the wood cut stylings of 16th Century Bayern (Bavaria, where I lived as a pre-teen) - so I took the liberty of using a German Blackletter font, and inscribing "Kunsthandwerk", which means Cultural or Artistic or Artisan Hand Work, and "Feindruckerei", or Fine Press / Printing.  It's a tip of the hat to my own German heritage.  And, after all, it were the Germans who gave the Western World Letterpress.  Direct from the Electorate of Mainz, by way of Strasbourg.  In a short time, Nuremberg became the Printing Capitol of the Western World.

Besides, I love Blackletter "Textur" and "Fraktur".  Reminds me of another place I lived: Valley Forge, not far from the Schwenkfelder and Amish communities.

One last thing: my Dell D620 lost image on it's screen.  I think I have it traced to the LCD inverter.  Ordered a new one, hopefully that will get me up and going.  While I do have a Mac desk-top for CS4, I do a huge bulk of my designing with good ol' FreeHand MX, on a PC.  So, since my Lap Top is my PC, it's pretty important that I get it going again.  Fortunately, the video card is good, and I can run an external monitor so I can see what I am typing right here and now.  But it's a pain being docked to a terminal.  

If the inverter does not work, then I'm replacing the LCD and cabling as well.  While it's costing me a bit to order new parts, it is still cheaper than having someone else do this - or purchasing a new Lap top!

I have a wedding order coming up soon, and I will post photos as I print it.

That's it for now.  

-gary.

Friday, April 6, 2012

Business Cards for PTF Photo, Tallahassee.




I had an opportunity to run some great business cards.  The client is PTF Photo, of Tallahassee, Florida.  The logo is a centralized blind deboss.  The paper is White Lettra.  This order was actually run on two presses: the 8x12 C&P was used for the blind deboss, and about half of the text run.  The other half was run by my Old Series Pearl Model 3, the last order to be run on her from my shop.  This is because the Pearl is now the property of Emma, of Central Virginia.  Yes.  Anna has a new home.  But as she left, she ran one last order for me, and it could not have been better.  Thanks, Anna.  You're a grand lady, and will do Emma very proudly.  It's been a pleasure to have shared shop space with you!

Below are some shots of PTF's new cards.  These were printed using traditional wood mounted metal dies, courtesy Owosso Graphics.  And once again, great results happened!













That's the latest from G. Johanson, Printer.  I might add that the Logo was not designed by me, but by the graphics designer for PTF, who also did a nice job!  Cudos to PTF Photo.  For more about PTF, click here.  For PTF's Facebook page, click here.

Good Providence in all your Letterpress Endeavors!

-gary.


Saturday, March 3, 2012

On Photographing Letterpress Products.

One of the more difficult things to do regarding Lettepress is photographing what you print.  Paper is hard to properly photograph in such a way that captures the Letterpress dynamic. Light bounces everywhere. Shadow needs to be in the right place. How many times have you visited a Letterpress site or an Etsy shop or go to someone's Flicker page,  and look at the letterpress printed image and struggle to determine....is that a deboss? or is that image embossed ?  That, or having shot your own work and uploaded it, think to yourself

 ". . . funny . . . I thought my paper was white!"

Kim Austin of Austin Press was gracious enough to permit me to tag along my video camera during a recent visit to her studio/shop down in San Fransisco's "Dog Patch" area. I have to say, she took at least two hours out of a busy production day to treat two total strangers from Central Florida like family.  I have been following Austin Press in publications like Victoria and Country Living for several years, amazed at how this little gal does so much with two iron Letterpresses and a whole lotta creativity.  She does not have the snazzy Heidelberg Windmills, no auto-feed Kluges, no Vandercooks . . . just a lot of hand-fed hard work and a way of capturing the essence of Letterpress both on paper - and in photographs.  

Kim came to Letterpress from out of a professional photography background, and when she was kind enough to take us into her backroom area where her camera and photo-stage was set up, I thought I'd better have my little handi-cam ready.  Kim has been working out solutions to problems that commonly plague any of us who have tried to post our work on line to advertise or share what we do.  How do we capture the essence of what Letterpress is?

