Cofiwch nad yw Cymru ar werth

Writer Richard King tells us about our recent collaboration: a letterpress print to accompany his latest book with Faber.


This print lists some of the key events in recent Welsh history, which are the subject of my new book Brittle With Relics, A History of Wales 1962 -97.

In the early 1960s, the author and academic Meic Stephens painted the words ‘Cofiwch Drweryn’ on a stone wall near Llanrhystud, Ceredigion. Stephens created the graffiti in response to the decision of Liverpool City Council to flood the village of Capel Celyn, Trywern, North Wales in order to build a reservoir to pump water to the city.

The phrase Cofiwch Dryweryn (the D in Dryweryn is a mutation of the proper noun Tryweryn’s T) is now synonymous with a renewed sense of small ‘n’ national self-confidence and is ubiquitous in parts of Wales; a professional graffiti artist I know receives regular commissions from primary schools to create murals of the phrase on exteriors walls and playgrounds. 

Translated into English the print reads: 

Remember Trerweryn
Remember Aberfan
Remember The Miners’ Strike
Remember Devolution
Remember Wales Is Not For Sale

This final phrase uses ‘Nad’ rather than the more familiar ‘nid’ as ‘Cofiwch’ is used here in the imperative.

Historically a sense of assertiveness in our country has been dismissed as ‘Welsh Nationalism’.

The phrase ‘Welsh Optimism’ seems closer to the energy now circulating within Wales.


Nick tells us about the print

The print uses a new Fenner paper called Paperwise natural, it has a nice smooth surface which work wells on the proofing press with the letterpress process.

I like the idea of constructing a typographic print by feel and eye. In other words, not planning on a computer (which we do with some work) but constructing it directly on the press. It felt like the typography should be clear and bold, so using the two colours felt appropriate, and also links the print visually with the book.

We used Gill Sans Regular 6 line wood type, that is great to use as you can build it with the 6 line Resolite furniture and it’s a fun (lego-like) process. It was printed on the FAG 40 proofing press which is always great to work with and easy and quick for an edition like this.

It’s been important for us to work on less ephemeral work where we can, and Brittle with Relics is an important book at an important time. Community is always important, and I think that this book and the meaning behind this print is founded on strong community. For me, you could also substitute community for socialism. Work like this comes from the heart.


Richard King will be discussing his book at Friendly Records on Thursday 7 April (Tickets for Bristol) and at The Social in London Friday 8 April (Tickets for London) as part of his book tour. Information for other events via Richard’s Instagram.


The print is 670x350mm and is available from our online shop for £25 + P&P.

Letterpress Billboard

Letterpress printed posters celebrating the local businesses of St Philip’s Marsh in Bristol being pasted up for Bristol Open Doors 2021.

This has been a lovely public art project in collaboration with Pete Insole and Nat Roberton from Bristol City Council to give a Victorian makeover to local businesses in the area. Using the finest of our wood type collection and engraved blocks each poster has been printed on a range of gorgeous GF Smith colours using the FAG Swiss Proof 40 press.

We love that the type and blocks we have used would have been used for just this purpose at some point in the past. We couldn’t be prouder to be part of this project.

News from the printshop

Keeping ourselves busy.

 
From top left clockwise: Vivienne Westwood words (in the shop); a collaboration with Chuffed and Claire Cartwright; Own the means of the production poster (in the shop); packaging for Wright’s; Progress (in the shop); labels for Wilding Cider.

From top left clockwise: Vivienne Westwood words (in the shop); a collaboration with Chuffed and Claire Cartwright; Own the means of the production poster (in the shop); packaging for Wright’s; Progress (in the shop); labels for Wilding Cider.

 

It goes without saying that it hasn't been quite the year that we were expecting. We are very grateful to everyone that has supported us either by commissioning work or by visiting and buying from the shop. We've not had a workshop in over a year and considering that they have been 50% of our work and income for eight years, it's no surprise that we've had to change and adapt to get by. We've continued to print for other people as well as design and print things that we care about. The shop has seen a lot of new editions from this work. We have also had time to plan and work on projects that hopefully will see the light of day sometime soon.


