Monday, May 9, 2011

Women Set Type!

I found the following article very interesting since I was the only woman in the pressroom all during my career as a printing press operator even in the 1970's. In fact, I was such an oddity, the owner of the company I was working for flew to California from New York just to see the woman they had running the printing press at his California location. This article gives a bit of the history of women in the typography and printing industries:

The text below is assembled from Unseen Hands, Women Printers, Binders & Book Designers (Princeton University Library, 2003), Women in Printing & Publishing in California, 1850-1940 (California Historical Society, 1998), and Epochal History of the International Typographical Union (I.T.U., 1925.) Other sources are indicated where used.

“Women have been involved in printing and the making of books ever since these crafts were first developed. Even before the advent of movable type, there was a strong tradition of women producing manuscripts in western European religious houses. In the Convent of San Jacopo di Ripoli in Florence, we find the first documented evidence, in 1476, of women working as printers. Girls and women were often trained by their fathers or husbands to assist in printing businesses, and there are many instances from the fifteenth to the eighteenth centuries of women taking over and managing these enterprises upon the early demise of their male relatives.... Many, certainly, only managed the business, while others were more directly involved. Estellina, wife of the printer Abraham Conant, proudly stated in a Hebrew book, Behinat `olam (Mantua, ca. 1477) that ‘she, together with one man, did the typesetting.’ [source]
In the 19th century, a limited number of occupations were open to women — teaching, needlework, domestic service, etc. Male-only unions ruled the printing business. Women, where employed at all, were relegated to certain low-paying jobs considered best suited for the weaker sex, such as dressing (polishing imperfections) from metal type, folding printed sheets, and sewing bindings. Yet there were exceptions — a few women were also employed in typesetting. Women who were widows or daughters of printers often learned typesetting out of necessity.
James Franklin, brother of Benjamin Franklin, taught something of the art to his two daughters prior to his death in 1835, and when he died he left his printing plan at Newport, R.I. to his widow and family. They operated it successfully for many years.
A woman’s typographical union was formed in France with a journal entitled La Compositrice, and the first major woman’s journal edited by a woman, Godey’s Lady’s Book, was published in Philadelphia from 1830-1858, edited by Sarah Josepha Buell Hale. [source]
...
Women were employed in the Day Book office in New York in 1853, while a strike was in progress against that office. This inspired a determined campaign against women printers. Union leaders inveighed against employment of women and urged the National Typographical Union to do something about it. The National wisely disclaimed any desire to interfere in treatment of the issue by local unions. Horace Greely, celebrated editor of the New York Tribune and a former president of Typographical Union No. 6 of New York, took up his redoubtable pen....
‘Your fears that women will supplant you, or seriously reduce your wages, Messrs. Compositors, are neither wise nor manly. The girls who marry and have families to look after will stop setting type — never doubt that — unless they are so luckless as to get drunken, loafing, good-for-nothing husbands, who will do nothing to keep the pot boiling, and then they must work, and you ought not to be mean enough to stop them, or drive them back to making shirts or binding shoes at three or four shillings a day.
If you find yourselves troubled with too strong a competition from female workers just prove yourselves worthy to be their husbands; marry them, provide good homes and earn the means of living comfortably, and we’ll warrant them never to annoy you thereafter by insisting on spending their days at the printing office setting type. But waxing theologic and pious, you tell us of the sphere of action God designed women to occupy —of her ‘purity’ and of the ‘immorality and vice’ she must inevitably sink into, should she be admitted into the composing room to set type beside you. We feel the force of these suggestions — we admit the badness of the company into which unregulated typesetting would sometimes thro her — but did it ever occur to you that this is her lookout rather than yours? It is perfectly fair of you to apprise her beforehand of the moral atmosphere to which promiscuous typesetting would expose her, but when you virtually say she shan’t set type because if she did your society and conversation would corrupt her you carry the joke a little too far.’
By 1864, due in large part to the depletion of the male work force during the Civil War, additional workers were needed in trades which were previously thought of as ‘male’ trades — one of these being typesetting. The number of newspapers and the demand for printed materials was on the increase, and women began to step into jobs in both the printing and publishing fields.
The National Typographical Union permitted women to form unions and to join existing unions in 1869, the same year it was renamed the International Typographical Union. Augusta Lewis Troup, journalist and typesetter for Susan B. Anthony’s newspaper The Revolution, was elected corresponding secretary of the International Typographical Union in 1870. She became the first woman to hold any national union office. [source]
...
Women Set Type!After hearing of the role of women in the 15th century printing industry, Emily Faithful decided to set up her own firm in Edinburgh in 1857 employing women only. In 1859 she founded the Victoria Press in London and employed men to do the heavy work. This met with a lot of hostility with the print unions which said that it encouraged immorality. In 1862 she earned the title of Printer and Publisher in Ordinary to the Queen, moved to an office in Farringdon Street and then to Praed Street, Paddington, where she remained until 1881. She was also a writer and poet and was involved in some of the publications produced by her firm such as the feminist English Woman’s Journal and the Victoria Magazine. [source] While her journal was established as a general literary magazine it provided a strong feminist emphasis on suffrage, married women’s property, education, employment and all of the other feminist/women’s concerns of the day. [source]
