Showing posts with label Letterpress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Letterpress. Show all posts

Tuesday, 29 March 2011

Second letterpress poster

More letterpress, and this time I ran the posters up without using the computer at all, just a combo of woodblock and linocut. Very suitable for these bands, who shun modern equipment and take their inspiration from the wild sounds of the 50s and 60s. Thee Ludds are also named in honour of local boy Ned Ludd, who as leader of the luddites led an anti-technology machine smashing revolt. You can sometimes get good results from doing things the old way! (or smashing things up)
Keeping the layout simple, I arranged the text in straight blocks, and added graphic elements cut from lino, managing to slice my fingers to shreds in the process. There's probably a fair dose of blood in that red ink! The ground of ultra-cheap, nicely textured brown parcel paper means I could use white for some of the text, as well as the vivid red and strong black, creating a poster that stands out when seen alongside all the digital prints on white paper that it was vying for attention with. 
        The surface crazing and wood grain on the old type blocks adds more texture, creating a lovely varied, tactile surface rather than a dull, flat, digitally perfect one. The pressure from the press also meant that the letters were very slightly recessed, adding another layer of interest to the surface of each poster.

For a long poster I set up the type in two chases, packing everything in tightly with wooden blocks and quoins, apart from the 'footstompers' text, which I left free to slide up and down to give movement to this line. Printing the text first, with a different run for each colour, I left spaces for the lino graphic of musical notes dancing around a spinning record. Each poster is subtly different, with a different arrangement of red, black and white, and some with white stripes rolled across the image to highlight the band names. 

The oil based inks give the text a nice sheen and give great thick coverage, although they're a bugger to clean up after using!





Thursday, 24 March 2011

Letterpress Poster

A foray into the wonderful world of woodblock here, using a vintage press and an assortment of chunky wooden type. 

I love the look of woodblock type. This trad printing technique was disappearing, with printers throwing out drawers of the stuff when newer techniques took over. Luckily, some folks collected up what they could, and I got to use some blocks that had been saved from the skip, with a heavy duty press to run them through, as well as the rest of the strangely named kit: quoins, chases, reglets etc.
      With a bit of careful arranging, test printing, padding, printing again, tweaking and printing again on various kinds of paper, I got the kind of result that would be hard to replicate with digital techniques alone. But talk about time-consuming - phew! It took me about 4 evenings of messing around to get something I could use. No wonder wood is out, and pixels are in. 
The prints above are some of these experiments. In the end, good old newsprint got the best result from this set-up, as due to the slightly uneven heights of some of the letters in this very old set, thicker paper didn't make enough contact with some of the blocks to make an even print. I played around with different graphics, including the swami and cobra idea above (another good 1950s film cliché), before settling on an advertising character from a restaurant chain and some hand lettering to digitally complete the poster. 
Just look at the end-grain on those letters. Mmmmm. 
Below is part of the set of type used in this poster, which is probably twice as old as I am.