Workshops on the horizon.

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We are excited to welcome people back into the workshop. Running workshops have always been a key part of what we do here. We're hoping to start from mid-April, we will put dates on the website in the next week or so. Please email you have any questions. Workshop gift vouchers are available in the shop. If you are a family, group of friends or business that would like to arrange your own workshop, we'd love to hear from you.


More Printing Bike adventures.

 
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Most of us have been thinking about the first place we'd like to travel in a month or two when we can leave these city walls once more. I've been starting to plan another printing adventure on the brilliant bicycle that my good friend Robin Mather made back in the carefree world of 2015. Since then there have been several thousand miles worth of hills, and many a postcard printed and posted from the far flung hills of Britain, France and Germany.

The new adventure will be to cycle from library to library, 100 in total around the country and print 10,000 bookmarks. The idea is to work with writers and artists to create beautiful bookmarks. In doing so I'll cycle 1000 miles carrying the lovely little Adana press up and down many a hill (much like the one about which is on the England Scotland border). It's still in the planning (and funding) stage, so if you have a favourite library or any ideas for such a hair brained caper, please email me your thoughts.

Thank you for your ongoing support. Please visit the website to hear more about our projects and share the link for the shop with friends – there are many treasures to be found and it's a great way of supporting us. We hope to see you very soon.

Letterpress in a Time of Pandemic by David Goldblatt

 
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After living under a regime that governs by slogan, I found myself trying to reduce what I took to be the lessons of 2020 into a similar refrain: “Believe the Science”, “Assume the Worst”, “Act Now and Save the Planet”, which was OK, but it was also kind of ugly and hectoring, which is the way of the slogan.

Is it possible to communicate something of this, to retain the punch and urgency of these staccato phrases, but also leave some room for the reader to make their own sense of the moment? I found those words in the work of the late Ulrich Beck.

Nearly thirty years ago I wrote a doctorate and a book on the then esoteric subject of social theory and the environment, including the work of the German sociologist Ulrich Beck and his pioneering work on the idea of a risk society. Beck could see the ways in which our mounting environmental and social crises were undermining the legitimacy of expert cultures of all kinds, from politics to science, as our capacity to transform the world outran our capacity to regulate and limit that power.

A month into lockdown I reread some of Beck’s work, begged Nick and Ellen to let me back in the print shop, and with much help and support from both of them, it is his words that that you can see in the prints on this page: sociological haiku meets concrete poetry, ee cummings meets comic book panels.

They are currently up on the walls of the chocolate factory within Centrespace, but I would much prefer them to be placed on the lecterns from which our rulers are currently speaking to us.

David Goldblatt is a writer, academic and broadcaster. Follow his letterpress work on Instagram @david_sgoldblatt


Set of four photographs: top left and right by Lily Watts; bottom left by Nick Hand; bottom right David Goldblatt.

 

21st Century Creative Podcast

A little while back Mark McGuinness visited Centrespace and recorded a podcast with Nick. While you can hear Ellen printing in the background, Nick talks about the tradition of letterpress printing and tells stories of some of the fine old presses that live in the printshop.

You can listen to the podcast here and Mark has also posted the full transcript of their conversation.

 
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Tranquility and bird song: tinkering with lead and wood type and the thud of a printing press.

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We've been wrestling with the new found tranquility of the city alongside the panic of how we're all going to get through this in one piece. Ellen and I have been in this little corner of the Old City of Bristol for seven years now. We have quietly been collecting and sorting type, restoring and operating presses. We've been working with and alongside lots of amazing people both in workshops and by creating print. We've also collaborated with lots of friends; other printers, poets, musicians and artists. It's been a lot of work and a lot of fun. At the moment, as you probably know, we can't run workshops for the foreseeable future. We are trying to look at how and when that might change, but for now we rely of commissions and selling print from our shop. We are very grateful to all the people who have helped by buying stuff from the shop already and we are adding new things each week. Please take a look, we've worked at having a bunch of things from £5 up to £150. Thank you again, it really is what is keeping the printshop going, we look forward to seeing you here again, hopefully not too far off now.

