Posts featuring ‘letterpress’

Festive printing

Once upon a time I saw some beautiful cards where the print had been pressed into the paper. Much more gorgeous than any computer print I had ever seen I set about researching how to make prints just like this. The research led me to buying a letterpress (an Adana 8 x 5 to be exact) off eBay. After more research and repeated attempts at printing and wondering where I was going wrong and calls to Mr. Caslon and photographing the thing for him to find the faults… I finally discovered that whoever sold it to me had made some weird adjustments that rendered the bloomin’ thing useless (note: buying off eBay is not always a bargain).

So after all that, and a workshop with Tanya from Snap & Tumble (that was documented here) which made me want to print even more, I admitted defeat, traded in my rubbish Adana and bought a refurbished one. And today I am documenting my very first print. It’s not really wedding related but one day if I get good with it I hope to be sharing wedding-related prints with you. Today’s print is Christmas related though and we’re all in the mood for Christmas right?!

A pretty press

So here is my lovely letterpress (low lighting made for slightly fuzzy images I’m afraid)…

Letterpress Christmas

Printing plates

Back in the day prints were made using metal type, all arranged together and put into the black metal frame called the chase (below left). I still intend to print this way at some point, once I’ve bought some metal type, but today there is an easier and quicker way of printing. And that is to create your artwork digitally, send to a company that make photopolymer plates (seen below right) and either have them mounted onto wood at the correct height or stick them onto a metal base bought from Boxcar Press. I went for the latter option as this way the base can almost always remain in the chase and I just swap the sticky-backed plates over…

Letterpress Christmas

Ink it!

A few dots of ink (in a suitably Christmassy red) were placed on the ink disc and then the lever depressed enough times for the ink disc to be coated (it rotates slightly with each depression of the lever). Letterpress action shots!

Letterpress Christmas

I actually should have taken the next photo after the ink disc was inked up as this is when you’d put your chase, complete with design, in. So just imagine the disc is covered in ink please :)

Letterpress Christmas

And print…

And then comes the action of feeding in the paper, pressing the lever to bring the design up to the inked plate and releasing the lever to allow you to take your paper, freshly imprinted, out! Repeat as necessary.

Letterpress Christmas

They’re back!

Ta daaa! Cute Christmas cards!

Letterpress Christmas

All packed and ready to be sent out to the lucky recipients ;)

Letterpress Christmas

Sadly, I didn’t get the impression into the paper I was after but I believe this is due to the plates being quite soft, compared to a sample I was sent from Boxcar Press, (any lovely letterpress people out there in the UK know where to get harder plates please let me know!) In the olden days, however, an impression was actually considered poor printing and the plate was supposed to just kiss the paper. So for now I’m going to pretend the cards are exactly how I intended them to be. While I look for better plates :)

Debs

Torontonian treasures

This post isn’t really wedding related but I thought it may be nice to have a bit of a break and let you know what I’ve been up to the past two weeks.

I decided to spend the month of May with my brother (who is now a semi-Canadian, aka permanent resident) and his girlfriend in Toronto.

So for the month I am living in their ‘den’ on an airbed behind a divide (there’s no door) meant to keep their cute cats Charlie & Mia out. But due to the divide looking like a giant scratching post (apparently it was the only one left) I’ve had a few sleepless nights armed with a squirty water bottle to try and stop the cats from getting in and popping the airbed. (I am actually already on airbed number two as they succeeded in defeating the divide whilst I was out once!)

Photography

Whilst I’m here I thought I could learn some new skills. So I booked on a GTA Photography Course to try and learn how to use my Canon 450D/Digital Rebel XSi DSLR properly. I got it at Christmas and have been shooting on manual since I got it but I actually want to understand what I’m doing! So I have 4 weekly sessions of the beginners’ class and then am booked up for an intermediate level weekend workshop. Have had two lessons so far on composition and what all the buttons do and those confusing ‘stops’.