During the late 19th century, women writers often moved into positions as editors of newspapers or small journals. At this same time, the Woman’s Suffrage Movement was gaining momentum and the women-edited journals were the obvious choices in which to further their cause. Spiritualism was also a popular movement at the turn of the century among women — largely because it did not discriminate by gender or ethnic background — and the women publishers felt a kinship because of this non-discriminatory nature. Journals such as The Carrier Dove, The Spiritualist, and The Golden Dawn were all journals edited by women and devoted to not only Spiritualism but in some cases, also to the Suffrage Movement.
Other women publishers and editors followed a more literary angle, publishing journals which featured articles on a wider variety of topics. In 1863, Lisle Lester took charge of the Pacific Monthly, a woman’s literary magazine previously known as the Hesperian. It had a rocky career as was the career of Ms. Lester — who was widely known for her strong opinions on many topics and her tussles with the male typographical unions. Another woman, Emily Pitts Stevens, gained prominence when she transformed the Sunday Evening Mercury — which was known as ‘a Journal of Romance and Literature’ — into the premier voice for woman’s suffrage in the West. She hired women to set type for her newspaper and in 1869 changed its name to The Pioneer — as ‘a name that more nearly covers our thought and tells the nature of our object and ambition.’ She became a major force in the founding of the California Woman Suffrage Association on January 28, 1870.
...
Women's Printing CooperativeIn San Francisco, which was becoming a center for printing and publishing in the West, women-run printing offices appeared in the 1870s and 1880s. The Women’s Union Job Printing Co., the Woman’s Publishing Company, Amanda B. Slocum and Jennie Patrick were a few either woman-run and/or -staffed printing offices of this period. The most prominent and prolific was The Women’s Co-Operative Printing Union, established in 1868 on Clay Street by Mrs. Agnes Peterson, followed in 1873 by Mrs. Lizzie G. Richmond. Early 1870 billheads produced by the WCPU proudly proclaimed, ‘Women set type! Women run presses!’ So confident was Lizzie Richmond that her billheads and advertisements often stated, ’We invite criticism.’ These printing offices produced a variety of printed materials for the public — books, commercial catalogs, corporate annual reports, legal briefs, [as well as] invitations, broadside advertisements, and handbills.
The many journals, newspapers, books, and even billheads that were printed during the late 19th and early 20th centuries used mainly one method of illustration — that of the wood engraving.... Leila S. Curtis and Eleanor P. Gibbons were two women who started up and ran successful engraving businesses in San Francisco. Both were trained in engraving and design. Their designs were found on billheads, business cards, and stationery, as well as in book illustrations, commercial catalogs, and innumerable other small printed items. Magazines published during this period often used the technique of the woodcut — rather than a wood engraving — to illustrate their pages. The technique used in producing a woodcut allowed for larger more fluid compositions. Lucia Mathews cut the designs for Philopolis (1906-1919) — a magazine published by Arthur, her husband, and herself during the early part of the 20th century. Florence Lundborg, an artist influenced by both Art Nouveau and the Arts and Crafts movement of the early part of this century, produced woodcut images for The Lark, the San Francisco literary magazine published by Bruce Porter and Gelett Burgess from 1895-1897. [source]
...
The turn of the century saw an increased interest in the aesthetic aspects of printing — now that women were an accepted part of the work force — and many fine presses sprang up throughout the state [of California]. A fine or ‘private press’ is generally understood to be a small printing house which issues for public sale limited editions of books which have been carefully made on the premises.
By the 1920s a tradition of fine printing was well under way in San Francisco, with Taylor and Taylor, John Henry Nash and the Grabhorns already fairly well established. These printing houses encouraged printing by women.... Other women with their own presses were Rosalind Keep of the Eucalyptus Press, Helen Gentry, and Jane Grabhorn at Colt Press, which was founded along with William Matson Roth and Jane Swinerton. In southern California, private presses were often a husband and wife team. The Saunders Studio Press of Claremont was founded in 1927 by Lynne and Ruth Thompson Saunders. The Plantin Press in Los Angeles was established in 1931 by Saul and Lillian Marks, Saul being in charge of design and layout and Lillian responsible for composition. Women such as Virginia Woolf and Elizabeth Yeats also founded private presses that produced handsome limited editions of the work of contemporary authors and artists. [source]
Women were notably successful at bookbinding, both ‘on the line’ — producing factory bindings — and in the creation of splendid examples of hand binding, particularly during the Arts and Crafts Revival of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
With the dawn of the 20th century and the emergence of women’s rights, women in printing and publishing entered more seamlessly into the work force. Finally, with the advent of fine press printing, the women printers in the 1920s and 1930s emerge as figures who achieved their goals to work at a skilled occupation that offered them not only an honest living but also a chance to use their creative instincts and skills.”

