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The Historic Presses Workshop

Author
sfwalker
Published Date
November 21, 2024

A new printing workshop has been set up in the Department of Typography & Graphic Communication so that students and researchers can use and study an unusual and distinctive collection of historic printing presses. It comprises three research-led reconstructions: a one-pull press; a common press and a lithographic pole press each made by Alan May. These are complemented by examples of the major hand presses made and used initially in the nineteenth century, by a Harry Rochat etching press and by a more conventional press for printing from lithographic stones. The workshop includes a collection of C19 wooden type and metal type for handsetting. A unique collection of world script metal type includes Chinese and Japanese, Cambodian, Tibetan, Bengali, Georgian and Syriac as well as Egyptian Hieroglyphs.

 

What is distinctive and exciting about the workshop is that students and researchers can work with and experience the three major printing processes as well see historic examples of each printing process in the Lettering, Printing and Graphic Design Collections, including everyday life examples in the Centre for Ephemera Studies.

 

The workshop is set up so that some of the presses can be used by students undertaking modules that have been designed to encourage their use. Some of the presses are for demonstration purposes only, led by master printer Geoff Wyeth, and some presses are not yet usable.

 

We welcome visitors by appointment, and plan to have themed workshop events and demonstrations. Our very first demonstration by Geoff Wyeth, of the lithographic pole press delighted delegates at the SHARP 2024 conference many of whom had no idea how lithographic printing from stone was done.

 

We are grateful to the University of Reading for allocating space and for refurbishment; to the School of Arts and Communication Design for supporting moving of presses and their maintenance and restoration to working order by AMR Press. Special thanks to Geoff Wyeth for workshop design and to Jude Brindley for her advice and guidance on health and safety.

 

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