The WWBD workshop - What Would Brad Vetter Do - was a weekend of pressure plate printing, wood type, ice cream (in honor of Hamilton) and a lot of fun. A $200 level perk for the Pressing On film, it brought people from around the country to Denver. Jason Wedekind, Tom Parson and Jeff Shepherd filled in for Brad at Genghis Kern. Slideshow of the printers and their work below.
Great day @Genghis Kern with Jason, Tom Parson and Peter Bergman teaching letterpress
Dec. 6; 1 - 4 pm FREE ADMISSION
Join us for the annual Book Arts League Holiday Open House. We’ll have letterpress printing and book arts demonstrations, including hands-on printing of letterpress demonstration in our historic print shop. We will have cards and books, posters and scrap bags, miniature books and ornaments for sale. Enjoy refreshments, tour the historic buildings, and come see the new improvements to the Farmhouse, all funded by the Book Arts League! All ages welcome.
Ewing Farmhouse, 1915 N 95th Street, Lafayette
Please park on Prairie Ridge Drive, see Map on website at http://www.bookartsleague.org/map/
Karen Jones has helped curate a list of Colorado artifacts. Now you can vote on your favorite--will it be a tofu pot? or a Civil War flag? See all of them and vote at https://collectioncare.auraria.edu/content/colorados-2015-most-significant-artifacts
We have a bus ready to take you to four different print shops where you can print a poster that grows as you go. Register for TypeCon (www.typecon.com) Or contact us englewooddepot@gmail.com to volunteer to help.
Come by and say hello
Tom Parson & Karen Jones at the Cherry Creek Arts Festival
Thanks to all who came to watch, print with us, and just hang out at the Cherry Creek Arts Festival --next stop Rocky Mountain Book Fair July 31- August 1
Cherry Creek Arts Festival - July 3-4-5 - 10 am, all day
at Tam O'Neill Fine Art, 311 Detroit Street
Join us for letterpress printing fun & poster sale to benefit the depot
Volunteers needed, no experience necessary! - info 720-480-5358
Rocky Mountain Book & Paper Fair
- Friday July 31 (2-9 pm), Saturday August 1 (10 am - 5 pm)
at the Denver Mart, I-25 and 58th
Join us for antiquarian books, letterpress printing demos, book arts exhibits and sales
http://www.rmaba.org
Typecon 2015 Conference - August 12-16
at the Sheraton Denver Downtown
http://www.typecon.com/
On Friday August 14 the Englewood Letterpress Depot will host a tour of five printshops, transportation provided. Join us to print a poster at each stop along the way.
WORKSHOPS
While construction is under way on the Depot we have begun to offer workshops at nearby studios. Individual letterpress and bookarts classes are now available on all levels. Press-repair, advice on supplies & equipment, demonstrations and hands-on experience with a variety of presses and techniques – say what you need! Proposals and instructors welcome! Check our website for other available workshops in the community.
Info: 720-480-5358 or englewooddepot@gmail.com
www.letterpressdepot.com
Members
Participation in any Depot workshop also includes membership. Members are who we are, our support & actual caretakers of our project – with all our resources, our presses, type, our library and collections, and our future! We are a living museum.
Membership details? Visit us online at www.letterpressdepot.com.
Volunteers
Your participation is needed! We need heavy lifters and experienced thinkers, we need obsessively focused sorters and record-keepers, indexers, researchers, talented hands, teachers & learners, printers & gardeners, librarians, historians & artists & writers, wild ideas & deliberate proposals, docents & greeters & fun personalities. What are your talents? What are your interests? Tell us your experience & desire, your available wish.
englewooddepot@gmail.com 720-480-5358 www.letterpressdepot.com
A living museum of letterpress, typography, design, poetry & art
email us at englewooddepot@gmail.com if you want to be on our mailing list
From design bookbinding to intricately detailed sculptures made from books to monumental installations featuring books, this exhibition showcases a variety of works of art inspired by books.The juror is book artist Alicia Bailey who also is the owner of Abecedarian Gallery in Denver
To complement the juried portion of the exhibition, FAC invited several highly accomplished book artists who are truly doing exceptional work in the field.Invited artists include Brian Dettmer, Monique Lallier, Adele Outteridge, Susan Porteous, and Claire Van Vliet. Many of these books contain great letterpress texts. Hope you will check it out. Foothills Art Center
After taking workshops with the Depot, German Murillo of the Antique Photography Studio wrote two wonderful blogs
- 20 steps to creating a Christmas card, from making the paper with Ray Tomasso, learning to print at a Depot workshop, burning polymer plates with Tom Parson and sewing the card with wife and daughter http://antiquephotostudio.blogspot.com/2014/12/merry-christmas-and-beautiful-new-year.html
- on the the experience of letterpress and of Depot workshops: http://antiquephotostudio.blogspot.com/2014/12/aboard-letterpress-experience.html
Treats for the holidays!
