And this is where Fran and Jen learn to use their new Heidelberg
published by Fran SheaOh, the joy of leaning over a giant machine that has the potential to crush my hands and create such beauty!
I think I felt joy. Or panic? In any case, I felt some sort of feeling while leaning over the New Press. Karl (the previous owner) had explained, really clearly, the 1,000 things to know – why couldn’t I remember them?? Knobs, pulls, blades, grippers, clutch levers, friskets, sucker bars, rollers, toggles, gears, pins, springs… they all seemed to get tangled up in my mind.
Oh, so tangled!
Just like a rat king.
That’s what happens when the tail of one thought gets covered in feces and the tail of another thought gets stuck to it… and the tail of another thought gets stuck to the other thoughts. It’s all very messy and usually ends up in some Dutch chimney.
Anyway, here’s a snippet of our lesson:
Vintage Indie
published by Fran SheaThis is Gabreial Wyatt —>
I think we would totally have been friends in high school. She would have called us “top-secret friends”. I was told (by my “top-secret friends”) that “top-secret friends” are better than regular friends. Sure, they don’t go anywhere in public with you, or sit next to you at lunch, or acknowledge your presence – but, that doesn’t mean anything.
Gabreial keeps a blog about all things vintage AND indie. She interviewed me because we are such good “top-secret friends”.
Lower Case n
published by Fran SheaThe Tanek logo has this lower-case “n” in it that I knew I recognized from somewhere:
Mrs. Meyers, Goof-Off and 2,500 pounds of love
published by Fran SheaThat’s what the press looks like – and I always play that song when I gaze upon it.
-33° in Brainerd
published by Fran SheaThat’s where I am. Will I ever be able to get back to Minneapolis? Stay tuned.
And, just because I’m a little obsessed with the weather, I gathered some very important figures. – Record low temperatures in The United States of America:
State | Temp. | Date | Station | Elevation |
Alabama | -27 | Jan. 30, 1966 | New Market | 760 |
Alaska | -80 | Jan. 23, 1971 | Prospect Creek | 1,100 |
Arizona | -40 | Jan. 7, 1971 | Hawley Lake | 8,180 |
Arkansas | -29 | Feb. 13, 1905 | Pond | 1,250 |
California | -45 | Jan. 20, 1937 | Boca | 5,532 |
Colorado | -61 | Feb. 1, 1985 | Maybell | 5,920 |
Connecticut | -32 | Feb. 16, 1943 | Falls Village | 585 |
Delaware | -17 | Jan. 17, 1893 | Millsboro | 20 |
Florida | – 2 | Feb. 13, 1899 | Tallahassee | 193 |
Georgia | -17 | Jan. 27, 1940 | Mauna Kea | 13,770 |
Idaho | -60 | Jan. 18, 1943 | Island Park Dam | 6,285 |
Illinois | -36 | Jan. 5, 1999 | Congerville | 722 |
Indiana | -36 | Jan. 19, 1994 | New Whiteland | 785 |
Iowa | -47 | Feb. 3, 1996* | Elkader | 770 |
Kansas | -40 | Feb. 13, 1905 | Lebanon | 1,812 |
Kentucky | -37 | Jan. 19, 1994 | Shelbyville | 730 |
Louisiana | -16 | Feb. 13, 1899 | Minden | 194 |
Maine | -48 | Jan. 19, 1925 | Van Buren | 458 |
Maryland | -40 | Jan. 13, 1912 | Oakland | 2,461 |
Massachusetts | -35 | Jan. 12, 1981 | Chester | 640 |
Michigan | -51 | Feb. 9, 1934 | Vanderbilt | 785 |
Minnesota | -60 | Feb. 2, 1996 | Tower | 1,430 |
Mississippi | -19 | Jan. 30, 1966 | Corinth | 420 |
Missouri | -40 | Feb. 13, 1905 | Warsaw | 700 |
Montana | -70 | Jan. 20, 1954 | Rogers Pass | 5,470 |
Nebraska | -47 | Feb. 12, 1899 | Camp Clarke | 3,700 |
Nevada | -50 | Jan. 8, 1937 | San Jacinto | 5,200 |
New Hampshire | -47 | Jan. 29, 1934 | Mt. Washington | 6,288 |
New Jersey | -34 | Jan. 5, 1904 | River Vale | 70 |
New Mexico | -50 | Feb. 1, 1951 | Gavilan | 7,350 |
New York | -52 | Feb. 18, 1979* | Old Forge | 1,720 |
North Carolina | -34 | Jan. 21, 1985 | Mt. Mitchell | 6,525 |
North Dakota | -60 | Feb. 15, 1936 | Parshall | 1,929 |
Ohio | -39 | Feb. 10, 1899 | Milligan | 800 |
Oklahoma | -27 | Jan. 18, 1930 | Watts | 958 |
Oregon | -54 | Feb. 10, 1933* | Seneca | 4,700 |
Pennsylvania | -42 | Jan. 5, 1904 | Smethport | est. 1,500 |
Rhode Island | -25 | Feb. 5, 1996 | Greene | 425 |
South Carolina | -19 | Jan. 21, 1985 | Caesars Head | 3,100 |
South Dakota | -58 | Feb. 17, 1936 | McIntosh | 2,277 |
Tennessee | -32 | Dec. 30, 1917 | Mountain City | 2,471 |
Texas | -23 | Feb. 8, 1933* | Seminole | 3,275 |
Utah | -69 | Feb. 1, 1985 | Peter’s Sink | 8,092 |
Vermont | -50 | Dec. 30, 1933 | Bloomfield | 915 |
Virginia | -30 | Jan. 22, 1985 | Mountain Lake | 3,870 |
Washington | -48 | Dec. 30, 1968 | Mazama | 2,120 |
West Virginia | -37 | Dec. 30, 1917 | Lewisburg | 2,200 |
Wisconsin | -55 | Feb.4, 1996 | Couderay | 1,300 |
Wyoming | -66 | Feb. 9, 1933 | Riverside | 6,650 |
AND before we start killing and eating each other, we are entertaining ourselves by throwing boiling water into the cold air.
