Monday, April 11, 2011

Hatch Show Print Visits Baltimore

This is a guest post from Alexis, a friend of Gilah Press + Design. Thanks, Alexis!



Gilah Press recently took an educational field trip to a lecture by Jim Sheradden of Hatch Show Print, the legendary Tennessee letterpress shop whose posters have influenced a generation of graphic designers even if they don't know it.  

Sheradden's visit was timed to correspond with the official public announcement of MICA's Globe purchase, and hundreds of letterpress enthusiasts showed up to learn and to celebrate. Sheradden, for his part, arrived confident, goateed, and vaguely un-PC, and explained the history of his shop with affectionate zeal.

Sheradden began working for Hatch after his dream of becoming a songwriter had quietly deposited him in Tennessee, jobless. The shop had already been in continuous operation since 1879, and when Sheradden arrived it was in danger of going under due to the advent of faster, cheaper printing methods. What Sheradden realized was that letterpress' historical interest and homespun appeal could be combined with contemporary technology to make a new business model, and rather than trying to update the shop, he chose to celebrate its oldness.

These days, a lot of Hatch's revenue is produced not from the physical prints themselves, but from the scanned images of them. Usually, the shop will receive a commission from someone music-industry affiliated (sometimes a venue, sometimes an agent, sometimes a merch company) and produce a small run of posters which are then sent off to be scanned and reproduced using the modern methods. The hand-printed posters are sold as collectors' items, and the shop also receives payment for the right to copy its images onto t-shirts and mass-produced advertisements. Everybody wins.

What was really interesting was hearing Sheradden talk about how he sees his shop – he doesn’t really see it as "his" shop at all. He calls himself the "steward" of the Hatch collection, and says that he feels a responsibility to the heritage of the shop. For this reason, he's never added any type to the collection, though his employees do still produce original linoleum cuts for some prints. The phrase he kept repeating, his favorite soundbite I suppose, was "preservation through production." He also kept referring to the shop as a "working museum."

Hatch's aesthetic has become so tied to the visual history of country music and rock and roll that most people simply take the look for granted without realizing where it came from. As Sheradden's introducer (a novelist whose name I wish I could remember) put it, "Hatch has put an idea in the reptile brain of designers of what a poster should look like." That horrifying digital font that's supposed to look like old wood type? Nobody ever would have bothered inventing that if Hatch hadn't made hand-done cool.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Publication and Mutiples Fair

This is a guest post from Alexis, a friend of Gilah Press + Design. Thanks, Alexis!



We're excited for the upcoming Publications and Multiples Fair at Baltimore's Open Space Gallery. Since its inception in 2009, the gallery has been extending fibrous roots into the local art scene, showcasing a wide range of emerging talent in areas from sculpture to print to doo-wop singing. Last year's publications & multiples fair was great:



…and this year promises even more delights because the fair has almost doubled in size, expanding from 13 to 22 participants. Newcomers include record label Wildfire Wildfire, champions of local heroes like Dan Deacon, OCDJ, and Ecstatic Sunshine; AK Press, publisher and distributor of radical texts by both fresh-voiced newcomers and anarcho-heavyweights like Noam Chomsky and Guy Debord; Creative Capitalism, legendary local publishing/performance art/music collective; and over a dozen more fresh faces drawn by Open Space's steadily-growing reputation (it was City Paper's "Best Gallery 2010") and unabashed lust for young, tender concepts.

Expect prints, zines, comics, and books, and also live poetry readings from Jeremy Sigler and Eileen Myles and a lecture from North Drive Press founder Matt Keegan (click on that link; North Drive Press is fresh and innovative and awesome).

The Fair takes place this Saturday, March 26, and Sunday, March 27 from noon until 6PM at 2720 Sisson Street in Remington, Baltimore. The lecture will be given on Saturday at 3, and the poetry will be read on Sunday at 7.

And, yes, those familiar-seeming posters were printed by Globe. Cool!

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Friends of Globe Make MICA History

This is a guest post from Alexis, a friend of Gilah Press + Design. Thanks, Alexis!

James Brown, Ike & Tina Turner, Pink Floyd, and The Jackson 5 have more in common than just musical genius and questionable emotional stability: all these musical superpowers, along with hundreds more, turned to Globe Poster to advertise their tours.

