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Chad Pastotnik, Deep Wood Press

~ Fine letterpress and intaglio printing ~ Celebrating 35 years in 2027

Chad Pastotnik, Deep Wood Press

Category Archives: A Printer’s Family Tree

A Printers Family Tree

22 Wednesday Apr 2026

Posted by Deep Wood Press in A Printer's Family Tree, A Printer's Family Tree, Education, intaglio, Letterpress, Presentation bindings

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Chad Pastotnik, design, fine press books, graphic-design, illustration, intaglio prints, Letterpress, pop-up book, Punch Cutters, Type Castors, Type Founders, Typographic history

A year ago I presented a first draft of this project and I’m pleased with the progress of my 360 degree wrap around pop-up structure depicting a curated history of typographic luminaries. From Johannes Gutenberg to Linn Boyd Benton this is an attempt to create a loose family tree tracing innovations in type design, type cutting and type founding from the 14th to early 20th century.

Going through my old copper plates I noted the symmetry of the tree on this 12 ¾ x 15 ½” (31.5x39cm) image and after I found my old proofs I immediately started cutting and folding them up into this kinetic structure. This is one of my intaglio prints that had long languished in an unfinished state when I frustrated myself with the addition of some figurative work. The first layer on the copper plate was a shallow etching but then fully worked over with mezzotint, stipple and hand engraving. The seventy names composed in Garamond and foil stamped in copper start with Gutenberg at the roots and the names chronologically ascend up the trunk and branches in some semblance of order and influence. Each quarter when fully opened includes the full list for viewing at any angle. The type is either hand set or cast on my Linotype machine for 14pt and under, the copper foil catches light nicely against the impossibly deep blacks of the mezzotint. The book requires six copies of the print for each edition, another labor of love with umber/black coarse hand made intaglio ink.

The book is covered in Asahi linen book cloth with a grey French Split goat skin on the spine. The book cover title is foiled in copper on black goat skin. It is housed in a solander box covered in Twinrocker Rustler paper with a black pebble grained goat spine foiled in copper which has a title on the cover that is, again, foiled in copper with another one of my small intaglio prints of a leaf and framed within a black goat border. The sidewalls and cover element are covered in Cockerell marbled paper I’ve been hoarding since Heart of Darkness. The box is 7 ¼ x 16 ¾ x 1 ½” (18.5×42.5x4cm)

I consider this the final Beta. The next version will have additional intaglio work on the main plate with new plate “wings” extending the width of the book as I prefer the dimensions of my previous prototype. I also have some more names I’d like to add as there are some mid to late 20th century individuals I feel need representation. There will also be structural improvements, I embedded magnets in the cover boards to hold it fully open but not enough of them to be successful!

This book will debut along with my new Mornings at Jack Pine at the Manhattan Fine Press Book Fair coming up very soon on May 2nd. I’m committed to making 5 additional copies and will start taking deposits for those on my return from New York.

$8000.00



Those of you who know me know my views on the contemporary “fine press” book scene. Conceptual ideas in small editions run rampant but often at the expense of craft and frequent ephemeral topics. I was making things like this 35 years ago when it was inconceivable to solicit such things to institutions while at the same time trying to achieve what I considered the pinnacle of fine press – books with words, lots of them and in proper bindings. A Printers Family Tree is my offering to the book arts gods incorporating traditional intaglio, letterpress, type casting and book binding as a tribute to the great individuals who came before who have influenced, informed and made possible my means of existence.

Some early attempts at folding and pop-up structures from 1994-2000 and last years prototype.

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New Projects from DWP: A Printers Family Tree

30 Sunday Mar 2025

Posted by Deep Wood Press in A Printer's Family Tree, Future Projects, Glenn Wolff, Jerry Dennis, Letterpress, Manhattan Fine Press Book Fair

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art, Broadside, intaglio prints, Letterpress, pop-up, Printing, typography

First off, the website has recently been updated and is now fully functional again after over a year in cyber limbo!

I will be in New York in just a week on April 5th to once again be part of the Manhattan Fine Press Fair. Our usual location at The Church of St. Vincent Ferrer, 869 Lexington Avenue. Just across the street the Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America is hosting the largest antiquarian book fair in the world at the Park Avenue Armory. Join me and many other private presses, book artists, makers and takers from around the world. And good news, after 11 years the church/school is letting us use the gymnasium which purportedly has windows! Please let me know if you hope to attend, I can add you to my will-call list.

