So Wonderful

Here is a plate mounted on our Boxcar base. Lou’s letterpress is singing in pool ink today, a lovely deep blue. Hearing the press run never gets old.

A day in our Letterpress Shop: Blooming Flowers

Flowers are blooming all over in the Smock area! Using the pollen pattern gift wrap (which is 2 sided), Jen has made this amazing, huge, beautiful display piece. So many ideas, only 24 hours in a day!

Another Splendid Press!

Just in case you thought we only had Heidelberg presses, here is a teeny one that lives on the reception desk. It is a miniature wooden handpress, ancestor to the Heidelbergs.

by Carrie Valenzuela, letterpress printer. 12:29 p.m.

First Friday Potluck

July 1st was our monthly Boxcar potluck where we cook for each other and talk with those we don’t see too often. We feasted, we laughed, we cried (with laughter), we were serenaded by printer Dave, a true renaissance man. Not only is he a letterpress printer, he’s also a carpenter, a motorcyclist, a glass etcher, good joke teller, and as we were lucky enough to find out, a talented crooner, guitarist, & harmonica player- all at the same time! Kudos to you, Dave!

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by Carrie Valenzuela, letterpress printer. 1:30 p.m.

Boxcar Talk with Satsuma Press

Can we use the word impressed without the pun? Because the woman behind Satsuma Press impresses us to no end. Lynn Russell is not only a self-taught designer, but runs her letterpress shop full time all the while being a wife and mother to Liam, a child with neuromuscular disorder called Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) Type 2. This lady has her hands full but was kind enough to let us dip into her life and learn more about her one-woman operation.

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WHAT MADE YOU WANT TO BECOME AN ARTIST? HOW DID YOU FIRST GET INTO LETTERPRESS?

I took my first letterpress class nine years ago and it was love at first sight. I didn’t set out to become an artist; in fact, I hadn’t taken any sort of art class at all since high school. For me, letterpress was simply the right fit. Letterpress printing is hands on work that requires an eye for detail and design.

WHAT WAS YOUR VERY FIRST PRESS?

A Vandercook SP-15, which I still have, in addition to a Heidelberg Windmill. The Vandercook is my trusty, slow paced machine; the Heidelberg is a tempermental beast (but when it’s happy, it is amazing.)

WHAT MEDIUM DO YOU USUALLY PRINT?

Photopolymer (from Boxcar)

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WHAT’S YOUR PROCESS FROM SKETCH TO PRESS?

I find inspiration from so many things – botanical drawings and vintage textiles in particular. I sketch everything in Illustrator now, but it often takes several rounds of revisions before I feel that a drawing is ready for press. With Illustrator, it’s fairly easy to make small adjustments to lines and shapes (although probably not as easy as it could be as I have no formal training in graphic design or any of the computer programs that go with that!) It’s also easy to play around with color choices – though sometimes I change my mind about this right when I go to press.

WHAT OTHER PRINT SHOPS DO YOU ADMIRE?

In no particular order –

I love Julie’s work – beautiful drawings, lush paper, rich colors. Studio Olivine
I am consistently blown away by the registration and attention to detail over at Studio on Fire.
I love the simple, peaceful work Rebecca does at Moontree.
Not letterpress but xylene transfers…stunning graphics, amazing prints. Beauchamping

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WHO OR WHAT INSPIRES YOU THE MOST?

I’m inspired most by people who do what they love – the very best way they can, with integrity. There are several people/studios that embody this philosophy with all sort of mediums. I admire them all immensely.

Heath Ceramics
Moop
Herriott Grace
Modaspia
Skinny laMinx
Bookhou
EmersonMade

HOW HAS LIAM INFLUENCED YOUR WORK?

