Scottish Field

TRADITIONA­L TYPES

Victorian methods make for a unique selling point at Borders printing press

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Holding on to Victorian traditions works for a Borders printer

While keeping apace with the latest in technologi­cal advances is vital to the success of many businesses today, a Borders printer is continuing to prosper using machiner y which dates back to the late 1800s. One hundred and fifty years after Smail’s Printers opened in Innerleith­en, the works still favour Letterpres­s over digital printing. Having escaped the invasion of desk t op publishing, Smail’s draws i n commercial i ncome using 19th-century equipment, with today’s love for tactile quality and the quirk y, vintage look ensuring customers continue to use the ser vice – despite a ‘rush job’ taking up to two weeks.

‘I love working with this machinery,’ says 23-year-old printer Chris Haig. ‘It’s a privilege because there aren’t many people my age doing this kind of job. We’re the only UK printer setting type by hand and printing letterpres­s commercial­ly.’

It was March 1866 when Robert Smail took on the Innerleith­en premises. Recognisin­g the potential in the expanding industrial town, the former shoe seller invested in printing technology and was inundated with work for the local woollen mills.

Having taken over the business with his brothers in 1890, family entreprene­ur Robert Cowan Smail expanded the equipment to include larger presses for the production of posters and newspapers, as well as investing in lithograph­ic equipment. It was the last time the business invested in new technology with future generation­s of Smails continuing the traditiona­l method on original machinery. The village press, which was taken on by the National Trust for Scotland in 1986, still processes orders for raffle tickets, stationery, business cards and wedding invitation­s, as well as printing Trust literature and other commercial projects. ‘ It can vary from printing a one-off copy of something that runs of thousands,’ Haig says. Anniversar­y celebratio­ns and tours take place in March.

www.nts.org.uk/Property/Robert-Smails-Printing-Works

 ??  ?? Image: Chris Haig operates the 100-yearold machinery at the printing press in Innerleith­en, which is still used today for commercial projects.
Image: Chris Haig operates the 100-yearold machinery at the printing press in Innerleith­en, which is still used today for commercial projects.

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