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Book Looks: Selections from the Press Library, Part 4

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Book Looks: Selections from the Press Library, Part 4

Hello Friends, and welcome back to Book Looks!

I began this blog series in 2021 to highlight some of the interesting volumes here in the St Brigid Press library — from the history of book-making to printing press maintenance, from typography and type design to the biographies of famous (or not) printers, and from paper-making to hand-sewing books. We’ll take a brief look at three volumes today, and spotlight more over time.

This edition of the series is inspired by my trip to Canada last October, where I participated in a marvelous gathering (a “Wayzgoose”) at Gaspereau Press in Nova Scotia. You can read about that adventure HERE.

Thanks for coming along as we browse the print shop shelves!

Emily Hancock

Previous Book Looks editions:

BOOK LOOKS, PART 4

  1. Design With Type by Carl Dair

To learn about the 20th-century-history of typography and design in Canada is to encounter the extraordinary work of Carl Dair. Born in Ontario in 1912, Dair became an exceptional graphic designer, teacher, and type designer, and in 1952 published Design With Type. This relatively slim but comprehensive volume became a staple resource in the trade, and is still available new from the University of Toronto Press who published the revised version in 1967 (although there are many inexpensive used copies floating around for you to snag). “Good design in any field demands that the designer know the materials with which he is working”; this is, essentially, Dair’s purpose for writing this book and his hope for his readers. The well-illustrated, concise tour of the forms and functions of type on the page is all in service of Dair’s ultimate vision —that of encouraging excellence in visual communication, not mere “visual stimulation.” [University of Toronto Press; I recommend the revised version published after 1967.]


2. Smoke Proofs: Essays on Literary Publishing, Printing & Typography by Andrew Steeves

My Canadian trip destination last autumn was Gaspereau Press in Kentville, Nova Scotia. Established in 1997 by Andrew Steeves and Gary Dunfield, Gaspereau is a relatively small offset- and letterpress-print shop that has had an outsized impact on the literary culture of its home province and beyond. From the digitally designed, offset-printed with letterpress jacket trade editions of poetry and prose, to Steeves’ completely letterpress printed fine press volumes, each book is an impeccably made home for excellent literature. In 2014, Steeves published a book of his own writing called Smoke Proofs: Essays on Literary Publishing, Printing & Typography. Rather than a “how-to” primer on typesetting or page layout, this collection from a true citizen-publisher is more of a what and why, “identifying issues, challenging dogma and agitating for our full and creative engagement with the many challenges we encounter when we set literary works into type and publish the results.” Steeves and his work have always called on me to be my best creative self for the good of the community I serve, and this book is a superlative guide and goad, inspiration and invitation, that I return to regularly. Smoke Proofs is a trustworthy, hand-held compass for anyone adventuring into the wilds of literary publishing and printing.


3. Keeping Watch at the End of the World by Harry Thurston

“All of us belong, as much as the black ducks / at rest in the harbour…”

Harry Thurston grew up in Nova Scotia and became a prize-winning poet and environmental journalist, as well as mentor to many students at the University of King’s College. His word-and-image collaborations with the renowned New Brunswick photographer Thaddeus Holownia (several volumes of which have been designed by Andrew Steeves) are exquisite. I was lucky to meet Thurston last autumn and to pick up copies of several of his books published by Gaspereau Press, including the outstanding Keeping Watch at the End of the World. The sea is a central presence in this beautiful collection. Whether writing about his native, booming Bay of Fundy or the Mediterranean’s millennia of layered stories, Thurston’s heart and eye take in and give back to us the intricate, flowing world. His ear, like his pulse, are tuned to the tides — whether oceanic, emotional, or historical. And he is always walking that wrack line, where the sea — whether the sea of time or of memory or of water itself— gives up its mysteries (and takes them back again). Grab a copy of Thurston’s work and enjoy his keen company in “This brief time we have to share / while the tide fills and empties the bay.”

(Apologies for the shadow-dappling on some of these photos below. My photographic error, not on the pages themselves.)


