The Print Studio & Press Arrival

It’s been a hectic few weeks here at Thin Ice Press. A few weeks ago room D/L/051 begun its transformation into the print studio and, with all the old desks removed, the space was revealed to be great.

D/L/051
D/L/051 at the University of York…soon to be The Print Studio
team in the studio
The team in D/L/051 at the University of York

We’ve had many deliveries within the last few days. The first of these included type cabinets from urbanfox letterpress, some wooden type, spacers, ink…and a large yellow hazardous materials cabinet that is currently sitting in the English department reception!

Deliveries
Deliveries piling up…I think everyone in the department reception will be as excited to have these items set up in the print studio as we are!

Last Friday lunchtime the room continued its transformation as new flooring was fitted. This development came just in time for the delivery of our three iron presses from The Logan Press, and also of the historic Gent press from Scarborough Museums.

work begins
Work begins to transform D/L/051 into The Print Studio
Flooring
The flooring is down
new door
Shiny new door…soon to be changed to ‘The Print Studio’

The arrival of the presses today was one of the most exciting moments of the project so far. We were able to see how the iron presses we bought in June had been beautifully restored by The Logan Press and it was fascinating to watch all the parts come together to build the three presses you can see in the photos below.

Eagle
The eagle (a counterweight) from our Colombian press

Columbian 1

Columbian 2

Columbian 3

Columbian assembled
Our 1838 Columbian press assembled by The Logan Press
Albion
1847 tabletop Albion
Albion assembled
The smaller Albion seemed a lot easier to assemble in comparison to the Columbian
Arab 1
Arab presses were designed to be supplied in parts (like flat-pack furniture of today)

Arab 2

dsc_0041

Arab assembled
1926 Arab
the presses
1838 Columbian, 1847 tabletop Albion and a 1926 Arab joining our Adana 8×5 at Thin Ice Press (Adana not pictured)

The hectic day of deliveries continued with the kind loan of the early 18th-century wooden common press, once owned by York printer Thomas Gent, from Scarborough Museums. The arrival of this press means we are now able measure the final pieces of the Gent press and complete the plans of our own reproduction wooden common press.

Gent press
The disassembled 18th-century wooden common press

These recent developments mean we can now move on with many of our plans, from printing to common press construction, but it has also offered up a moment to reflect on what we have achieved in a relatively short space of time. There is still a lot to do, move into the studio and tweaks to be made on all the presses, but we are now custodians of a historic press and room D/L/051 is home to a (soon to be) working printing studio!

A big thanks to The Logan Press for your work today and to Scarborough Museums for loaning us the Gent press. I’d also like thank everyone who has subscribed to this blog and those following our journey on Instagram and Twitter – it is so wonderful to see your engagement and enthusiasm towards our project.

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