Yes, letterpress still exists today, though it is primarily used for specialty printing rather than mass production. Many artists, designers, and small businesses utilize letterpress techniques for unique invitations, stationery, and art prints. The resurgence of interest in artisanal and handmade goods has contributed to a revival of this traditional printing method. Various workshops and studios continue to offer letterpress services, keeping the craft alive.
There are no anagrams for the word letterpress. The next longest possible word from these letters is presettles.
One can purchase letterpress Christmas cards from a crafting store such as Michaels. If one owns an Apple iPad or iPhone, you can use iPhoto to turn your pictures into beautifully designed letterpress cards.
He invented the letterpress
Very little. Today, letterpress is used for very high quality moderate-run label printing, like wine labels, and not much else. A few wedding invitations and other society printing jobs are run letterpress, but letterpress has a problem: it's hard to do. In the label business, UV flexography and rotogravure have basically taken over all of letterpress's market; in general commercial printing, offset and rotogravure have supplanted it. And in invitation printing, most of that's done in thermography. About the only reason I can think of to keep a letterpress AS a letterpress, and not convert it into a diecutter, is to do crash imprinting. Crash imprinting is done when you've got a multi-part form you need to number. To do crash imprinting, you buy a numbering tool for your letterpress. The completed multipart form is fed into the letterpress and numbered, and the numbering will imprint on all parts of the form. The problem with this is, crash imprinting has NEVER been a huge market and it's getting smaller.
Greenwich Letterpress
The address of the Olde Yakima Letterpress Museum is: Po Box 10477, Yakima, WA 98909-1477
yes it does still exist :)
Yes they still exist
yes, because we still exist
Yes, THEY STILL EXIST
Yes, they still exist.
Yes, many aircraft still exist.