
Mary Mashburn, proprietor
of Typecast Press, got her first whiff of
printer's ink and press wash while on a newspaper
field trip during grade school in Marin County,
Calif. That's all it took. She's been chasing
the irresistible scent -- as well as the
lore, legends, ancient machinery and modern
possibilities of honest-to-goodness printing
-- ever since.
A military brat, Mary
has lived in places cold (Alaska, Minnesota),
way cool (atop Mount Tamalpais, overlooking
Oakland and San Francisco) and hot (North
Carolina, Arizona) and decided to set up
shop in Baltimore, clearly in the latter
category, with husband Steve St. Angelo,
a journalist at U.S. News & World Report
magazine.
OK, she's not your grandfather's
letterpress printer -- chances are he would
have liked Mary anyway. Through a 25-year
career in journalism and the graphic arts,
she has built a reputation on creativity,
flexibility, customer service and a commitment
to doing things the right way well before
the ink touches the paper and long after
it dries.
Mary loves this printing
stuff: from salvaging old presses to brainstorming
design concepts to mixing inks and hand-feeding
the old machines. When the wind blows the
right way, she says, it smells a bit like
heaven.
And you can cast that
in metal.
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