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HoPIN Webinar - Illustrated Print for Industry and Commerce

19/02/2021
HoPIN Webinar - Illustrated Print for Industry and Commerce

On Monday, 22 March from 5 pm, this webinar will be chaired by Dr Caroline Archer-Parré Professor of Typography at Birmingham City University, Co-director of the Centre for Printing History and Culture at Birmingham City University, and Chairman of the Baskerville Society.

Speakers include:

Adrian Slaney (BCU), Silk cigarette cards The term ‘Silk’ refers to any printed or woven picture, on silk, satin, twill, ribbon, canvas, velvet or net fabric. Originally issued in American cigarette packets between 1905 and 1917, these ‘giveaways’ proved a very popular promotional item which was taken up by twenty British tobacco manufacturers at the advent of the First World War (1914). Silk inserts were an adaptation of the popular cigarette cards and their subjects included religion, cricket, football, art, flags, army and naval badges, flowers, and clan tartans. This talk presents a selection of these silks.

Georgina Grant (Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust), Ironware and illustration: the Coalbrookdale Company catalogues The Coalbrookdale Company was famed for its cast iron work, such as its cooking pots, steam engine cylinders, the first iron bridge in the world and thousands of decorative items from statues to benches and fountains. To advertise their wares the Company produced illustrated trade catalogues, reaching their zenith with a magnificent catalogue produced in 1875. In researching the catalogues and printing blocks in the collection, the Museum has been able to build up a picture of how the catalogues were created - the journey from designer to engraver and printer, and how this translated through to the final products made in the foundry.

Dr Henrietta Lockhart (Winterbourne House and Garden), A Murmuration of Screws: print from the GKN Archive 'If it's a matter of how to fasten one thing to another, get in touch with GKN!' So runs the strapline from one of GKN's brochures from the 1960s. The company was founded upon screws, nuts, bolts and hooks. Delving into Winterbourne's GKN archive reveals a wealth of catalogues and leaflets produced by GKN and its subsidiaries, from the 1970s to the 1990s. This talk will highlight the way in which products have been arranged aesthetically in printed material, sometimes echoing contemporary artistic trends. It will conclude with the emergence of the iconic 'GKN' logo, designed by Abram Games.

Martin Killeen (University of Birmingham), See food and eat it: illustrations in some cookery books This presentation briefly examines aspects of historical gastronomy - the study of food culture - via a survey of some illustrated cookery books from the turn of the 19th century from the Cadbury Research Library. Ranging from guides to healthy living to celebrations of haute cuisine, this material offers insights into several topics including product branding and the emergence of the celebrity chef. Beyond this the genre engages with key contemporary issues such as gender roles, regionalism, and race and colonialism.

Register for the event here

For more information please contact the Corporate Communications Team.

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