Globe was in operation here in Baltimore from 1929 until last summer, when it was finally forced out of business. While the shop also took on more nitty-gritty projects like "public auction" and "home for sale" signage, it's best known for its huge contribution to the visual history of R&B and rock and roll. The shop stopped operating its enormous letterpresses ("enormous" = 24,000 lb) in the late 1980s in favor of cheaper offset presses, and recently sold the old Miehle letterpresses off as scrap metal.



The shop's enormous collection of materials, equipment, type, cuts, photos, and posters is currently lying as it fell, in position in the company's huge Highlandtown warehouse. Owner Bob Cicero was stuck housing equipment that was no longer paying for itself – until recently, when help arrived in the form of 20 MICA students with matching t-shirts.

I recently spoke with Friends of Globe treasurer Sabrina Kogan about the process of saving Globe's collection from being auctioned off piece-by-piece and melted down into scrap metal.

Friends of Globe was inspired by Mary Mashburn, proprietor of local Typecast Press and letterpress instructor at MICA. She first heard about Globe's financial quagmire while trying to arrange a tour of the shop for her Fall 2009 letterpress class, and, as a hopeless letterpress romantic, she thought it would be a tragedy if the collection was split up. She began to work with people from various fields – designers, art editors, folklorists – to try to find a way to save it, but it wasn't until MICA students got involved that a solution was reached.



Sabrina told me that the project began with a blog and a run of screenprinted t-shirts. The shirts were donned by about 20 pro-Globe students at one of the quarterly "town hall" meetings where MICA President Fred Lazarus hears the opinions and ideas of his plebes. Apparently Lazarus was "pretty taken aback" by this color-coordinated display, and began exploring the possibility of purchasing the collection.

The Friends of Globe were then tasked with explaining why the purchase would be good for the school's curriculum. Sabrina, a graphic design major, explained one of the points they made: "I think it's crucial, when learning about type, that you have a chance to actually use type. So when you're talking about things like kerning and spacing, they're real things, not just buttons on the computer. It brings it to life."

The group also pointed out the value of the collection as a piece of art history, and one that no other art college can match.

After a few more meetings, the group successfully convinced the school to move forward, in a happy reaffirmation of grassroots power. The purchase was publicly announced last week, though specific details have not been released yet.

Of course, the sheer size of the collection is a problem. The school's purchase won't comprise everything in Globe's arsenal. They'll be taking about 2/3 of the wood type and 1/2 of the metal cuts, and only some of it will be moved into active rotation in the school's print studio. Much of the rest will be put into storage, and there has also been talk of using some of the archive space at Johns Hopkins, since they're much better equipped for historic preservation.

Bob Cicero is apparently very excited that his collection is being reborn as an art medium. There are tentative plans for him to teach a history class with the materials.

In the meantime, Friends of Globe is still fighting the good fight and raising money to help Globe pay its March (and final) month's rent. They're selling their badass "Friends of Globe" t-shirts on Globe's Etsy site (the t-shirts that melted Fred Lazarus' heart!), and they have more shirts in the works. You can also buy reprints of some of Globe's most popular old-school show posters there:



The Friends themselves plan to spend the upcoming spring break closing the deal, choosing which pieces to take, and beginning what will be a long moving process.

This is a huge victory for the rebirth of letterpress as an artistic craft. I suspect that this will ultimately save more than just the Globe collection. Such a major recognition of the value of historic letterpress, from such a well-renowned institution, will do a lot to raise the profile and prestige of the medium. Who knows? This could be the start of a trend.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Big News from Boston

This is a guest post from Alexis, a friend of Gilah Press + Design. Thanks, Alexis!



What do you get when you combine dozens of linotype machines and letterpresses, thousands of drawers full of lead type, boxes and boxes of etchings and seals, and about a billion other historical and contemporary printmaking accouterments?

