Image
courtesy Yee-Haw©
Art by Timothy Winkler


|
* * * The first thing that strikes you upon entering the headquarters of Yee-Haw Industrial Letterpress is the smell of ink. It permeates the air like a residual memory of times gone by, warm and moistcompletely unlike the metallic tang of expended toner that attacks your nose at the ever-pervasive Kinkos. At this print shop, the machines dont dryly huff or cast scanner beamsthey clank and kerchunk and roll bright hues of ink onto thick sheets of chipboard and fibrous paper. Its a place where people really work hard, and actually look like they love doing it. Things are slightly disorganized right now, not quite ready for public viewing. Boxes are jammed in corners of the turn-of-the-century storefront, the front counter still doesnt have its top glass, and a giant costume pig head sits cockeyed, smiling and waiting for someone to put it on. But thats only because the Yee-Hawers have just moved into their new digs in downtown Knoxville after more than a year working out of a family barn in Corbin, Ky. If you had to move a dozen or so tons of printing equipment, youd be tired too. But once things get straightened up, visitors will be entering a dimension where age-old printing techniques and pop folk art have been fused to form a one-of-a-kind enterprise. Part museum, part graphic design business, part gallery, Yee-Haw is a shrine to the nearly dead artform of letterpress printingthat Gutenberg-approved method of pressing paper against inked plates of text to create a printed page. Sent to oblivion by modern offset printing, letterpress is now usually considered either a quaint curiosity or, worse, an antiquated technology not worth saving. But not at Yee-Haw. * * * Co-owner Kevin Bradley, goateed and slightly scraggly like any good artist, pulls open a drawer from one of the century-plus-old type cabinets that line Yee-Haws storefront space. He plucks out a large wood block inscribed with a fanciful "A." "This is a circus font that came out of Memphis," he says, thumbing the still-sharp edges with appreciation. "They did it out of wood because it was lighter and more manageable, plus it held up very wellthis stuff goes back to the early 1800s. We got this out of a barn in New York state." "Covered in porcupine turds," adds Julie Belcher, Yee-Haws other owner and designer in residence. Together, the thirtysomething duo has scoured several states for long-unused equipment hidden in warehouses, basements, and barns. Theyve become letterpress archeologists, uncovering musty warrens stocked with type cabinets and paper cutters and presses. The circus type from Memphis came by way of an old collector in New York statehe and his father had followed the Mississippi River buying up type in the 50s. (In the 19th century, the river was the best way to move heavy equipment, thus many letterpresses were located near rivers.) Stashed in his dairy barn for decades, and being attacked by porcupines, the type was rescued by the Yee-Hawers when the owner realized theyd be using it for its intended purpose rather than selling it off at $20 a pop as flea market curios. Through similar deals with former pressmen and retired dealers, the Yee-Haw HQ is now stuffed with millions of pieces of wood and lead type, four Vandercook presses, a giant paper cutter, and a newly acquired 50s-era Heidelberg press that looks like a multi-tentacled mechanical beast. ("The Cadillac of letterpress!" Bradley declares with pride.) Most of these deals were less business transactions than they were a passing of the torch. "We really strike a good connection because we take samples of what were doing and show them were carving blocks, printing wood type, doing it by handand I think they really dig that quite a bit," says Bradley. "We pretty much have working relationships with all the people weve bought equipment from. They just appreciate the fact that were still using it." The idea for the Yee-Haw enterprise was hatched three years ago near the ovens of Peggy Hambrights Mag-Pies, a Knoxville bakery, where Bradley and Belcher met. University of Tennessee art school grad Bradley had returned to Knoxville in 1996 after spending the previous two years working at Nashvilles Hatch Show Print, one of the countrys few traditional letterpress shops still in business. Likewise, Belcher had come back to Knoxville after spending several years in New York as a grad student at the School of Visual Art and a full-time freelancer for 17 magazine and Blue Note Records. Both were searching for something to do with themselves, stuck in career limbo as they helped bake wedding cakes. "I didnt want to get a graphic design job because I knew Id be sitting at a Macintosh and doing brochures or whatever you have to do," says Bradley. "I never liked sitting in front of the Mac because I felt it was stealing my soul, in a lot of ways. So I discovered alternative ways of getting type on paper, and letterpress seemed to me to be the way to go with it." Although Belcher wasnt very familiar with letterpress, Bradleys knowledge and enthusiasm won her over when he suggested they start their own business. "One of the things