Slinging Ink, Part 2: Preserving Type History in the Midwest
@ Newberry Library
Online
Opening Friday, March 26th, from 12PM - 1PM
12 to 1 pm CST
This program will be held virtually on Zoom. Please register for free in advance here.
NOTE: You can also watch a live stream of the program on the Newberry Facebook page or YouTube channel.
In this special two-part program, the Newberry’s Jill Gage will speak with Bill and Jim Moran, Directors of the Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum, about the history of wood type and the evolution of the type styles manufactured by Hamilton Manufacturing, a Wisconsin type company founded in 1880. At one time one of the country’s largest makers of wood type and printing equipment, the company evolved into the Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum in 2000 and has since become a national center for print and type history.
Part 2
Focusing on the Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum, Part 2 of the program covers the museum’s historical and contemporary role in fostering type design and production in the Midwest. Joined by the Newberry’s Jill Gage, Bill and Jim Moran will discuss the newest addition to the Wood Type Legacy project in honor of Etta Hamilton and other ways the museum engages with Midwestern type history.
About the speakers:
Jim Moran is Director of the Hamilton Wood Type Museum. He has studied and contributed to the art and craft of print for more than 35 years. He leads letterpress workshops, archives the collection, and maintains the museum on a daily basis.
Bill Moran is Artistic Director of the Hamilton Wood Type Museum and a third-generation letterpress printer and graphic designer. Bill also teaches printing history at the University of Minnesota. He is the author of Hamilton Wood Type, A History in Headlines.
This program is generously sponsored by the Paul M. Angell Family Foundation. It is part of the Newberry’s What Is the Midwest? project, funded by a major grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
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