February 2011 February 2011 - Glencairn Acquires Replica Gutenberg-Era Printing Press
Glencairn's New Replica Gutenberg-Era Printing Press | In September 2010, Glencairn Museum acquired for its permanent collection a Gutenberg-era replica printing press. The press will be used for printing demonstrations during educational programs and special exhibitions. |
From Gutenberg to Kindle: The Art of Bible Making
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Glencairn Acquires Replica Gutenberg-Era Before Johannes Gutenberg (c. 1400-68) published his first Bible in the 1450s using his innovative moveable-type printing press, Bibles were generally available only in the form of expensive hand-lettered Latin manuscripts. Gutenberg’s invention marked the beginning of a revolution in printing that allowed everyday people to possess their own Bibles in their own native languages.
The Gutenberg press brought together a range of new printing techniques, the most important of which was the casting of movable type from metal alloys. Pieces of type were arranged into a wooden frame and covered with an oil-based ink. The ink was transferred onto paper by means of a screw press, the form of which was adapted from a wine or olive press. This allowed the printer to create hundreds of copies in just a few hours. The Gutenberg-style replica printing press, which Glencairn obtained last September for its permanent collection, will be used for a live printing demonstration at Glencairn’s Sacred Arts Festival on Sunday, April 10th. Allen Bjorkman, from New York State, who previously owned the replica Gutenberg press, will do the printing.
Hicks, now 88 years old, made approximately 30 replica printing presses during his lifetime. Bjorkman dubbed it the “Fenix Press” because it arose from the ashes of history, like the legendary Made almost entirely of wood, a Gutenberg-style press delivers pressure through the use of a large center screw, which lowers the platen down to the paper when the lever is pulled. Some replica presses use a metal center screw, but for the Fenix Press Hicks painstakingly carved a two-lead screw from wood, which he believed to be more faithful to the original. Other design features were gleaned from the descriptions and illustration of Joseph Moxon, who published the earliest known printing manual, Mechanick Exercises on the Whole Art of Printing (1683-1684). The essential elements of the printing process, invented by Gutenberg and his associates, remained the same for centuries.
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