We cannot imagine the additional pressure that the rash of school shootings is having on this generation. We want to show our support for sane gun laws.
Read moreEverything the same, but different
We hated working for a client who came armed with a logo and an accompanying design manual dictating specific color options for both the logo and the corresponding background, how close images could occur to the logo, etc.
Read moreDreaming Stephen Hawking
Ray has long been mesmerized by the idea of there being a Stephen Hawking, much less that there was a real Stephen Hawking. Many other things that just wander out of the darkness of his shelves of experiences and Stephen Hawking is one of them.
Read moreManhattan Book Fair
THERE WAS A STRANGE ENERGY at the Manhattan Book Fair on Saturday, March 10, and it happened right out of the gate.
Read moreNewark Post 10th anniversary front page
The Newark Post, the local Newark, Delaware, newspaper got wind of our 10th anniversary celebration and sent a writer / photographer to join us.
Read moreUpper Chesapeake Book Arts Group
RD Burton walked a group of members of the Upper Chesapeake Book Arts Group through the process of producing a non-adhesive accordion-fold book at Lead Graffiti.
Read moreFreedom of the Press postal stamp
Details
On September 22, 1958 the United States Post Office saluted “the proud profession of journalism by dedicating a commemorative postage stamp to a basic American right—our American free press.” So spoke L. Rohe Walter, the special assistant to the postmaster general, at the stamp release ceremony that was held at the world’s first School of Journalism at the University of Missouri. Walter delivered a rousing lecture highlighting American history’s great guarantors of freedom of the press: Thomas Jefferson, the author of the Declaration of Independence, and also Benjamin Franklin, America’s first postmaster. Joseph Pulitzer was also quoted in the remarks: “Our Republic, and its press will rise or fall together.”
A commemorative binder with a sheet of these 4 cent “Freedom of the Press" stamps, along with a transcript of the dedication speech is held in the RIT Cary Graphic Design Archives as part of the Lester Beall Papers. Beall (1903-1969), was a New York-based modernist graphic designer who won the commission for the stamp design. Mr. Walter commended the design as follows: “Currently the Post Office Department carries close to three billion copies of newspapers a year in the furtherance of its traditional position as handmaiden to the nation’s free press. This new stamp is in the same tradition. Its distinctive design, emphasizing a hand holding an old-fashioned quill pen, a stylization of a hand printing press and horizontal and vertical bars suggesting type bearers, is the work of the noted artists and designers, Lester Beall and Charles Goslin.” (Goslin, [1932-2007], then at the brink of his career, went on to teach design at Pratt Institute.)
One hundred twenty million of these stamps were printed at the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing in 1958. Their design is just as fresh and their message just as relevant, almost 60 years since their date of issue.
⬆ We prduced a keepsake to give away at our 10th anniversary celebration. We had our Albion iron hand press set up to print the enlarged stamp image. The piece also included an original stamp, along with a description. Participants were supposed to print the stamp image and then sign the keepsake.
NOTE : We will fill out information about this stamp as we find it. We love this stamp and have purchased about 15 sheets of it off eBay over the past year.
The Book Club of California Review of "Moments Carved in Paper no. 4 : Endurance Letterpress"
Gerald Cloud wrote a complimentary review of Lead Graffiti's, Moments Carved in Paper no. 4 : Endurance Letterpress.
Read moreTwo things you don't know about Jill
Even if you know us pretty well there are a couple of things about Jill that you might not know.
Read moreYou're invited to the party!
Join the Lead Graffiti letterpress studio for some fun as we celebrate 10 years of printing slowly & patiently via letterpress. Saturday, February 17, from 2 to 6 pm. 120 A Sandy Drive, Newark, Delaware
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