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Plates still in place more than a year after the final press run.

A combination of lemon, vinegar and kitchen roll apparently take rust off a treat…

The old Frederick News Post printing press, left abandoned still loaded with paper when the FNP moved to their new facility.

Fujifilm X-E1 with Zuiko 50mm f1.8 lens

The Plantin-Moretus Museum (Dutch: Plantin-Moretusmuseum) is a printing museum in Antwerp, Belgium which focuses on the work of the 16th-century printers Christophe Plantin and Jan Moretus. It is located in their former residence and printing establishment, the Plantin Press, at the Vrijdagmarkt (Friday Market) in Antwerp, and has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 2005.

 

The printing company was founded in the 16th century by Christophe Plantin, who obtained type from the leading typefounders of the day in Paris. Plantin was a major figure in contemporary printing with interests in humanism; his eight-volume, multi-language Plantin Polyglot Bible with Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek and Syriac texts was one of the most complex productions of the period. Plantin's is now suspected of being at least connected to members of heretical groups known as the Familists, and this may have led him to spend time in exile in his native France.

  

View of the courtyard of the museum

After Plantin's death it was owned by his son-in-law Jan Moretus. While most printing concerns disposed of their collections of older type in the eighteenth and nineteenth century in response to changing tastes, the Plantin-Moretus company "piously preserved the collection of its founder."

 

Four women ran the family-owned Plantin-Moretus printing house (Plantin Press) over the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries: Martina Plantin, Anna Goos, Anna Maria de Neuf and Maria Theresia Borrekens.

 

In 1876 Edward Moretus sold the company to the city of Antwerp. One year later the public could visit the living areas and the printing presses. The collection has been used extensively for research, by historians H. D. L. Vervliet, Mike Parker and Harry Carter. Carter's son Matthew would later describe this research as helping to demonstrate "that the finest collection of printing types made in typography's golden age was in perfect condition (some muddle aside) [along with] Plantin's accounts and inventories which names the cutters of his types."

 

In 2002 the museum was nominated as UNESCO World Heritage Site and in 2005 was inscribed onto the World Heritage list.

 

The Plantin-Moretus Museum possesses an exceptional collection of typographical material. Not only does it house the two oldest surviving printing presses in the world and complete sets of dies and matrices, it also has an extensive library, a richly decorated interior and the entire archives of the Plantin business, which were inscribed on UNESCO's Memory of the World Programme Register in 2001 in recognition of their historical significance.

Printing presses at the Federal building as it is known.

At the Musee de L'Imprimerie, Lyon

Peter Chasseaud, letterpress print produced by the Tom Paine printing press

The Tonn Press was renowned for Welsh literary scholarship and was largely the work of William Rees (1808–1873), a prominent figure in the town. Llandovery was one of the important printing centres in Wales and Tonn Press publications are today sought by book collectors far and wide and are notable for their design, quality printing and the variety of their titles.

 

The Old Printing Office is now at St Fagans.

Printing Press of the Romanian Patriarchate in Bucharest.

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1992-11 Romania ROM92T-113

Founded in Leominster in 1873 to provide training in letterpress printing and provide income for the orphanage.

 

A gas powered press valued at £100 was installed. Probably a gas engine with a leather drive belt between the flywheel of the gas engine and the flywheel of the press.

 

The boys worked three hours a day in the printing office, one set in the morning and another in the afternoon. This allowed them plenty of time for school and for play.

 

Other homes such as Barnado's, National Children's Home and The Children's Society provided training in print.

Maker:

Born: USA

Active: USA

Medium: gelatin silver print

Size: 7.5" x 9.75"

Location: USA

 

Object No. 2012.622

Shelf: E-40

 

Publication:

 

Other Collections:

 

Notes: TBAL

 

To view our archive organized by themes and subjects, visit: OUR COLLECTIONS

 

For information about reproducing this image, visit: THE HISTORY OF PHOTOGRAPHY ARCHIVE

From when even simple engineering pieces, such as hinges, door handles, door knockers, ships and steam trains all had style and decoration. Not just as embellishments but serving a purpose as well.

Hopkinson & Cope albion press

Printers working the machine to press type against paper.

A 3D printed printing press for printing on paper with ink.

 

More Info: rasterweb.net/raster/2018/11/04/little-printing-press/

Plantin Moretus Museum, Antwerp

The Barkang printing press at Labrang Monastery, Xiahe, Gansu, China

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