What is the 15th Room Press? Upon the founding of the Kelly Writers House as a writer-centered community in 1995, the writers and teachers who formed the House’s hub assumed from the start that a printing press would be involved. It was only the physical limitations of our small Victorian cottage that initially prevented letterpress projects. But the idea has always been compelling: to teach young writers the uses of cutting-edge digital technology and at the same time reinforce the traditional materiality and physicality of hand-set printing.
When, in the spring of 2005, the University of Pennsylvania began discussing how it would celebrate the Ben Franklin tercentenary, the Van Pelt Library, the Department of Fine Arts as part of Penn Design, and the Kelly Writers House together dreamed up the project of what became The Common Press. Three printing presses, ink, and moveable type were purchased, and the project began in earnest.
One part of the Common Press, the 15th Room Press, is an imprint project involving Writers House affiliated writers and students and is named to help us imagine an extra room beyond our 14-room cottage. Over the two years, and in that new space, we have learned to design projects, hand-set moveable type, ink and clean the presses, and hand-print broadsides. We currently have two broadside series – one which features the work of our visiting poets and one, called the “Hub Series,” which features the work of our community members. Every year we also collaborate with our partners at the Common Press for special press workshops and embark upon larger limited-editions projects.
It is the intention of the KWH community to continue teaching our young writers the importance of setting type, getting your fingers inky and experiencing the feel of type impressed on paper – if only to remind these students of what is generally true behind the mission for all KWH projects: writing is a communal rather than a solitary act and the work of bringing writing to readers is a practical art that requires concrete skills. The colophon symbol of the 15th Room Press – three mismatched chairs replicated from actual chairs in our Arts Cafe at the KWH – continually reminds us of our community project.
See more about our collaborators, The Common Press.
