A new chapter for Briar Press
Long story short:
We’re forming a nonprofit organization dedicated to restoring Briar Press and other aging online resources, and to establishing a sustainable platform for delivering free letterpress education to the public.
It’s a big project to plan and to produce. You can show your support and follow our progress at Letterpress Forward.
* * *
[The first 30]
To the Briar Press community:
Nearly thirty years ago, in the winter of 1995, I started thinking about how fun it would be to use a very new technology in service of a very old one. HTML, the markup language used to create web pages, had been released two years earlier. Suddenly, with just a few simple tools, anyone could publish ideas to the entire world.
This was arguably the *second* time in history that a set of technologies had coalesced into a world-transformative machine enabling the rapid spread of information. Artifacts of that first seismic innovation—the printing press—filled the basement of my childhood home, forming the contours of my mom’s letterpress shop: literal tons of printing machinery, cabinetry, tools, and type.
So it was that two milestones of communication, separated by 500 years, were married on the internet, with an announcement to follow in early 1996, posted by my mother Elizabeth on Letpress, under the subject “Letterpress Web Site”: Our son gave me a surprise for Christmas: a web page for The Briar Press.
Mom and I operated and grew the site together through several increasingly ambitious rebuilds. What began as a passion project developed into a more complex platform that would need dedicated attention and expertise as membership rose and web technologies advanced. At the same time, in keeping with the ethos of the early web, we chose not to display banner ads or accept commercial sponsorships, which we felt were inconsistent with the site’s educational mission and its supportive, peer-to-peer community. Our internet fees were covered through the kindness of donors.
Eventually, the work of administering Briar Press became too demanding. The community took notice, and many of you offered to help.
* * *
[Recently]
As the printing press once liberated information from gatekeepers, independent, self-hosted communities like Briar Press create spaces for open dialogue without the interference of algorithms or the influence of profit-driven agendas.
For all its independence, Briar Press now stands, somewhat unsteadily, at a crossroads. Last year, in collaboration with a development partner, we made some long-overdue repairs to our outdated codebase. Highlights include:
—Critical upgrades to the user messaging system that have nearly eliminated mail server errors and bouncing messages
—Integrated Google search functionality that replaces the inefficient built-in system to improve search performance and results
—Automated spam filtering to reduce the possibility of excessive spam activity
—A somewhat improved (though still fragile) image uploader for the Classifieds and Discussion, with increased file size limits and better error reporting for users
—Improved resilience against certain types of potential attacks on the site
—An automatic backup solution to support site restoration in case of failure
These repairs will help keep Briar Press running for a bit longer. Nevertheless, the age of the site is an inescapable fact. The user interface is not optimized for mobile devices and does not meet current standards of accessibility. The site lacks modern security protocols. It continues to suffer recurrent outages during daily use. In short, it is vulnerable at multiple points to failure, jeopardizing irreplaceable historical and technical knowledge contributed over decades by countless printers, some who are no longer with us.
* * *
[The next 30]
Over the past year and a half, a small group of advocates for Briar Press has been meeting weekly on Zoom to explore ways of saving the site. Together, we developed a plan centered on establishing a new nonprofit—a collaboratively managed organization to guide and complete the work ahead.
The Letterpress Forward Foundation, pending approval of its 501(c)(3) status, will be dedicated to preserving online letterpress history and providing free access to knowledge about the book arts for a diverse audience. Beginning with Briar Press, and then turning to other aging resources, Letterpress Forward will safeguard electronic book arts resources and independent knowledge-sharing communities that are at risk of disappearing forever.
With the organizational support of Letterpress Forward, Briar Press can finally evolve from a side project into a self-sustaining one. Here’s what we hope to accomplish, in a nutshell:
1. Engage the community to understand what it needs from Briar Press.
2. Define a focused and achievable vision for a new website.
3. Secure funding through grants, partnerships, and community contributions.
4. Design, develop, and transition to a modern platform that is adaptable to evolving community needs.
I am so grateful for the commitment and encouragement of the team behind this plan: the insightful educators and printers Amber McMillan Braverman, Amos Paul Kennedy, Jr., and Gerald Schulze; developers Jason Grigsby and Eric Portis (who keeps an idle C&P under a sheet in his garage); and my colleagues at Blackletter—Ruth Martinez, Production Supervisor; Anna Skarstad, Senior Graphic Designer; and Hanna Spencer, Executive Administrator.
We are especially honored by the support of Amber and Amos, inaugural board directors of the Letterpress Forward Foundation.
* * *
[What you can do]
We would love your help writing the next 30 years of this story.
If you found your press on Briar Press, if you learned something or dropped some knowledge in the Discussion, if you believe that the next incarnation of Briar Press has a role to play in the letterpress community, please share this message with friends and colleagues who may be interested in our mission.
You can also voice your support for this project directly by joining our mailing list at Letterpress Forward.
With much gratitude,
Eric Nevin
and the Letterpress Forward team
with
Elizabeth Nevin
Briar Press
AWESOME! As a self-proclaimed preservationist, I applaud you with many thanks. I’ve gained tremendous knowledge from (the crusty oldtimers on) this site. Thank goodness they chose to contribute.
Thanks for putting this up Eric. Im grateful that things are moving along, and to help in the small ways I am able.
Here’s to another 30 years.
Awesomesauce. Joined the list and donated and even posted about it to keep the hits going.
—
Ted Ollier
Reflex Letterpress
This is very good news. I have learned so much through Briar Press over the years and strongly support it. I look forward to seeing a robust community return. I have signed up and donated.
I’m with you.
Signing up right now.
The revitalization of Briar Press comes at the perfect time.
Meta has made a hard right and announced today that it would end its fact checking program.
It’s time for us to dump facebook and instagram along with Mark Zuckerberg, Joel Kaplan and Dana White.
May I suggest that Eric and Elizabeth and the Letterpress Forward team offer a means to set up a monthly contribution to the project of revitalizing Briar Press? I for one would commit some modest monthly amount to help get this wonderful service to printers on a firmer footing and since I am not versed in the work but can afford supporting it modestly, I and probably many others would willingly make such a modest but vitally necessary contribution to support the work of the experts in keeping BP going strong.
Bob
Glad you guys have a plan to keep Briar Press going!
I have learned so much from this site, and am so glad to see it both continue and grow. Thank you for all your work!
Briar Press has been an important resource to the book arts community; I’m glad you’re making plans to keep it going.
Glad to see the collective knowledge will continue to be supported for years to come!
So excited to hear this news! BriarPress was my gateway into printing knowledge and I’m so excited for this next era!
Lorraine
Thrill of the Chase Press
Thanks to all who are involved in this ponderous task. Keeping letterpress alive is so much more than just the printing.
It is the way we built societies and created our own histories. In the middle of the 15th Century in Western Europe, it was Johannes Gutenburg, a German leviathan who changed the entire complexion of printed information. And now, it is up to those of us left who are dedicated to antiquated printing, to carry on as much as is possible, this generative of all human progress. Many thanks again.
E R ‘Skip’ Upcott - Pontiac, MI USA