The following video is presented to you at the behest of Kim.  I see this sort of thing as sharing 'trade secrets'.  Kim is sharing publicly, right here, the results of a process she has been working on for two years to get 'just right'.  I really appreciate the rare priviledge to be recipient of Kim's experience and wisdom, as well as her wonderful hopitality.  

This particular video is the first of two that I made at Austin Press.  The other will follow presently.



Tuesday, February 28, 2012

A Study in Contrast


 

During our last workshop, my student (Isabel, proprietor, 9th Letter Press) was printing the main design of a future "prop card", using Van Son rubber based grey No. 10.  We were using the usual Crane Lettra, #110 Pearl White.  At one point I had her slip in some hard surfaced card stock that we had used as barrier paper, which protects the stock during the cutting process.  This was approximately 100lb hard finished card stock, bright white.  I knew what was going to happen.  Isabel did not.  When the platen opened up, she nearly stopped the press.  The only word she could find was "wow".

Why "wow" ?

We were getting good results with the Lettra.  Nice impression, that tactile deboss that we've become accustomed to.  The reason why Letterpress, frankly, is on the map.  So we were happy.  But something we also became accustomed to was the general softness of the image.  Oh, we can have a 'hard' edge with Lettra, and we can have saturation to a very high degree.  But there is a look that we get used to.  

The open fiber nature of unsized paper tends to discuss the imprinted image to a slight degree.  A thin line can be reproduced well.... but a field of several hundred cross-hatch shading lines, or "tints" as they were once called - does not permit the softer papers to respond to the plate or die in the same way that harder stock will.

Harder stock takes a lighter "hit".  Some call it a 'kiss' impression, a term that I think is misleading.  A proper "kiss" from a Letterpress will knock your front teeth out.  There is pressure exerted.  There always WAS pressure.  It just did not penetrate to the rear surface of the paper receiving the image.  But oh, yes, there was definately an 'imprint'!  We looked for it in 1969 in trade school, we looked for it in 1973 on the pressroom floor, and some papers received quite a bit of "kiss".

Hard stock, however, stays flat, the paper surface does not rise beyond the type or die face and onto the shoulder as the print surface makes contact with the paper and impresses. The face, or print surface, is conservatively inked. Once the impression is made, the ink tends to reside on the surface of the paper.  There is no discussion, or diffusion of the ink upon open fibers.

The result is a more saturated color, and a very fine articulation of fine-line detail.  Overall, higher contrast.  In the case with Isabel, the image literally 'popped'.  A very stark contrast is seen between the presentation of this same image, with the same ink and same pressure on Lettra.  Don't get me wrong, the image on Lettra was indeed nice.  And, in fairness, the harder stock added to the contrast effect by being a brighter white.  

So, I decided to do some comparison with both the Gray No. 10, and "Everyday Black", courtesy Dave's Ink In Tubes, my new go-to for ink.  The photographs that follow are the results.


These are images of an 1890 Old Series C&P, printed from an 11g. copper advertising cut of the era. The color is black.  The paper on the left is Lettra.  The paper on the right is a harder Canson cold press.  The Canson has two sides, one side holds an extruded finish, the other is smooth, and a bit harder.  I chose the harder side.


This is a close-up of the black on Lettra.  The image has a reasonable deboss such as is appropriate for this image.  The photo is a bit blurry, I did the marco shots without a tripod.  Sorry.  :)


This is the same image, same run, colour, pressure, on the canson.  While I mention pressure, I did try to see if increasing pressure would darken the image.  It did not, it only reduced the articulation.  Thus I was careful to keep the pressure of the 'strike' the same, as much as I could tell.


The above image was printed in No. 10 Grey.  Lettera is on the left,  the hard finished 90 or 100lb card stock is on the right.  The finish of the card stock is similar to that of a standard index card.


