Color Thesaurus

CrayolasAs a kid, courtesy of my large box of Crayola crayons, colors were synonymous with words: apricot, almond, goldenrod… (of course wikipedia has a chart with historical information on every Crayola color ever!). As an adult and a letterpress printer the word-names aren’t useful anymore. I mix colors using a Pantone mixing guide, which has no names, only percentages of other colors with no names (well, really code numbers for names!). So when my friend Cathy sent me a link to a color thesaurus, I was immediately transported back to kindergarten, sitting at the kitchen table with paper and my box of Crayolas (and that smell of waxy crayons). Here’s the entry for “goldenrod”:

goldenrod.jpg

For the love of &

One of my favorite symbols is the ampersand (&) because typographers have such a good time with it. In my beginning letterpress class earlier this month one of the students typeset and printed her return address on the back of some envelopes using Bernhard Fashion. I’ve tacked one of the envelopes up in my studio and that beautiful ampersand has been making me smile ever since.

sample of Bernhard Fashion

All these are vices

I think my favorite time to drop in at the SF Center for the Book is mid to late afternoon, maybe 3:30. Usually several people are letterpress printing in the front studio and there’s a quiet hum of activity. All sorts of projects get printed at the center: invitations, cards, wood block and linoleum prints, broadsides and even the occasional book. Last Friday Roger Snell was printing an 8×12 broadside for a reading December 4th at Moe’s bookstore in Berkeley, “a gift … to celebrate the new year 2008 and publication of the Collected Poems of Philip Whalen by Wesleyan University Press.” (That’s what it says on the back.) It’s printed on thick thick creamy stock, and has a blind embossed hit of wood type below the quote. Roger gave me one, and I’ve photographed it to share the quote, and maybe think about my own vices. (Read more about Whalen on wikipedia, but better to read Alastair Johnston’s reminiscences.)



Broadside of Philip Whalen quote

A Few Grains of Sand Save the Day

sandpaper.jpgThe other day as I was letterpress printing cards from photopolymer plates, I noticed a small ink mark toward the edge of the paper that shouldn’t have been there. I quickly discovered that the bottom corner of the plate was curled thus picking up ink and printing on my card! My usual remedy for this problem is to tape down the offending corner and if that doesn’t work, to cut off the curled piece of the plate.
But what to do about the already printed cards? I remembered a trick my friend Laura Jane taught me — the errant ink can be removed by gently rubbing the paper with a bit of very fine grain sandpaper (I used 320 grit). Whew, cards saved!

Print Only in Natural Light

Good Mornin’ Joe by Chris SternI’ve had a table several times at the weekend-long Seattle Antiquarian Book Fair. Two days of smiling and talking is really tiring, but the second year I attended I was lucky enough to have a table next to Chris Stern, a letterpress printer from Washington. When the fair was slow, we talked about printing and poetry and paper and maintaining our presses. I immediately forgot how much my feet hurt and how sore my smiling muscles had become.
Sadly, Chris died of cancer last year. Maralyn Crosetto, Day Moon Press, and Mare Blocker have designed and printed a poetry broadside as a fund-raiser to help with the medical bills. Mare’s poem has the wonderful title “You Told Me Once You Only Print in Natural Light.”
That’s Chris’ broadside “Good Mornin’ Joe” on the left. You can see more broadsides here and a gallery of all the work he and Jules Faye did together on their website.

Life Forms Patterns

2008 Calendar — cover
life forms patterns
haphazard and beautiful—
catch them as they fly by

This week I finished printing my 2008 calendar — a year of patterns and poetry. It’s a desktop calendar with 12 unbound letterpressed cards that display the month, a pattern and a haiku poem written for that month. It comes in a plastic case that doubles as the display frame.
It’s been the perfect project to end my “year of the broadside“, as each month is a mini-broadside with a poem and illustration. It was especially fun selecting the 2 colors for each month (and especially challenging to hand mix all those colors so they matched my swatches!)
Here’s a thumbnail of all the months (click on it to see a lot more detail). The calendar is for sale on my webite ($18 + shipping).

2008 Calendar