Here’s some photos I took for my composition homework:

GTA Photography Course homework

Baking

And here’s one I didn’t show that kinda employs the rule of thirds: a drunken attempt at baking a rainbow cake:

Baking

Fell to pieces when trying to cut a slice but it tasted awesome! The cream cheese icing they sell here in tubs is so bloomin’ good!

Drawing

I also spent an evening taking a life-drawing class. And if life-drawing conjures up images of uncomfortably drawing wrinkly old men in the nude (which it always has for me!) well we all couldn’t be more wrong. I went to a Dr. Sketchy’s life-drawing event where the subjects were hot, skimpily-dressed cowgirls posing provocatively in the back room of a bar to a great rock soundtrack.

Fact: drawing cowgirls whilst listening to Marilyn Manson and supping on wine is so much better than drawing wrinkly old men in a stuffy art room. I did discover I’m not so great at drawing people but the atmosphere and the chance to see what other people drew still made for a great night! There are some really talented people out there! Sadly you’re not allowed to take pictures but have a look at this to see the kind of thing you could end up drawing at Dr. Sketchy’s!

And if you fancy drawing at Dr. Sketchy’s yourself it aint just a Toronto thing. In the UK they have one in Birmingham, Coventry, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Huddersfield, Leeds, Lincoln, London, Manchester & Nottingham!

Printing

I was really looking forward to the letterpress workshop I booked and I wasn’t disappointed! I found Tanya’s Snap & Tumble workshop via Google and was pleased to see she had an Adana 8 x 5. As this is the press I have I knew it’d be a great way to finally get mine printing! In the end I actually decided to print on the Craftsman as it’s slightly bigger but the principles are the same so I’m still confident my Adana will be up and running when I get home!

When I got to Tanya’s (which took 3 trains and a short walk: I was impressed I made it seeing as I’m not a native) she chatted to me about how she got into printing and showed me some of her gorgeous cards. And then she let me pick some type to print. I went for a sweet and simple ‘I like you’. I figured printing this at the top of the notepaper could let me write all the reasons why I liked someone underneath: cute right?

Tanya showed me how to lock up the metal type in the chase and how to put that chase into the bed. And then I got to print some blind impressions:

Snap & Tumble letterpress workshop

I love the way the shadow forms the words: beautiful!

After a few of those I decided to go ahead and mix up some ink. I went for a subtle blue by mixing black, blue, yellow and white. Turned out lovely. And so I printed some more…

Snap & Tumble letterpress workshop

And then I got more adventurous and went for the wood type. Being a Northern girl I went for a Northern phrase (not one I use but definitely one I’d bring out if I needed to express my Northern roots!)

Here’s what I printed:

Ey Up letterpress print

For my third mini project I attempted to print on some Moleskines I’d bought especially. They came out really well and the word choice suits the lined paper inside and the fact that I write lists for everything. Sometimes I even write lists to tell me in which order to consult my lists.

Moleskines

So in the three hour workshop I learnt how to use the letterpress (including lots of great tips), got to print 3 different things multiple times and even enjoyed a slice of cherry pie and a cup of tea…

Tanya & tea

Tanya on the press

…and all the while having a lovely chat with Tanya!

If you’re in the Toronto area and have a love of type or craft or pretty printed things you really should do this workshop! And here’s something wedding-related for this post: Tanya also offers Save-the-Date workshops which is a great idea for couples wanting to have an input into their wedding day and get beautiful letterpress printed stationery all at the same time!

If you don’t fancy printing yourself you should still check out Tanya’s work. Because it’s stunning. She also offers wedding stationery sets.

Other stuff

In other news I’ve:

  • watched Exit Through the Gift Shop: an awesome look at street art
  • played several games of Settlers of Catan (and even won once)
  • and even visited the gym in my bro’s condo a few times! (I hate exercise so am pretty pleased I’ve done some)

Hope the diversion from weddings wasn’t too boring! I’ll be back soon with more wedding stuff!

Debs

Vendor Details:
Snap & Tumble website
Snap & Tumble blog
Contact Tanya

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