To close out our little trip to Canada, here’s a final word from Carl Dair — this poster hangs in a prominent position at St Brigid Press:

Well, that’s all for now, friends, as I gotta get back to setting some type ;-) Stay tuned for future installments of Book Looks, and in the meantime, be well and read on!

Emily

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St Brigid Press Visits Canada!

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St Brigid Press Visits Canada!

The happy gathering at Gaspereau Press, Nova Scotia. Photo by the amazing Thaddeus Holownia .

Hello and Happy Autumn, dear Friends of the Press!

Have you ever heard of a Wayzgoose?? Me either, at least until I entered the world of traditional printing. (FYI, it does not involve a real goose.) Well, I just got back from Canada a couple of weeks ago, having attended my very first Wayzgoose

This strange, centuries-old word (with an uncertain derivation, possibly Dutch) originally described a yearly gathering of printing-house workmen to celebrate the end of the summer and the beginning of autumn (the season of working by candlelight; can you imagine? setting tiny type by the wavering flame of a candle?!). The modern Wayzgoose is still a celebration of letterpress printing and traditional book-making, an event for folks who practice and/or just love this craft to gather, share experiences and encouragement, and PRINT together! (In well-lighted spaces ;-)

At the invitation of my friend Andrew Steeves of Gaspereau Press in Kentville, Nova Scotia, I attended their annual Wayzgoose on the third weekend of October. What a marvelous, energetic, generous, convivial, diverse, and inspiring group of folk! Truly, it was a life-highlight for me. 

In the above photo, Andrew Steeves (right), who is the co-owner of Gaspereau Press, the Wayzgoose host, and an outstanding letterpress printer and book publisher, taking a photo of the remarkable Amos Kennedy, Jr., brilliant letterpress printer and community activist from Detroit, Michigan. Soon we were joined by Toronto’s Phoebe Todd-Parrish, a wonderful linocut artist, printer, and human being.

Folks from here and yon gathered to engage with the printer-presenters before the open-house at Gaspereau. A generative mix of poets, curators, general public, architects, photographers, and more.

I was honored to be one of three presenters during the morning session, along with Phoebe Todd-Parrish of Flycatcher Press in Toronto and Amos Kennedy of Kennedy Prints in Detroit. Each of us talked about our print shops, process, and work.

After lunch, Gaspereau Press opened its doors to the public, and several of us held printing demonstrations on various of Andrew’s letterpress equipment. What an absolute joy to help someone print something for the very first time — from seniors to six-year-olds, I watched so many faces brighten with the delight of printing! Which, of course, delighted me.

That joy was infectious, and suffused the whole event. Including in the evening, when a number of poets (those whom Andrew had published during the past year) read from their outstanding work, and then when three literary critics and curators held a round-table discussion with Andrew. From dawn ’til way past dusk, the Wayzgoose catalyzed connections, new- and old-friendships, discovery, inspiration, and, yes again, joy.

Phoebe Todd-Parrish (left) is an awesom printmaker and teacher from Toronto. She and I had the pleasure of collaborating on the demonstration print during the open house portion of the Wayzgoose. She created a linocut image to go with a quote by Henry David Thoreau, and we guided participants in the actual printing of this keepsake. What fun!

“I believe in the forest and in the meadow and in the night in which the corn grows.”

— Thoreau (from “Walking”)

Klara du Plessis is a poet, literary curator, and artist-scholar from Montreal. And she was my most excellent assistant during the open house. We often had a long line of folks waiting to try their hand at printing at the press, and Klara was simultaneously traffic director, printing technique explainer, community engager, and all around joyful presence.

Though I was sad to leave, I was also eager to get home and get back to work in the print shop! During the long drive homeward, I made pages of notes about ideas and projects to come, and will share more about those as they ripen. 


Thank you so much for sharing this inky journey with me, dear friends!

With all best wishes,

Emily


Emily Hancock
St Brigid Press
Afton, Virginia
stbrigidpress.net

Amos (L) and Andrew (R) talkin’ shop in the Gaspereau Press print shop. Andrew is leaning on the Linotype, while Amos is rummaging through the cases of wood type.

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