Bamfords ‘Wuffler’ and ship printing blocks

Discussion in 'Antique Discussion' started by KSW, Nov 24, 2019.

  1. KSW

    KSW Well-Known Member

    Picked these up today.
    One is a printing block from Bamfords farm machinery AKA JCB now. (Joseph Cyril Bamford)
    The other is completely unknown of a ship- any ideas or just a random ship?. Very intricate pattern.
    Love to hear any thoughts.
    Thankyou :)
    B1D18B7B-9C9C-4338-80B4-9A66157C64E0.jpeg AC9ADBFF-66C4-41C6-A6BB-0A5D2A96ABF9.jpeg 350BB57A-3E08-49FC-A7B8-2D211CD6F009.jpeg ADA7CD45-7A7A-4EE8-9430-F2169C569EFC.jpeg 8C0DBCBF-399F-4540-A68F-940F1337B1D1.jpeg
     
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  2. shallow_ocean_spectre

    shallow_ocean_spectre fine.books' bumping squirrel

    It's the printer's mark of Mathias Goes, Antwerp.
     
    Last edited: Nov 24, 2019
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  3. Bakersgma

    Bakersgma Well-Known Member

    There seems to be a ribbon with lettering near the top of the ship. Can you see what letters?
     
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  4. shallow_ocean_spectre

    shallow_ocean_spectre fine.books' bumping squirrel

    It appears to read, "CONIGREE," Herefordshire perhaps?

    upload_2019-11-24_16-27-45.png


    .
     
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  5. KSW

    KSW Well-Known Member

    Brilliant. Thankyou. Off to google....
     
  6. KSW

    KSW Well-Known Member

    I couldn't make it out. It could be Conigree now you say it SOS.More research.
     
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  7. blooey

    blooey Well-Known Member

    I worked as a graphic artist in an old photoengraver's shop that made cuts like these. First job after leaving Art School.
     
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  8. daveydempsey

    daveydempsey Moderator Moderator

    I saw a reference on the net to "Conigree light beacons" but lost it somehow.

    The ship might be an early light ship to guide shipping.

    However it looks like a characterization of the "Golden Hind"
    to me.
     
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  9. KSW

    KSW Well-Known Member

    Had a quick Google and didn't come up with much.
    Mathias Goes was the first to bring print to Antwerp in the 15th century. A son Hugo came to London and then York in the early 1500s.
    The ship is meant to represent progress and commercial enterprise.
    I can't find anything about Conigree if that's what it says.
    Can't find anything about more recent descendants or companies using this image.
    So, some beginner questions- What date did metal blocks like this replace wood cuts?
    If this image was used in the 15th century, what's a printing block doing here now?. Why would it be recreated for a company that doesn't exist any more?
    When did this form of printing cease?
    Still googling but any help would be great as without you I'd still be googling ships!.
    :)
     
  10. shallow_ocean_spectre

    shallow_ocean_spectre fine.books' bumping squirrel

    @KSW - Your metalcuts are twentieth century. Lots of early images were re-used over the years - some were even re-used within the same book, as in the Liber Chronicarum.

    Metalcuts were used extensively from the first decade of the sixteenth century forward in the West, exempli gratia:

    https://sokol.co.uk/book-of-hours-5/

    Thereafter the use of woodcuts - which wore down and broke quickly - fell out of favour.
    .
     
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  11. KSW

    KSW Well-Known Member

    Just been having a look, some are incredibly intricate and must have been highly labour intensive to create the early blocks.
    The Bamfords one can be dated to 1950. Presumably these printing blocks became pretty much obsolete after that?
     
  12. shallow_ocean_spectre

    shallow_ocean_spectre fine.books' bumping squirrel

    With the advent of digital printing, nearly everything became obsolete.






    For an idea of what real printing once was, have a look at Aldus' 1499 printing of Francesco de Colonna's of Hypnerotomachia Poliphili. A past sale:
    hyppp.jpg

    or just sift through Google Images:


    https://www.google.com/search?q=Hyp...hVJwFkKHfKsCF4Q_AUoAXoECBIQAw&biw=800&bih=471
     
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  13. KSW

    KSW Well-Known Member

  14. blooey

    blooey Well-Known Member

    It was actually the almost universal acceptance of offset lithography, and finally web (no, not that web!) flexographic printing that sounded the death knell for the photoengraving trade, some decades before the digital era.
     
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  15. KSW

    KSW Well-Known Member

    I didn't know there were and still are light ships when the waters weren't suitable to build a light house. Thankyou, I love the random information I pick up on this forum and the twists these threads take.
    FullSizeRender.jpg
     
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