Letterpress printing does not always have to begin with metal type. If you have a fragile type you don't want to wear out, if you want to use a computer-generated font, if you have a large amount of type to set and your composing stick hand is tired, you can use photopolymer plates. Above a student in a Depot workshop is washing out the plate after it has been exposed. To see the whole process check out Tom Parson's pictures on Flickr https://www.flickr.com/photos/79988210@N00/sets/72157647162502923/ or call him to schedule an individual workshop 720-480-5358.
The Vandercook press was the center of attention at the second session of the Depot's Traveling Workshop held at Metro State University of Denver. Tom Parson (above) and Peter Bergman (in slideshow below) worked with Victoria Adams-Kotsch, Megan Duffy, Cristy Fernandez, Emily Lennon, German Murillo, Bradley Wacjman and Jen Wisler.
Interested in workshops? volunteering? landscaping? donating? email us at englewooddepot@gmail.com
Woohoo we’re official! This week we received final confirmation from IRS that the Letterpress Depot is a non profit –a 501(c)(3). We’ve been “pending” since November. That means all donations to us are now officially tax deductible to the full extent allowed by law. Thanks to Executive Director Tom Parson for tackling the application, and our wonderful active board for helping see it all through: President Lonnie Smith; Vice-President Jason Wedekind; board members David Ashley, Peter Bergman, Jim Bernath, Karen Jones, and Wilson Thomas, and me, the secretary and blogger.
But we could use some extra hands and heads. We are looking for someone familiar with accounting (CPA?) who could volunteer some time. And an affordable licensed contractor who would like to work on a project such as the Depot. Not to mention some help on lawn maintenance as needed (Lonnie and wife Sandy, Wilson, Tom and I have all been down with the grass and the weeds—thanks!)
In other news, the traveling workshop has started (for some pix from that, click on Workshops at the top of the page). And Tom and Patti just came back from the ATF Conference in Salem, New Hampshire. No, that’s not an Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms reunion but rather the American Typecasting Fellowship (a nod to the American Type Founders of past renown). It’s a biannual gathering of all those interested in type- and line-casting and it was just a fascinating bunch to be with. Frank Romano, director of the Museum of Printing in North Andover, Massachusetts was the generous host, and ATF founder and guiding spirit Rich Hopkins regaled the crowd with tales of how he acquired all his casters. There was one particularly gruesome image of old monotype casters being forklifted into dumpsters when Rich couldn’t fit all 12 being discarded into his pickup—or his shop. Frank and Rich also had a lively duel on monotype versus linotype: their expertise also clear in their gorgeous books – Rich’s Tolbert Lanston and the Monotype (http://bit.ly/1wzriQp) and Frank’s History of the Linotype Company (http://amzn.to/1pd7JJS) - two must-haves for anyone interested in printing and type history. These will be in our depot library collection!
Also speaking at the conference - Frank Brannon of Speakeasy Press who has been working with Ed Rayher of Swamp Press to cast type of the Cherokee language. Frank came across a syllabary of the language that Sequoyah created in 1821 and it became his life’s passion to get it cast and spread the knowledge. Ed took up the challenge. Now it is being used in North Carolina to pass on the language as well as the art of printing.
Two apprentices from M&H Type —Mark Sagianis and Chris Godek – told of their adventures being thrown into the world of casting. The apprentices there have to commit to 4 years at minimum wage, and then they are expected to stay on afterwards. Their enthusiasm and sheer joy about their work was infectious.
Greg Walters of Piqua, Ohio described the challenges of casting 120 point type Cloister Initials on a huge pivotal caster obtained at the American Type Founders auction in 1993; Stan Nelson(formerly with the Smithsonian) described and demonstrated his molds for hand-casting type; Bill Welliver gave a full update on his system for computer interface with the Monotype composition caster - there were talks on just about every type of casting equipment, a swap meet and auction, endless delicious food (including one unforgettable 5 course Italian dinner) and connections with wonderful typenuts all around the world.
