Tag: Phil Abel

  • The Guardian: How To Print With Letterpress

    The Guardian: How To Print With Letterpress

    Not sure how I missed this, but a 2010 arti­cle with Phil Abel of Hand & Eye Let­ter­press in the Guardian.

  • Hand & Eye Letterpress, London

    Hand & Eye Letterpress, London

    Phil Abel runs Hand & Eye Let­ter­press, Lon­don.

    6 Pinchin Street, Lon­don E1 1SA

    Establishing Hand & Eye: Phil’s Account

    For most of the time I owned it, my Arab plat­en lay in pieces.

    My part in its sto­ry starts with a fire in a local school which result­ed in the print room being dis­man­tled. Some years lat­er, in the late 1970s, they were keen to clear out the old equip­ment and a chance meet­ing with the art teacher led to them offer­ing it to me. Round­ing up a group of friends to help with the move, I came away with my first full-size cas­es of type, two stones, sev­er­al Mod­el platens, a small trea­dle plat­en and the crown folio Arab.

    All of this was heavy, of course, and dif­fi­cult to move, but the hard­est of all was the stripped-down Arab. There were two great pieces of cast iron, both heav­ier at one end and so par­tic­u­lar­ly awk­ward to lift and car­ry. To make mat­ters worse, one of them was hinged. Some of it was paint­ed roy­al blue, but where the met­al was bare it was coat­ed with a thin lay­er of rust. We man­aged to lug all this down the steep steps into my moth­er’s cel­lar, none of us imag­in­ing that it would sty there for six or sev­en years.

    This was quite a haul for me. I had start­ed print­ing on an Adana 8 x 5 with a few minia­ture cas­es of Times New Roman and Palace Script. Now I had more press­es than I could pos­si­bly use and copi­ous sup­plies of Baskerville and Gill Sans. There were var­i­ous plans for set­ting this all up and using it, but they came to noth­ing. Grad­u­al­ly homes were found for the oth­er press­es, leav­ing me with the Arab and the type, cab­i­nets and stones. At first the type was sort­ed and print­ed on the Adana, but as I became more involved in work and house ren­o­va­tion that trick­led to a halt.

    Then my employ­ers and I part­ed com­pa­ny. I rel­ished the free­dom, applied unsuc­cess­ful­ly for a few jobs and won­dered what to do with myself. I was about to turn thir­ty, and reck­oned that if I did not try print­ing for a liv­ing then I might nev­er have anoth­er chance. Four months after becom­ing unem­ployed I opened the doors of Hand & Eye Print­ing.

    The name, sub­se­quent­ly changed to Hand & Eye Let­ter­press, was cho­sen to reflect the phi­los­o­phy behind the ven­ture. Inter­est­ed in the idea of craft work, I had read about Eric Gill and his views on the sub­ject. They res­onat­ed with me, and I hoped the name would con­vey my inten­tion to pro­duce job­bing print­ing to high stan­dards.

    It seemed that the Arab fit­ted in with this well. Trea­dle pow­ered, I thought it would help avoid the evils of machine made things that Gill warned against. The fact that it was pow­ered by a renew­able ener­gy source, name­ly myself, also appealed.

    There remained the ques­tion of how to con­vert the sev­er­al pieces of met­al and wood into a work­ing print­ing press. Indeed, I had no idea whether the machine was com­plete. A print­ers’ engi­neer was rec­om­mend­ed to me, and he sur­veyed what I had and thought it would work. He knew about trea­dle platens, hav­ing crushed the end of one of his fin­gers in one as a boy.

    Ear­ly one snowy Jan­u­ary morn­ing the machine back came up those cel­lar steps and was tak­en to my new work­shop in the East End of Lon­don. Liam had been right, and that after­noon it was in one piece. How­ev­er, the rollers had long since per­ished so I could not print any­thing on it, and the guard was incom­plete, but the machine turned over. I decid­ed I could work with­out the guard, and Liam intro­duced me to the ven­er­a­ble and local firm of Har­rild & Part­ners, who had the rollers recov­ered for me. He also sowed the seeds of the Arab’s demise.

    Teas­ing me a lit­tle, he said I would real­ly have arrived when I had a Hei­del­berg plat­en, and told me how a min­der used to run three of them at once: one on a long run, one on medi­um runs and one on short runs. Although I nev­er expect­ed to have that amount of work my imag­i­na­tion was fired. What I did not then realise was that you can turn out a lot of work that way but it is unlike­ly to be very well print­ed.