0°, Hydraulics and a Hair Dryer
published by Fran SheaWhy is it that the one time I leave my house something awesome happens?? Jack drove the Heidelberg Windmill down from Wahpeton, North Dakota this morning. Drove it right down to our fancy studio.
I’m in Brainerd not running around the house in my underwear and Jen is back at ZP headquarters. Who knew (Jack the mover knew) that the press was going to be delivered TODAY? Apparently, the hydraulic part of the pallet jack (not Jack the mover) didn’t love the 0°. I guess it was frozen and I’m no expert but that seems like a setback. Jen called me wondering where she could find a hair dryer. I don’t know why she wanted to style her hair but I’m not going to judge. Apparently, Jen’s beautiful hair did the trick because the new press is safe and sound in the SW corner of the shop.
It’s ART!! DO YOU HEAR ME?? ART!!
published by Fran SheaAlphabetically speaking, Zeichen follows Warhol in the Room and Board dictionary. Andy Warhol and Zeichen Press sit side-by-side on the Wall Art page – I don’t want to speak for Mr. Warhol BUT I’ll bet he is thrilled with the proximity… This might be just the thing to jump-start his career… Good luck, Andy!! You weird, prolific little man!!
So, back on the R&B website – here’s what the description DOESN’T say:
Produced entirely by hand using
vintage (super old) printing equipment,
Zeichen Press creates this letterpress
design exclusively for us in their
Minneapolis studio. Actually, they call
it a studio but really it was once the
family garage – an issue that nearly
cost the owner (Fran Shea) her marriage,
and more importantly, the garage.
I mean, studio. Using a centuries-old
manual printing method, they set salvaged,
antique type by hand in limited print runs
to give the work a one-of-a-kind quality
that feels both modern and classic.
°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°
They edited that copy down to the nub! But I suppose they know best.
Have a look at these photos: GASP! They make me want to buy one of my own prints!
The strong would survive the winter. The weak would, of course, be eaten.
published by Fran SheaThe Long Winter is the true tale of a Minnesota family surviving one of the most brutal Winters in our recorded history. Trapped in the house – day after day after day – the blizzard makes it impossible to see out the window or even walk out to the barn without getting lost. Good ol’ Pa rigs up a rope to follow, he is always coming up with some creative solution! Ma follows that rope because Pa finds himself trapped in a ditch by the creek. The wood pile dwindles to nothing and the family is forced to twist hay into little bundles – they would burn these in the cast-iron stove to heat their little house. … Tough, brown bread is the only food left to eat.
Or is it?
What if that was on the jacket flap? I’d totally read that book.
It’s time for Christmas rejects!
published by Fran Sheahttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SH1j1luFOw&feature=related
Gosh, that’s a scary movie! Those poor misfit toys… the choo-choo with the square wheels, the pistol that shoots jelly, the effeminate jack-in-the-box… I think the jack-in-the-box and that little dentist-elf would make a cute couple.
Okay, so I keep trying to design something to print on these FIVE THOUSAND BEVERAGE COASTERS that we have lying around. I guess no one cares about preserving the shine and luster of their finished furniture.
I think that’s barbaric.
Maybe they think it sends the wrong message? I don’t. I think it’s perfectly acceptable to booze it up through the 12 days of Christmas. In fact, it is acceptable all year round IF you set your drink on one of our beverage coasters. (Was that some sort of plug?? Yes. Here’s a link: AND here’s one I designed just for Touchpoint Retail. It has the recipe for a candy cane martini right on it. Isn’t that handy??
They decided to go with a card design from the Zeichen Press line but JUST TO BE DIFFICULT (I mean, sui generis.) they had us print it on an oversized SQUARE coaster. But I must admit, it’s pretty darn nice.
Two-timing ZP
published by Fran SheaBut I LOVE you Zeichen Press! I do. It’s just that Tanek has something (money) that you don’t have. Does that sound shallow? It’s not, I swear. It’s not just the money. They make me coffee. AND they tell me I do good work. You just sit there and take. And take and take and take – a word that comes to mind is “relentless.” But not in a bad way. Did I mention they’re architects? I know! Restaurants, retail, residential… Wait, did I mention restaurants?… Of course you had to know, the signs were everywhere. Remember when I made those Tanek paper dolls?
Or that 4-color halftone?
Wait, that was just last week. Anyway, I’m totally NOT breaking up with you. I’m just going to be seeing them too. But that’s cool, right? Don’t be so selfish.
**Editor’s Note: What does this mean??? Zeichen Press is just doing some marketing for Tanek.