This article is from:

http://backspace.com/notes/2004/04/women-set-type.php

Monday, May 2, 2011

The Paragraph Portion Completed

Here are the finals for the Paragraph section of the Data assignment.

Add that should put the Data to rest. Now off to designing the poster for the Art Department Open House and Student Show.


Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Retro Post - Roughs on the Headline Assignment

Hello All,
It has been called to my attention that I did not post my roughs for Part 2 of the assignment on this blog...oops. So, for all of you that may have missed them on the critique wall, here they are:

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

The Data Assignment Continues With Part Three

Part Three of Your Data Yourself
In part three of this assignment we are to use a paragraph that is connected to our chosen word, in my case data. This will be fit into a defined space of 8x10. We can use two typefaces and incorporate the previous headline, "Your data Yourself". However, this is a complete redesign so I can change the fonts and design.
I want to convey the idea that your data and yourself are two very different aspects of the description of you. I have decided on the use of two contrasting typefaces to describe the contrast between the straight forward aspect of your “Data” (san serif upright) and the expressive and complex elements of your “Self” (handwriting). I wanted the two to coexist on the page as in the real world, with the self standing out as the more important aspect. I also want to remind the reader that their data can define some of  what they are but not who they are.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Data - Part Two

For the second part of the "data" assisgnment we were given a headline to go with the word we had chosen for part 1, in my case, "data". The headline was, "Your Data, Yourself". We are to use the headline in the same way we did the single word, using the principles of design to convey the meaning of the headline using only type. We did get to add the use of a second type face bringing the grand total up to two.  I wanted to convey the idea that your data and yourself are two very different aspects of the descripttion of you.  So I wanted to use a very straight forward and unexpressive typeface for the Data (Arial) and a more expressive typeface for Yourself (Freestyle Script). I wanted the two to interact as they do in the real world. After the critique of ten roughs, I had only found one idea that was worthy of going further, so I played around with getting the type to wrap into itself. Here is what I came up with:


I them had to find another design idea. I came up with this one using the font Cambria and Lucida Handwriting for the large S in self. This is how it turned out:



This one was a bit of fun to get the letters to fit into one another required alot of trial and error with kerning, typesize and placement. I was pleased with the results.

Data Finals

After going through the critique and listening to the opinions and advice of my fellow classmates, I narrowed my roughs down to these two and produced digital finals to be mounted for the assignment.