    Just as I was get­ting my new busi­ness organ­ised Matrix 4 was pub­lished. I did not know the jour­nal then, but I was told about the arti­cle on the Arab in that issue. For­tu­nate­ly I was still able to find a copy by the time I heard about it. Geof­frey Osbourne’s piece was of great inter­est, and his list of ser­i­al num­bers told me that my machine had been built in 1911.

    Once the new rollers arrived I had the painstak­ing job of adjust­ing the impres­sion. I imposed a full forme with new type at each cor­ner and adjust­ed the four impres­sion bolts behind the type bed to get an even impres­sion. Then I had to do some­thing about the roller tracks. The leather that had orig­i­nal­ly cov­ered them was old and tat­ty and a replace­ment had to be found. See­ing some dis­card­ed car­ton straps in the street one day I realised it was about the same width as the tracks. After pack­ing out with strips of board and paper the rollers ran along it at the right height.

    Up till then all my print­ing had been done on the Adana. I knew it was not big enough to pro­duce the qual­i­ty I want­ed, but had no idea how for­tu­nate it was that the Arab had come my way. Its great advan­tage was that the plat­en piv­ots right down by the floor rather that near its own base. Con­se­quent­ly as the machine turns over the plat­en is almost par­al­lel to the type bed as it approach­es it. The press is there­fore more for­giv­ing of incor­rect pack­ing of the plat­en than, say, a Hei­del­berg. This was a les­son that only came home to me lat­er in my career.

    The machine pro­duced some nice work once was it was set up prop­er­ly and I had got used to han­dling it. Look­ing back, it is amaz­ing to remem­ber that it print­ed the text of cat­a­logues for a West End art gallery. Some­times the sheet required was big enough to over­lap the plat­en, but since it was hand fed this did not mat­ter. I became adept at inter­leav­ing and could turn out a thou­sand sheets an hour. The trou­ble was that the tread­ling was dam­ag­ing my knee. By the end of the first year I had to get larg­er premis­es and a motorised press. It took anoth­er year, but even­tu­al­ly I had both.

    Although the new place was two and a half times the size of the old one I had filled it up before I even moved in. I had bought two proof­ing press­es and a guil­lo­tine as well as a Hei­del­berg plat­en. The Arab was squeezed into the front by the win­dow onto the street. It must have been many years since a trea­dle plat­en could be seen in oper­a­tion in Clerken­well, a tra­di­tion­al home of Lon­don print­ers. It attract­ed a lot of atten­tion, par­tic­u­lar­ly from for­mer comps and min­ders who had moved onto oth­er careers. It brought in quite a lot of work, too.

    Quite by chance, the engi­neers from whom I had bought the Hei­del­berg were in the process of clear­ing out the premis­es of the recent­ly demised Excel­sior Print­ing Com­pa­ny. One win­ter evening they took me up to the dark dingy build­ing in Edmon­ton, where I found some rem­nants of their han­dling of the Arab. There were parts lists and brochures, one of them a splen­did item com­plete with rib­bon and tas­sel. I kept them for some time until I realised that St Bride’s Print­ing Library was a bet­ter place for them than in my fil­ing cab­i­net.

    It took some time to learn to get a decent result from the Hei­del­berg but as I did the need for the Arab declined. My plan had been to have it motorised, but even­tu­al­ly I realised it would have to go. A sen­ti­men­tal attach­ment to it was over­ruled by the dis­cov­ery that I could fit a Ver­ti­cal Miehle into its space. They could be picked up for next to noth­ing and it would allow me to print a big­ger sheet. I found one in due course, and looked for a home for the Arab. Scrap­ping it would be a last resort, so I adver­tised it in Exchange & Mart. The deal­er who answered was plan­ning to export it to Sri Lan­ka, where it would not be both­ered by the high tem­per­a­ture and humid­i­ty. I like to think of it out there still, run­ning as well now as it did when it was made more than nine­ty years ago.

  • Woodletter or Poster Types

    Woodletter or Poster Types

    Small print­ers would be asked to pro­duce all man­ner of work, and one part of their ser­vice would be to pro­duce posters.  Nat­u­ral­ly they need­ed much larg­er type than used for books or job­bing work and poster types emerged as a class of type of their own.  Beyond 72pt (1 inch) it was usu­al for type to be made of wood, and it was mea­sured in lines, 1 line being equal to 1 pica or 12 points.  So, wood let­ters 1 inch tall would be 72 points called 6 line.