This is Grey No. 10, same pressure as the black Lettra version above.  It is predictably lighter, but a close view shows the individual cross hatch lines are distinct enough to provide a fair degree of articulation.  Really, not a bad impression at all.  And we purposely chose this colour because we want the text that will be added to dominate attention.  After we ran a number of these impressions, and I was sure the ink had leveled, I had Isabel slide in the harder card.


Can you see where Isabel's "wow" came from?  (hopefully, you are thinking "yes". Otherwise, boy, will I feel stupid.)  The gray is almost as dark as the black, largely owing to the paper's natural color, a bright white.  But what is amazing to me is the fine-ness of the tint lines, the shading lines, which are micro-thin.  The Lettra sample reproduced these lines well, but the hard stock permitted a contrast and a fine-ness that made the image fairly jump off the card.

This is where Letterpress comes into it's own.  You can get fine lines from offset lithography, sure, but you will never get this kind of contrast.  You don't get that 'pop'.  This effect can be taken to the next level by trying gloss card stock, like Krome-cote.  We used Krome Cote back in the early '70s for the business cards of the executives at Clarklift Central, Orlando FL.  We ran the olive green solid colour 'shells' on a 1250 Multilith and an 1850 Multilith.  But the text was printed by moi on our 12x18 New Series Chandler and Price, set by Linotype at the old Orlando Graphics on Sligh Avenue, Orlando . . . in a time long ago and far away . . . .  The executives agreed that the names, titles and text data on the card looked far better typset and run on our platen press than when run offset.  This was long before Martha Stewart, folks. Never let it be cried in your ear "golly, if we don't deboss....might as well do offset or digital!!  Who will know the difference?"  Baloney.  The difference will be evident, believe me.  Yes, even with a "kiss" impression.

I hope you enjoyed my little 'show and tell', and maybe helped to generate some ideas out there.  Letterpress is so much more than punching paper.  In fact, the prowess of the Letterpress can - in some ways - be wholly missed if we ignore the beautiful, awesome original and traditional uses thereof.

Good Providence in all your Letterpress endeavors!

-gary.





Friday, January 20, 2012

Jarrrid & Jayna's Wedding Announcement.



These cards are printed on pearl Lettra, which is choice for this sort of work.  The colors of Jarrid and Jayna's wedding are navy and yellow, so I did some custom mixing, including some vintage tube inks that go back some thirty years.  So, there's the "something old, something blue". . . all that is needed now is the "something new" and "something borrowed".



Jarrid and Jayna's names are set in Bickham Script.  The rest of the text is set in Tymes (not Times Roman!)  Some of the photos will show there is a deboss to the print.  Not heavy, but just enough to be pleasing to see and to hold. 


Here is some detail of the tree, trunk and grass.  The card is printed to a full bleed, and some creativity was involved running the 'plate', or die, so close to the edge, and yet still have a side guide, or gauge, to align the paper in the press. What I wound up doing was using a double stack of Lettra, cut one by four inches, taped together with 3m framing tape, and adhered to the very edge of the image. That way the die could imprint to the very edge without smashing on a standard gauge pin.


Another shot of the text.  Photographing printed items to show the truthful depth of impression deboss without exaggeration by the shadow and slant is an art in itself.  I'm still on the curve of that art, I'm afraid.


The press used for this job is a 1936 Chandler and Price New Series, manufactured in 1936.  In the world of Letterpress, it's fairly new.   The ink used was a mix of Peacock Blue (Kelsey Inks, 1980), Process blue (Dave's Ink In Tubes), Reflex Blue (VanSonn) and "Everyday" Black (Dave's Ink in Tubes).  Dies are courtesy Owosso Graphics.  Of course, the paper is Crane Lettra, with matching envelopes.  

On Monday, the RSVP will be run. It may prove to be somewhat of an event.  Watching the event will be an intern from Mama's Sauce, a student designer, and a Professional designer, plus myself.  Perhaps I'll call for a Pizza, and we'll have a "Print & Pizza Party"!

Stay Tuned!

-gary.


Tuesday, December 27, 2011

A Beary, Berry Christmas: a Christmas Card Design by Anna Coleman.




