Letterpress: A Celebration

News|The FontFeed|Yves Peters 2008-09-10 21:48:36

On Friday 7 November 2008, my previous post – "Letterpress is again to be celebrated, or so the growing popularity of the process would certainly suggest. Increasing numbers around the world are setting up their own small studios, looking for tuition, or commissioning letterpress within commercial design work. All this thirty years after the process effectively became commercially obsolete. And in spite of the fact that letterpress can be messy and slow, often requires a lot of space, not to mention the considerable constraints it brings to layout, colour, artwork and type. So why do so many people still want to get involved, and how do they make a success of their efforts?"

The conference will allow you to review and discuss the phenomenon of letterpress in the twenty-first century through a packed one-day programme of talks, demonstrations and displays of work. You'll be able to meet practitioners and exchange stories as the different communities working with letterpress, from printers and designers to students and general enthusiasts are brought together. Be inspired and maybe even find out what you need to set up on your own!

Speakers

Phil Abel – Hand & Eye LetterpressClaire Bolton – The Alembic PressAlex Cooper & Rose Gridneff – London College of CommunicationAlan Kitching & Celia Stothard – The Typography WorkshopAlan May – Press builderHarry McIntosh – Compositor and typecasterJohn Randle – Whittington PressPatrick Walker – dust

More information

Tickets

Full rate: £60 / £50 Friends of St Bride LibraryStudents, over 60s: £30 / £25 Friends of St Bride Library

header imageSmall letterpress shop in Pt. Reyes Station, California, August 2003.

© J. Lurie-Terrell

Kets

Kets

Typecaste

Typecaste

K and T

K and T