I’m excited to bring along a new project which has been boiling away in the back of my brain for over a decade as I worked on the logistics – A Printers Family Tree – from Gutenberg to Zaph with some paper engineering! Thirty years ago I did all kinds of this sort of thing as individual projects but I’m committed to edition at least 10 of this new piece. I’m still working out paper weights for different pieces but all the elements will be created from intaglio prints – both new mono prints and culling from my vast collection of too many plate proofs and states from my earlier engravings and mezzotints. The names are foil stamped from brass type in this prototype but I will create slugs on my Linotype machine in Garamond for the final impressions. I’ve worked out the binding structure but the boards will remain relatively plain in paper and cloth for flexibility and because they won’t be visible when displayed. The book will be housed in a case as it still won’t sit like a proper book when closed.

The spread that is just penciled in with names will have pop-up elements as well but I’ve left this “editable” as I’m hoping I’ll have plenty of feedback on my choice of whom to include in my list of prominent type designers. Though I have a laser cutter/engraver all these are/will be hand cut to follow the inevitable irregularities the intaglio prints and mono prints have to offer in the trunks and foliage and to allow flexibility foiling the names on each panel with the jig I’ve created for my foil stamping machine.

Looking over exhibitors at our “fine press” book fairs – a majority are now book arts. Two different things in my mind and kind of a dilution of the real work. I do miss the old days of the FPBA before the flailing organization opened up it’s definitions of fine press. If you can’t beat them, join them. What do you think of these evolving definitions?


Other current projects are a new book with essayist/poet Jerry Dennis and our mutual friend and frequent collaborator, Glenn Wolff, is once again illustrating with wood engravings. Jerry, Glenn and I have done multiple projects together over the past couple of decades and it’s always fun to work out a new project – Mornings at Jackpine is a collection of verse and an essay contemplating the turning of seasons in our physical world and the cycle that is our existence. Jerry’s essays, poems, and short fiction have appeared in more than 100 publications, including The New York Times, Smithsonian, Audubon, American Way, Gray’s Sporting Journal, PANK and Michigan Quarterly Review. His books are widely acclaimed, have won numerous awards, and have been translated into Chinese, Japanese, German, Portuguese, Czech, and Korean.

Some of Glenn’s engravings for the project:

Another recent collaboration with Jerry and Glenn is a series of broadsides to benefit Michigan libraries that are facing defunding, book banning or reduced services and hours. The first print is available now via the Peter White Public Library in Marquette, MI. “A Passion for Books” is printed on 300-gram Somerset textured cotton paper, measuring 15 x 11 inches. The text is composed in Garamond and printed letterpress on a Vandercook 219 OS.

We are working with the Library of Michigan and other entities to see how we can bring this and the 3 additional prints we plan to add to the series to more libraries across the state. I’ll happily crank my Vandercook for a day or two to do what I can to support our libraries.

Two editions are available:

·       Special Roman-Numbered Edition: Limited to 20 pieces, hand-colored by Glenn Wolff, and signed by Jerry Dennis, Glenn Wolff, and Chad Pastotnik. Available for tax-deductible contributions of $500 or more.

·       Open Edition: A signed two-color print available for tax-deductible contributions of $100 or more.

Order by clicking the “Donate” button at https://pwpl.info/giving/ and in the payment processing page scroll down to the broadside option of your choice. Payments can be made via debit card, credit card, or PayPal. If you would rather use check or credit card over the phone, contact Heather Steltenphol, Development Director at Peter White Public Library, at 906-226-4305 or via email at heather@pwpl.info.


Another recent philanthropic project is a broadside completed for The CODEX Foundation’s 5th Assembly/Exchange Portfolio – The Art of Translation. Further announcements and details forthcoming from CODEX for this 2025 release but I will share these images of my contribution during production with hopes some of you will be interested in acquiring it with the rest of the portfolio upon its release in a beautiful box along with probably 20-40 of my contemporary peers from around the globe. I was happily paired with David James Duncan to produce his piece “One River” for the first Assembly/Exchange in 2019.


Another project in its infancy is large in scope but has begun to form up is my series of Midwest author books which Mornings at Jackpine will kick off. In addition to the fine editions I produce, a second state will be offered on Mohawk paper and a simple binding structure which I will print on my Little Giant press allowing me production speed unheard of with my hand cranked cylinder proof press and I’ll pass the time and cost savings along to those of you who love the books but can’t justify the expense (I get it, I really do.) I’ve worked out everything but the marketing but that’s never stopped me before! I’ve also created a new partnership to edit this series of books but this will all be gone into in depth in a future blog post. This is another aspect of Deep Wood Press I’ve been wanting to explore more and have given a lot of thought to in the past decade. I will continue to issue fine editions of great books from the past that have touched and inspired me but my heart is in new writings, upcoming authors and translations and that’s the direction I see things moving forward with the greatest energy.

Ok, that’s a lot for one blog post. I’ll let it digest and get back to you in the next 6 months.

One last note. The stupid AI on WordPress tells me my words and sentences are too complex for most readers and that some of the words I use don’t even exist. If you’ve made it this far – welcome to the minority!

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