Anna decided that she wanted not only to design her card, but to do the actual printing.  We decided to use the Pearl OS Model 3 (7x11), despite the absence of rollers.  This gave her the opportunity to hand ink the die.  It was a bit of a process, but she did develop a cadence.  This also gave me a chance to put the Pearl through a few cycles of actual printing.


We used two types of card stock, a classic white linen finish and a light grey laid card stock, both by Neenah.  The original artword is pen and ink on bristol board.


Anna's favorite subjects are animals.  She has a unique style that can give very human personalities to them, yet keeping them completely in their natural animal state.   Her graduate portfolio review show was based on "Anthromorphism", the rendering of human likeness through animal behaviour in illustration techniques.  Anna has a background in illustrating childrens books going back to her first professional contract at age 12.  She currently works at Rifle Studios, Winter Park, and does freelance design as the occasion permits.

The cards were a big hit. Publication was limited to 100, handed to friends, family, and associates.  And dear old dad.

Cheers!


Ex Libris




This Christmas found me printing something I always wanted, but never had time to do for myself: Book Plates!  Sometimes, these are referred to as 'Ex Libris' cards, or labels.  Ex Libris is Latin for "Out of the Library of".  Book Plates are as old as the Book itself.  It was created to mark the owner, in a day when books could cost anywhere from a months to a year's salary for a skilled workman or Professional.  To loan a book was to lend a substantial investment.  Figure that, say, Bailey's Etymology, a Dictionary from the 1730s (mine was printed in 1732) took a single printer about one year to compose, set, print, bind, and put into the sales line-up.  In some cases books took several years to produce.  Matthew Henry's Commentary took so much effort to print that Matthew Henry Himself took part in the process of printing it.   As mentioned above, the price of such an item reflects the work that went into it (as well as the demand for it, which must have been likewise substantial!)

The Book Plate played the same role as a brand mark on cattle.  There was no mistake who the owner of the book was.  Any attempt to remove the Book Plate left disfigurement that made it obvious that a person's Book Plate was once there, and that the book itself may have been stolen. To put it in today's vernacular, lending a book was much like lending out your iPad 2.  You sorta kinda would like it back.

Book Plates were very personalized.  Earlier examples were often very simple printed labels, typeset, with perhaps a decorative border.  Many book collectors still prefer these types.  Some featured a family's coat of arms, such as the plate on my 1807 copy of Walkers Dictionary, sporting the Plate of  John Stephenson Cann, brewer of Wymondham, Norfolk, and owner of the Kings Head Publick House 1780 - 1840:

 

Others carried regular works of art, and were commissioned.  In the latter 19th century and early 20th century, many notables of the day had commissioned Book Plates that reflected something about the owner.  Masks of Comedy or Tragedy perhaps, if you were an actor.  Artists, Scientists, Philosophers, Military Officers, Politicians, Musicians, notables of all walks of life....even silent screen actors.....used custom Book Plates to mark their libraries.  And yes, some of these folks had very large, well appointed libraries.  It was a very literary era.  One that I find more imitated, rather than actuated, today.

My son in law, Zac, recent biblical studies graduate, mentioned his attraction for Ex Libris cuts and expressed a wish to one day have some for his own growing library.  That was all I needed to hear.  Dad-in-law happens to have a Letterpress Shop.  How convenient.

I took for the central design a cut that dates to the 1640s.  It had been modified when I found it.  It is a zinc cut, in very good shape.  The design features a Post Rider, known as a Postilion.  His dress suggests Germany or Austria.  His mount is fully loaded and he is announcing his arrival with what became known as a Post Horn, which became the symbol of the Post in many countries of Europe for centuries.  In the upper left is the Arch Angel Michael announcing through a voice horn (fire masters used voice horns, predecessors to the megaphone, well into the 20th century to shout orders in the midst of a raging fire) - or maybe it's Gabriel playing a Sackbut.  On the right is Hermes, representing speed, handing off a sealed message to the post rider.  Possibly the world's first Air Mail delivery....