So, this completes Part 1 of the assignment. Now, off to Part 2.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Data Roughs

This is the beginning of our second assignment. I chose the word "data" from the list of available words because it looked like the biggest challenge for me to work with (what was I thinking???).

I looked up the word "data' to see what meanings I could find:
1. The computer definitions we all expect (I won't bore you with the tech language), let's just say it is information.
2. Lieutenant Commander Data from Star Trek fame, that's a bit more fun.
3. DATA an electronic music band from the late 70's.
4. A genus of moths of the Noctuidae family (extra credit science points)
5. Datas (cheated by adding "s") a Brazilian municipality

Okay, here are my 10 roughs:
These seem to deal with the computer information definition. I am still brainstorming on the Star Trek and moths.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

What is Monotype?

Monotype is a foundry. The Monotype® foundry, part of Monotype Imaging, is home to the Monotype Library of typefaces. The history surrounding the Monotype foundry dates back to the Lanston Monotype Machine Company, which pioneered mechanical typesetting in the 1880s. From typefaces such as the Times New Roman® family designed originally for The Times newspaper of London in the 1930s, to corporate identities created recently for companies such as Barclays, Monotype fonts have helped to create various recognizable brands.
Today, as Monotype Imaging, we license typographic solutions to consumer electronics device manufacturers, independent software vendors, creative professionals and leading corporations worldwide. We also provide solutions for software applications and operating systems. Our e-commerce Web sites, Fonts.com™, Linotype.com, ITCFonts.com and Faces.co.uk allow you to download and license thousands of fonts. Our Fontwise® solution helps companies and agencies stay legal by managing their font licences.
Although names have changed and technologies have evolved over the years, Monotype Imaging represents a rich history of typographic innovations and design and is recognized today as a global leader in text imaging solutions.

For more information here is their website:
http://www.monotypefonts.com/AboutUs.asp

Monday, February 28, 2011

David Carson on design + discovery | Video on TED.com

David Carson on design + discovery Video on TED.com

TED Talks

Below is a link to a TED talk by David Carson who is a "grunge typographer"/designer who hails from Santa Monica, CA. He made a name for himself  in the 1990's by breaking with the rules of typography and type design in a style that is now found on t-shirts, skate boards, flash intros, and more. He founded the magazine Ray Gun and designed pages that squished, smashed, slanted and butchered type in the name of design, making the point, over and over, that letters on a page are art.


This is one of the examples he shows during his talk:



"Don't mistake legibility for communication."

The video is humorous and shows examples of his design sense. A delight to watch. Check it out...

http://www.ted.com/talks/david_carson_on_design.html

Sunday, February 27, 2011

Assignment One Roughs

For this assignment we were to choose one letter, one typeface and either upper or lower case to use to create images representing the 6 principles of design.  I chose Century Schoolbood "t" because it has some nice design elements in its shape. It has sharp 90 degree angles and rounded corners, along with both straight and curved lines.

Here are my roughs:

Principle 1 - Shape:
Principle 2 - Line:
Principle 3 - Direction
Principle 4 - Size:
Principle 5 - Texture/Pattern
Principle 6 - Value
Those are my attempts at using a letter as a design element. Let me k.now which ones you think work the best.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Examples of Good And Bad Typography

Here are my picks for Good Typography.

Example One
This is a wonderful example of incorporating type into the design. The type alone creates the image of the hat.


Example Two
Isn't this great? It is a Fed Ex print ad and I thought the creative use of type was truly outstanding.



Alright, now for the not -so-great (bad) examples:

Example One
What were they thinking???? I think they need to hire one more EMployEE, yep, seems they need a graphic artist with typography skills!


Example Two
Even with a package of stick on letters from Home Depot they could have done better than this!



Well, those are my examples. I look forward to seeing what the rest of you find to share.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Sarah Leatherman's New Blog Spot for Art 41

Hello, Welcome to my Art 41 Typography and Lettering blog spot. I will be tracking my assignments and projects for this class on this blog.  Welcome to all fellow students. Leave me your comments and I will visit your blog and keep you encouraged too! Let's see what we can design with type.