Depends on whom you ask. According to the City of Boston, you get a million-dollar-per-year expenditure, which is why the city recently decided to shut down its municipal print plant and auction off the contents. The equipment has been divided into 200 separate lots to be auctioned on February 24, and all of them can be viewed pre-auction here. There's everything from a four-color Heidelberg to a hand-operated platen press, a six-foot linotype machine to a lot of over a million sheets of paper. The most fun lot includes engraved likenesses of Boston public officials, a block declaring "The City of Boston" in Old English font, a cigar box full of official city seals, and thousands of lead type sets. There is also an antique phone booth, for some reason (sold separately).

According to printmaking enthusiasts, of course, the sum of these parts is something wonderful and golden and good, and it ought to be preserved. The big question is what the purchasers of these items will ultimately decide to do with them. Much of the equipment is still contemporary and has practical, industrial value, but a lot of it is outmoded as far as large-scale production is concerned and has value only as part of the small-press revival movement, as part of an antiques collection, or as scrap metal.

So are letterpress lovers going to claim this type and keep it in use, or will it ultimately be relegated to a museum or, worse, a foundry? When asked his opinion, former City Council president Lawrence S. DiCara, whose face is depicted in one of the engravings, summed it up thus: "I think I'm far too young to be considered a historical relic."

Friday, February 11, 2011

the cosgroves

We recently printed this stationery set for the Cosgroves, a young family in Baltimore. The design reflected both their interest in minimal compositions—with bright colors and strong contrast—as well as the warmth and importance of home. The half-tone is an image of their row house in Charles Village.



These were printed on 110lb Crane's Lettra Fluorescent White with a little neon ink to boost the 'pop' of the red. The large solid areas took a lot of ink and impression so a slower run was necessary for the paper to really take in the color and impact.



The amount of time the inked form is in contact with the paper (also known as the dwell) can change the look of the final print. A faster run will apply less ink to the form, and a lighter hit to the paper will result in a saltier look of large areas. And while saltiness is something we love about letterpress, some designs might require a little more coverage and time.

Monday, January 17, 2011

viva las vegas

Last week we printed wedding invitations for our friends Karie and Chris. To reflect their wedding location and personalities, they asked for an invitation that was bold, simple, and spoke directly of Las Vegas.



The main invitation card acts as a "postcard"; on the back, a handwritten message lets guests know the date, time and location of the event.



The reply card acts as an actual postcard (Karie and Chris' address is on the back), so a thick 220# cotton stock was used to cut down on show-through, allowing for a much deeper impression. In turn, this helped with getting more even ink coverage on the sign, skyline and poker chips.



Friday, December 17, 2010

chloe, the third shift printress

annual holiday party

It has been insanely busy around here, but because we work hard, we play hard.



We had our annual holiday party last Friday at a gorgeous home owned by Cynthia of Soup's On in Hampden. Lots of delicious foods were consumed along with a variety of wine, champagne and beer. Everyone bonded around the roaring fire and, later, we were entertained by Cory, an aspiring card trick magician (who also happens to be Nathalie's husband)!

Kat invited everyone over to her place for the after-party where we tore up her kitchen with mad dance skills. We also made sure to engage in a team-building exercise: forming a pyramid.


From the top, going left to right:
Ahnhee, Cassidy, Nathalie, Whitney, Kat, Erin


Go team!

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Drumroll, please...

Okay, so it took us a year, but it’s your fault. You’ve been keeping us busy! Thanks for that, by the way...

Without further adieu, here are our Ready, Set Fly! winners:

Kim Bentley
Danielle Davis
Nick Kalivas
Julia Kostreva
Andy Mangold
Kelly Miller
Jon Stapp


Congrats everyone, and thanks for all of the great submissions! We’ll be in touch with the artists shortly to discuss the details.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

AIGA Baltimore event: Letterpress Tour

from here: http://www.aiga.org/content.cfm/event-detail?eid=47750854

Letterpress Tour at Gilah Press + Design

Wednesday, August 25, 2010
6:30 - 8:00 PM

Join AIGA Baltimore for our Letterpress Series. The first event is a tour at Gilah Press.

Started by MICA alum Kat Feuerstein, Gilah Press + Design uses letterpresses from the late 1800s and early 1900s to create all types of printed pieces ranging from greeting cards, invitations, business cards and stationery. Come smell the ink, take a tour of the shop and learn the workings of modern day letterpress printing.

Event is free! No registration necessary.

Questions: alissa@baltimore.aiga.org