Below: Gary Gregory who prints as Ben at the Old North Church; George Hamilton who flew in from Austria; Bill Welliver with slides of his work; Stan Nelson and Rich Hopkins; Tom, Gary, and Stan; and Sky Shipley and some of the fonts he has cast at Skyline Type Foundry.
Things have been very busy in Depot-land. Our traveling workshop, which starts next weekend, sold out in one week - 7 students, 4 teachers, 4 printshops, 4 days. More workshops to come in the future. Tom Parson also held his first one-on-one workshop - $100 for 4 hours. If interested, email us at englewooddepot@gmail.com.
The Book & Paper Fair (slideshow below) was a wonderful time for all-things Book Arts. Tom printed, David Ashley calligraphed names, and Karen Jones explained book conservation. The Depot, the Colorado Calligraphers Guild, the Guild of Bookworkers and Book Arts League all were represented. It was a great time to meet others interested in book arts, and spread the word about the Depot. This past weekend, Tom and I again printed - this time at a birthday party, where guests were encouraged to join, and several did.
On the building end, meetings with architects, civil engineers and others ongoing; some weed-whacking and planting too. If you'd like to volunteer for anything - trenching, re-orienting leaks, putting together shelves, helping with the next event, or if you know an accountant/CPA who might volunteer their skills - email englewooddepot@gmail.com.
If you missed PBS NewsHour's coverage of Arion Press, check it out. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ta6h2OZV2z4
Thanks for following the Depot (also find us on Twitter @letpressdepot and on Facebook www.facebook.com/letterpressdepot
PBS NewsHour went behind-the-scenes with Arion Press to watch these fine art printers put together their 100th book - a remake of Leaves of Grass.
for closeups of Arion's machines including its line of Monotype machines below, check out
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/art/printing-whitmans-masterpiece-by-hand/
demonstrations of printing, book binding, calligraphy & preservation
exhibit of artists' books curated by Abecedarian's Alicia Bailey
exhibit of posters created by master printers for the Depot
Come for the paper stay for the ink
Guys with memories of 9th grade shop classes, people who were taken with the precision and just plain cuteness of the Curtis & Mitchell Columbian No. 1 press, children wide-eyed at seeing their prints emerge from the small Vandercook proof press, and those who know and admire the Depot building, all came to watch Tom print in a tent in front of Tam O'Neill Fine Arts Gallery during the Festival. More Saturday 1-4 and Sunday 10-1. Thanks to Karen Jones and Wilson Thomas for all their help.
A steady crowd came all First Friday to the poster show - a whole lot of fun and talk and buying of posters. In the next few weeks, we will offer the posters for sale online. Here are some pix of the event- then down further namin' some names of the people who made it all happen
Thank you to all who came, to all who bought and to those without whom there would not have been a show: printer and show impresario Jason Wedekind, board members and other volunteers Karen Jones, Diane and Ray Tomasso, Lonnie & Sandy Smith, Wilson Thomas, Peter Bergman, Trey Maserang and Tom & Patti Parson. And of course the presses who are donating their work - Birdwood Press, Baltimore Print Services, Book Arts League, Brad Vetter Design, Carimbo Letterpress, David Ashley Studio, Dog & Stars, Foolproof Press, Genghis Kern, Hamilton Wood Type Museum, Inky Lips, Keegan Meegan & Co, Matter, Moongirl Productions, Power & Light Press, Shepherd Letterpress, Springtide Press, Strongarm Press, Sweet Letterpress and the Press at Colorado College. We are grateful to BookBar for hosting the show. And last but not least, because it lies underneath much of this printing, Neenah Paper. Thank you for your generous donation.
Glenn Moore and his family generously donated their dad's incredible print shop. Volunteers rallied to move it into a 48' trailer until the Depot is ready for such treasures. Here is a slideshow of that effort.
Special thanks to our moving team: Glenn Moore, Heather Page, Patti & Tom Parson, Ed Popovitch, Susan Porteous, Marc & Darrien Silberman, Lonnie Smith, Doug Sorenson, Wilson Thomas, Ray Tomasso and Jason Wedekind. Follow us on twitter @letpressdepot
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