Our little credit card sized guide to the history of Universal Suffrage, is £5 (free P&P) and is a must for anyone lucky enough to have the vote, as well as essential for the suffrage round of a pub quiz (they'll be back soon). Our luggage label set is a fairly random use of the amazing Victorian ironmonger wood engravings in our collection again £5 inc P&P. The playing cards are illustrated by our good friend Jeb Loy Nichols. Each card is illustrated with a country soul legend and the pack was printed by our own legend, Ellen Bills on the death defying Heidelberg Windmill press. You can see them in action here. The Move Slow and Mend Things print is a collaboration with friends, Joe and Cally who had spotted an opportunity to offer a response to the evil giant, Facebook who adopted the phrase Move Fast and Break Things. Our print is A3 and printed slowly on the FAG40 proofing press with our battered wood type and is in the shop for £15 plus P&P.

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We just have a handful of each of these left now: The print of the Bristol's Old City (where we are based) is from a walking map (also in the shop) and illustrated by Simon Tozer. It is 380x560mm and printed on Somerset Satin and costs £30 plus P&P. "No One Can Own a River" is scratched on a sign telling you when and where you can walk alongside a stretch of the Wye. The phrase is detailed in our friend Richard King's book The Lark Ascending. The print costs £15 plus P&P and is 282x670mm, it makes good use of some lovely old river blocks by Jon McNaught. The final print is from Jeb's playing card set (above) and uses a set of the blocks from the playing cards, it is 204x631mm and is £15 plus P&P.

We'll see you soon, meanwhile thanks for you support.

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Photography of print shop Lily Watts.

Move Slow and Mend Things

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At this time of lockdown, isolation and distancing it is especially comforting to be collaborating with Cally and Joe Schofield and print these wise words with some of our treasured wood type. This is a response to Mark Zuckerberg's Facebook “Move Fast and Break Things”, just an alternative point of view worth considering.

Posters are A3, letterpress printed on a cotton-based 175gsm off white paper and available in our shop £15 + p&p.

Patience with Jeb Loy Nichols and the Country Soul brothers and sisters.

A lockdown pastime. Playing patience with Jeb Loy Nichols and the Country Soul brothers and sisters. Making these hand-printed letterpress playing cards and a collaboration with Jeb were a highlight in the print room last year.

You got it wrong is from Jeb Loy Nichols and the Westwood All-Stars new album June is short, July is long Available here.


Rules of the game: patience #1 (the one where all the cards are dealt out).

Deal by placing one card, face up, on the table in front of you then, to this card's right, six more face down. Go back to the second face down card and place one face up and five face down, go back to the third and repeat until you have seven piles with the top cards facing up. Not place another card face up on the second pile, a little lower than the first so the number and suite is visible. Continue along the doing the same until the seventh pile. Then go back to the third pile and do the same, essentially you are building down the table so that the shape of the tableau is a right-angled triangle upside-down. You will have three cards at the end. Add one to each of the last three runs of cards.

Your objective is to uncover the aces and place them along the top of the tableau so you can build up in number from ace to king each of the suites. So whenever you an ace is exposed, move it to the top and keep an eye out for the next number to be exposed in play.

In the tableau, the next descending number of the same suite can be added to any exposed card (the ones at the bottom of the run of up-turned cards). For example, if you have a nine of spades exposed and you can see somewhere on the table (not in the same line of cards as the nine) the eight of spades, you can pick up the eight and all the cards that are on top of it and move that whole section of cards to lay on top of the nine. When a whole column is moved, you can turn over the cards in the piles behind. If a gap appears, you can only fill it with a king (but it can be a king with all the cards that are on top of it in its column).

You continue to move cards in this way and hope to uncover the aces of each suite and then the cards from ace to king that help you build up a final set of four piles with king on top. But it doesn’t always go to plan and if you find you can’t move, you just have to take deep breath, gather up the cards and start again.