that really attracted me was these are all elements I already knew aboutusing design to combine typography, illustration, photography," she says. "Its just a different way of doing it. I never used a computer in college, so this is just like full circle." So how do you start a new business using outdated, centuries-old technology? Belcher and Bradley began with the phone book, calling every printer in town and asking if they had any letterpress equipment to sell. They began hearing horror stories of how in the 60s, when letterpress became completely obsolete, wood type collections were bought out for a few hundred bucksand used for kindling. But with the help of inquiring friends in other states, the pair started tapping into the letterpress underground. First, there was Nelson Nidiffer in Huntington, W. Va., a septuagenarian dealer who used to buy out print shops of all kinds and still had a 30,000-square-foot warehouse full of every piece of press equipment imaginable. ("He let us run roughshod in there for about a week, and we were just picking out stuff we wanted, like kids in a candy store.") There was the guy in Barberville, Ky., whose father had started the newspaper there in the 30she had type cabinets stored in an old barn, the drawers swelled shut with age. ("We had to pry them open with crowbars.") In Knoxville, there was Holland Ingram down at Stubley-Knox Litho Co., who had a completely intact collection of beautiful type. ("It was amazingit was all pointed in the same direction.") The Heidelberg was acquired from a family-run printer in Rochester, N.Y., after being used for three generations. ("The son was forced to work on it as a kid, so he hated itjust wanted to get rid of it.") "Its really fun to go 20 miles down a dirt road to this mans house, and then go a few more miles down the road to this barn, and theres like four cabinets of type in there," says Belcher. "We just sit there all day going through the drawers, just looking to see what there is, just getting excited because you always find something that youre thinkin man!" Once the partners had acquired some of this equipment, they needed a place to put itand found they really couldnt afford to buy a space. Thus, they hauled their stuff to Belchers family barn in Corbin, where they opened shop two years ago. Working out of those unheated, cramped quarters, they launched Yee-Haw by creating posters from some of Bradleys quirky folk art paintings and mailing them out to art directors and record labels. They werent sure how much response the mailings would getCorbin isnt known for its design studiosbut the calls started coming in and clients lined up. Yee-Haws work has ranged from creating typography for Southwest Airlines (for a campaign they still havent seen) to designing posters for the Kentucky Derby. Some of the more glamorous gigs have involved music tour merchandise: T-shirts, posters, and hats for stars like Lucinda Williams, Mary Chapin Carpenter, and Southern Culture on the Skids (who also requested funeral fans). One recent job was a poster for the Dave Brubeck Quartet based on an old Paul Klee album cover painting. That job necessitated the carving of five different blocks (one for each color) by hand; each poster then required five passes through the printer. Top speed on the Vandercooks is about 16 prints a minute. Altogether, it took about a week to complete the Brubeck job. "Youve got to be a bulldog," says Bradley. "Its all hand-done, hand-cranked, hand-printed. So its really labor-intensive work." Once printed and dried, a Yee-Haw poster has a tactile sense of the work involvedthe Vandercooks apply 2,400 pounds of pressure onto the paper, which leaves behind not only inked letters but also indentations. You can feel the words and graphics on the page. But it isnt just antique fonts and old-timey printing methods that has won Yee-Haw its clientsits also the artwork created by Bradley, Belcher, and contributors such as Timothy Winkler and Jennifer Jessee. Yee-Haw posters radiate with cartoon aliens, devils, and pin-up girls, surrounded by mystical beat incantations, like this one for Lucinda Williams: "She sings like an angel * From Lake Charles Louisiana * With a broke heart-fact * Raised on polk-salad and poetry." In the world of graphic design, its safe to say theyre truly uniquesingular enough to land Yee-Haw on the cover of Print magazine, a leading graphic design publication. "What weve really tried to do is hand-carve illustrations and typography using the letterpress, and create a new letterpress piece with it," says Bradley. "And its tough because sometimes you feel like it is artits a limited edition, theres only 200 of these in the world, and weve hand-carved them and hand-printed them. And then on the other hand, youre thinking nobody gives a damn. Its something on paper and its gone out there. You fight between that, but you just have to believe in ityou just have to love it to do it, and it all washes out." First Published: July 15, 1999 Metro Pulse More Examples of Yee-Haw PrintsRelated Websites:http://yeehawindustries.com/ This is Yee-Haw's online store. Buy something for your walls!
©2005 PopCult
|