To the lower right we see townsfolk standing, hat in hand in a salutary gesture, awaiting the arrival of the Post.  Under the horse we see grave markers, broken impliments of war, and to the lower right we see a ship sailing into a serene and calm harbor.  We find flags mounted from a church steeple, from ships' masts.  All of these were symbols of things that marked everyday life.  Remember, this illustration was cut right at the end of the Thirty Years War, which ravaged Europe.  Death, War, Pestilence, invading armies, all determined your circumstance in the realm of things Temporal.  The Post Rider carried not only the mail: he was the Six O'Clock Evening News!  He was your connection to the outside world.  Not many newspapers were in circulation then, that would wait for another generation or so.  Hence, the post rider became symbolic for not only news from home, but news from around the world. 


This is a bit of detail.  The image is 3.5 x 2 inches.  The original illustration was a wood cut.  This is a "Zinco" from the original, date unknown.  My guess places this cut around 1920.  Note the retention of some rather fine lines.  I've seen the original cut, and have noted there were some editing that went on with this particular cut, but nothing significant.  I chose this cut for the "News" theme.  I like to think in terms of "Good News".  The news that Christ had come to rescue men from their certain and tragic fate.  News that God had so loved His Own that He gave His only son to be delivered for our transgressions and to be bruised for our iniquity.  This, Charlie Brown, is the meaning of Christmas.

 

Featured above and below the central cut are foundry cast crowns, from one of my traditional/18th century border fonts, using 18 pt. Lombardy.  I am not sure of the name, the type trays that contained these fonts were donated, and date to approximately 1900.  I carry these as a titling font, from 18 to 36 point, stored in home-made trays.  Home-made, I assume, by the prior owner. The Crowns are courtesy Quaker City Type Foundry, Honeybrook PA.

 

Here is a close up of the lower portion.  The impression is classic 'kiss', that is, enough pressure to adequately transfer the ink from the forme to the paper.  The paper itself is a discontinued vellum.  I chose this paper because of all the stock that sports the name "vellum", this paper actually has the look and feel of flesh-side vellum.  It has very nearly the same translucency and general conformation, although the grade is thinner and much more even in thickness.  It is slightly thicker than text weight, but no where near card stock.  It was a close-out item at my Orlando supplier, and I grabbed the one remaining ream.  I've been picking at it very slowly over the past two years.


My packaging was inspired by fellow blog-spotter Luis Seibert. My package is made from the same vellum as the cards, cut by scissors and sealed with a Letterpress Christmas Seal, the Centennial Commemorative of the first American Christmas Seal designed by Emily Bissel, 1907, for the National Red Cross.  I issued these in 2007 and in 2008 from the Florida Pioneer Settlement for the Creative Arts.  Printed in sheets of 12, they are the only commemorative seal that I know of.  The design is taken from that very first "Merry Christmas" seal. I thought it appropriate to use it to seal this little 'stocking stuffer'.  A cranberry ribbon surrounds the sides, held in place by 3M two-way framer's tape.


Here's a bit of a closer view of the Ex Libris package and seal.  Making the package was a project in itself.  If I decide to package Book Plates like this all the time, I will be designing a die to make the cuts.  That will speed things up tremendously.


Here are a couple shots of the ribbon around the sides.  Added a nice touch.  It would have been really classy to have a wax seal made.  That would require some sort of monogram design on my part.  But . . . . that's another project for another day.


So, in conclusion, the specs:
Size: 3.75 x 2.625 inches, horizontal orientation
Paper: Magna Carta Parchment "Coachlight" vellum finish, 60 lb, grain: long.
Inks: Kelsey Brown, tube, mfg 1980 ; Black, "Ink in Tubes"., purchased this year.
Type: 18pt Crown ornaments, monotype, Quaker City ; text: 18 pt. Lombardy, foundry: unknown
Center cut: Zinc, 3.25 x 1.75 inches, hardwood base, mfg. unknown, age unknown.

Availablilty: upon request.  E-mail wd4nka@aim.com

That's it for now.  Good Providence in your continued Holiday observation, and a safe, prosperous New Year!

-gary.