    Woodlet­ter is tra­di­tion­al­ly stamped with the mak­er’s name on the top of the cap­i­tal A’.

    Poster Type Makers

    Robt. De Lit­tle of Vine Street, York are per­haps the most famous mak­ers of woodlet­ter.  Estab­lished in 1888 they ran until 1997 when demand fell to make the busi­ness unsus­tain­able.   Their equip­ment went to the Type Muse­um, Lon­don who pre­sum­ably have the equip­ment in store.  They were able to sup­ply plas­tic-faced woodlet­ter to improve the qual­i­ty of the print and wear.  Claire Bolton of the Alem­bic Press researched their his­to­ry and pub­lished accounts of their enter­prise.

    The famous met­al type­founder Stephen­son, Blake of Sheffield orig­i­nal­ly sup­plied wood­en type made by anoth­er firm.  In 1907 they estab­lished a Wood­work­ing Depart­ment and began pro­duc­ing woodlet­ter a year lat­er.  SB’s 1910 cat­a­logue was the first to include their own poster type.

    Both of these firms seemed to con­cen­trate on ser­vi­ca­ble types; rather than the exot­ic, mul­ti­ple-colour type that you could see on cir­cus or the­atre posters.

    Renovating Woodletter

    While today’s print­ers enjoy the unique effect that comes from slight­ly worn wood­en type, ear­li­er print­ers were keen to print a pris­tine image.  An arti­cle in the Small Print­er in the mid 1980s sug­gest­ed this –

    • Fill any cracks in the let­ter with a wood filler and allow this to dry
    • Place an emp­ty chase on a per­fect­ly flat sur­face.  Prop each cor­ner of the chase with two or three lay­ers of board.  This  thick­ness will be need­ed lat­er to be applied to the back of the let­ter.
    • Place the let­ter in the chase face down and lock it up.  The result should be a face-down let­ter with a slight gap between the chase edges and the sur­face
    • Using a very fine abra­sive paper, light­ly sand the face of the let­ter until the chase and the abra­sive paper meet: at this point you should have a smooth let­ter face, but not quite type high
    • Apply the same thick­ness of board to the back of the let­ter that you used to prop the chase up.  This should bring it back to type high

    I per­son­al­ly would pre­fer not to do this sort of thing, but the demands of the moment often made print­ers do strange things with woodlet­ter.  I’ve seen Vs become As by the addi­tion of a cross bar and being turned over; and also the backs of sel­dom-used let­ters (like Zs) become new let­ters through hand carv­ing.

    Buying and Selling Woodletter

    The mar­ket today is one area of let­ter­press where prices bear lit­tle rela­tion to the val­ue or orig­i­nal costs of the type.  There are three big con­sumers of woodlet­ter: ebay sell­ers who occa­sion­al­ly break up large founts to sell indi­vid­ual char­ac­ters; fur­ni­ture mak­ers who want to use it with­in pieces of fur­ni­ture, for exam­ple a cof­fee table; and small print­ers who are keen to use it for its orig­i­nal pur­pose.

    If you’re sell­ing poster type, con­sid­er using the British Let­ter­press Clas­si­fieds ser­vice to reach print­ers direct­ly; or con­tact me for spe­cif­ic advice.

    Current Practitioners

    There’s a won­der­ful charm to let­ter­press posters, and many con­tem­po­rary let­ter­press print­ers still enjoy work­ing with let­ter­press posters.  The grandee of woodlet­ter print­ing is Alan Kitch­ing who pro­duces ener­getic let­ter­press posters — I can almost guar­an­tee that you’ve seen them in pop­u­lar cir­cu­la­tion.  He claims to hold the largest col­lec­tion of wood let­ter in the UK after he took on the types from a the­atri­cal print­er poster.  Ian Mor­timer of IM Imprim­it also claims to have Britain’s largest col­lec­tion of woodlet­ter and prints ser­vi­ca­ble posters on his Albion press­es.  Also in Lon­don is Phil Abel at Hand & Eye cur­rent­ly sell­ing posters through his online shop.

    Justin Knop­p’s Typore­tum uses woodlet­ter to pro­duce excel­lent cards and posters.

    Robert Lee from Uni­corn Graph­ics in the US has been in touch to share his Amer­i­can Wood Type YouTube chan­nel.