Soon after I bought my first press, I found I was pregnant with my son, Liam. I worked only sporadically then – and even less so from the time Liam was diagnosed with a neuromuscular disorder called Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) Type 2 at 14 months until he was two and a half. (Read more at Liam’s blog.) After that, though, I slowly returned to my small studio. In that space, I found both solace and inspiration. I learned as I went along – making mistakes often, yet loving the process. Years later, I still make mistakes, learn from them and love printing. While my work has evolved over the years, I have stayed true to my original aesthetic – good, simple design that is pleasing to the eye and mind; refreshing color and lush paper; plenty of open space and quiet, graceful beauty.

Satsuma Press is still just me (and my 2 printing presses) – and I like it this way. I still design and print everything by myself, although I collaborate with other artists around the world on occasion. I still answer every email and pack every order. My husband helps out from time to time, but mostly I spend my days in the studio alone. Some days I work just a few hours, some days I work fourteen hours. I keep my schedule somewhat flexible for all the things that may come up for my family. Through it all, my intent remains the same – small-scale, honest work done well.

WHAT DO YOU LIKE ABOUT WORKING WITH BOXCAR?

Well, not a thing or an item, but Cathy at Boxcar has provided endless amounts of help to me, from the time when I was just getting started and even now. It’s really nice to have a small company to work with over the years. Also, the Boxcar Base is pretty nifty and I have one for each of my presses.

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ANY NEAT TRICKS YOU CAN SHARE?

No, not really a tricks kind of person…but two things I can share, that I’ve learned over the years – and which I need to be reminded of more often than I’d like to admit are these:

Don’t print late at night. This seems unavoidable sometimes (for me this is usually in early fall when I’m trying to get my calendar printed), but more often than not, I make mistakes that I’m too tired to catch at the time. Do I still print at night? Yes, on occasion, but I try to make it something simple, like printing my logo on the back of each card.

If a client doesn’t seem like a good fit at the start, s/he probably isn’t. It’s better to face this up front and at the beginning, rather than further down the line when it causes more difficulty for everyone.

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WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FORWARD TO?

I do have new projects that I’m excited about! I actually just did my first jewelry collaboration on a lovely little necklace.

Be sure to check out Satsuma Press’s shop. It’s never too late to order some 2011 calendars! (Especially when they’ve been designed and printed with love.)

Happy Halloween from Boxcar Press!

Halloween became so much more fun once we started having kids who wear cute costumes…after much debate (UPS Man? Mailman? UPS Man? Mailman?), the Boxcar Toddler decided to be a U.S. Mailman this year. He delivered hand drawn letters to lucky people all over the building. (and yes, there is, in existence, a very cute Boxcar Baby #2, who is dressed up as the letter “J” and even wore a Halloween bib….but we forgot to take a photo of her! Typical second child, right?!?!)

Custom envelope liners (it’s true, a little flat printing in a letterpress shop)


In addition to having a whole lot of letterpresses in our print shop, we do have a few offset presses that we use for doing cool things like….flat printing custom envelope liners! We tried letterpress printing them at first, but the solids strained our presses, and with such a large form, we got such a light impression that it looked identical to flat printing anyway….so now we use our letterpresses for things that letterpress is good at (almost everything), and we use our offset presses for things like huge envelope liner solids! After printing the large liners, we send them through a die-cut run on our Heidelberg Cylinder and then hand-insert the finished liners into the envelopes. We fell in love with these bright red liners….

Giving thanks for….letterpress and you!

Harold spent a few hours downstairs in the letterpress shop today taking some really great atmospheric photos of our presses and our printers. Nothing looks better to us than bright ink on a Heidelberg Windmill under dramatic lighting conditions! We’ll be posting more pictures from our shop’s photo shoot to Boxcar’s flickr account in the next week or so. In the meantime, Happy Thanksgiving! Today we’re being grateful for the creation of letterpress and cast iron, and also for you, all of our awesome letterpress-loving customers. We’ll be thinking of you all as we eat our tofurkeys! (By the way, our offices are closed Nov. 27, Thursday, and Nov. 28, Friday).