Selections from a playlist while touring the Pacific Northwest
design: Jordan Weaver
Great book and great book cover.
YOU CAN HAVE YOUR OWN JORDAN WEAVER, TOO!
Designed by Jordan Weaver
This is a promotional piece featuring samples of my portfolio. Instead of designing a book to send out to prospective employers I thought it might be nicer to send something interactive. Whereas a book has a fixed sequence, this “House of Cards” format can be rearranged and played with all while displaying my work.
Gutenberg Remix
History becomes tangible in a studio setting where tradition is married to experimentation. We’re not just resuscitating an outdated technology—we’re using it to explore new ways forward. Here’s an example of our most recent experiment.
We began with digital type designed by Eric Wolinsky in the graphic design program at Virginia Commonwealth University. The name of the type family is Halfton and has a solid face and a skeleton face.
The first step in our experiment was to import Eric’s type into the modeling software required for a 3D printer. Tobias Wilbur in our graphic design program and Connor Broaddus in the Engineering program collaborated to develop the macros for the software extension to streamline this process.
Next we uploaded the 3D files to the server in the computer lab of the Sculpture department at VCU where they have an SST 3-Dimensional printer. Eric McMaster, Assistant Professor of Sculpture and extended media then formatted the files in order to send them to the 3D printer.
Each letterform of the alphabet was printed as a 3-dimensional type-high block with a solid face on one side and a skeleton face on the flip side. Type-high is a precise measurement for inking and printing type on a letterpress. Eric designed the family to be all caps so we printed each uppercase character as a single movable block.
After printing the blocks, we moved to the letterpress lab in the Graphic Design department at VCU. We locked them up solid side face up using the pangram “THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG” on an SP-25 Vandercook, a flatbed cylinder press. We inked the press with neon green oil base ink and pulled the first color of our poster.
Because each block has its Skeleton face on the flip side in perfect registration, we simply turned each block over to print the second color with blue ink. A run of 36 posters was the result of our project titled Gutenberg Remix.




