Voices From the 'You Are Here' Exhibit

This is one of two articles about this exhibit. Read the other one here.  You Are Here is a large scale installation resembling a giant landscape of buildings and natural elements designed and printed by Jennifer Farrell of Starshaped Press, Hamilton’s Visiting Artist 2019–2022.    You Are Here was printed over six days at the Museum. It utilizes various sizes of large... Read More »

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The Linotype Machine: An Evolutionary Cornerstone of Printing Technology

Few machines contributed more to the spread of printing than the Linotype Machine, invented in 1884 by Baltimore watchmaker Ottmar Mergenthaler.   Mergenthaler set out to dramatically reduce the time it took to set type by hand, one letter at a time, as it had been done since Gutenberg’s invention of the printing press in 1452 B.C.E. A single page... Read More »

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THE BEVY OF TYPE PATTERNS FOR "O" IN THE HAMILTON WOOD SHOP

The Wood Shop at the Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum has patterns for many different fonts. These patterns are usually stored as letter sets (A-Z plus punctuation, numerals, etc) with each pattern in its own drawer. Most of our type patterns are indeed stored that way, in hundreds of drawers in the Wood Shop.    However, one cabinet contains... Read More »

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"ON THE GROOVE": PRINTING AT THE PENLAND SCHOOL OF CRAFT

To be asked to teach at the Penland School of Craft is quite an honor. The school, nested in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina is away from everything. To suggest it is rustic, is a stretch. The studios are all set up with excellent equipment and the teachers I met there all confirmed that feeling.   My co-instructor... Read More »

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Documenting Company and Community Life: The Hamiltonian Magazine

The Hamiltonian was a quarterly magazine produced by the Hamilton Manufacturing Company in Two Rivers, Wisconsin. The collection at the Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum contains issues of The Hamiltonian dating back to 1944, with December 1944 being the earliest issue in the museum's collection.   The December 1944 issue lists the names of service men (former company  employees) missing or killed in action. This... Read More »

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