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Tools of the Trade: Letterpress Printing in Singapore

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Culture

1 June 2024

Letterpress printing may be obsolete today but the tools involved continue to be objects of fascination.

A person is standing in a room with shelves full of books and colorful posters on the wall.

Sun Yao Yu, a traditional letterpress educator and Typesettingsg’s founder. Courtesy of Sun Yao Yu.

Wood Type

A collection of wooden printing blocks with various letters and Chinese characters arranged on a metal surface.

Pictured here are wood type from the 1980s from Yu Yi Rubber Stamp & Print, which ceased operations in 2017.

Metal Type Sorts

Box containing metal types for printing covered in packing paper with a label saying "Palace Script".

This font, Palace Script in 14 pt, was cast in 1971 and sold by a local printing equipment trading company, Raman & Co. In the 1980s, metal type like these were still sold to local print shops like Jetprint Services, where this was salvaged from.

Matrices

A single metal printing block with an engraved symbol is placed on a worn wooden surface.

Pictured here is the matrix for the Chinese character 短 (short) in 宋体 (serif). Common typefaces used locally include 宋体 (serif), 黑体 (sans serif) and 楷体 (script). It is possibly among the last few surviving matrices in Singapore, and was salvaged from Odds ‘N’ Collectables, a local heritage shop.

Type Cases

A set of vintage drawers for letterpress type on the left; close-up of type pieces in wooden compartments on the right.

The type cases here were salvaged from Seng Huat Press, which shut down in 2023.

People standing between large racks of typefaces in an old printing workshop with windows in the background.

Type cases and cabinets shown during Yusof Ishak’s tour of the Government Printing Office, 1961. Ministry of Information and the Arts Collection, courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

Lead and Rule Cutters

An old manual printer's tools on a wooden table near a window, featuring a type holder and metal type pieces.

Universal Notting London Lead and rule cutter. Cutters like these are a rarity today, with only a handful still being used in old print shops. This cutter was from Yu Yi Press Company.

Formes

A block of traditional Chinese movable type printing alongside a printed card on a wooden surface.

Forme for a Chinese name card, early 1980s.

Flongs

A large printing plate with densely arranged Chinese characters and images of batteries, with a close-up showing detailed text.

Flong for Sin Chew Daily (星洲日报), 1967.

Thumbnail for YouTube video

Typesetting Machines and Printing Presses

People are operating large printing machines in a spacious, industrial workshop with high ceilings and overhead lighting.

Linotype casting machines at the Government Printing Office, 1952. Ministry of Information and the Arts Collection, courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

Several workers operate machinery in a printing workshop with mostly metal equipment.

Monotype caster used at the Government Printing Office, 1952. Ministry of Information and the Arts Collection, courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

Several men stand near a large industrial machine labeled "Original Heidelberg Cylinder" in a workshop environment.

Heidelberg cylinder press at the Singapore National Printer’s General Printing Office, 1975. Ministry of Information and the Arts Collection, courtesy of National Archives of Singapore.

Three red tabletop printing presses are lined up in a row with hand tools hanging on a pegboard in the background.

Adana 8 x 5 printing presses. These printing presses were salvaged from various print shops in Singapore that have shuttered.

Type Specimen Books and Printing Blocks

Three pages of a type specimen book from 1950; the first page is the cover.

MPH type specimen book, 1950.

A metal printing plate and its stamped result featuring a bulldog surrounded by text in a rectangular frame.

Printing block for a bottle label with Chan Kong Thye’s branding, 1970.

A bottle of Chan Kong Thye Black Sweet Rice Vinegar with an orange label and an image of a dog on a store shelf.

The brand can still be found today in supermarkets like NTUC. Photo by Veronica Chee. TYPESETTING TOOLS

A drawer full of metal type pieces on the left and a typesetting frame with tools and type blocks on the right.

Unless otherwise stated, the photos in this collection are courtesy of Sun Yao Yu. Yao Yu is a traditional letterpress educator and a founding member of the International Association of Printing Museums.

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