Vanderblog

A forum for flatbed cylinder proof presses
21 Oct

“SRL” proof press

Marty Veerde, Chair of Printmaking at the Quay School of Fine Arts in Whanganui, New Zealand sent me these photos of a Vanderlook-alike with hopes that I could identify it. Unfortunately, I have no information on this make. It has only two written references on it, one on an attached plate stating “Impression On – Off” and the other cast into the cabinet end with ‘SRL’. I thought it possible that it stood for Saroglia, once a well-known Italian manufacturer of printing presses and the maker of the Canuck proof press. The successor company is MEC Saroglia s.r.l., but in an email reply said it was not theirs.


Prof. Veerde says the press has no provenance or history. “… there are a few things missing off of it that will confuse the casual glance. Unfortunately the motor to power the ink train has been stripped before I got the machine and this would sit very high on the non operator side of the press It also had a protective shroud over the front of the carriage side plate which is missing as there are four screw mounting points there. The way that the ink train (vibrator roller and form rollers) disconnect from the carriage is also very distinctive and the casting for holding this roller train is aluminum.

The gripper trip bracket mounted on the operator side at the end of the bed-way is also another distinctive feature. It is not metric threaded so is either of English or American manufacture. I have just taken the old switch box apart and it has Bill Switchgear, Birmingham, England. Whether this was retrofitted or came with it is difficult to tell, however it does suggest British made.”

6 Responses to ““SRL” proof press”

  1. 1
    Eric Holub Says:

    The “S” might stand for Soldan, and the L for Ltd. but I have no idea what the “R” might be.

  2. 2
    Paul Moxon, Moderator Says:

    Perhaps. Soldan Ltd. is named as an importer of Vandercooks into England on the model serial number cards held by NA Graphics. Some cards also note that Soldan also assembled Vandercooks from shipped parts.

    Other than the image of the Lightning proof press Eric gave me, I don’t have much information on Soldan. I have emailed contacts in the UK, but this has yet to yield a new lead.

    The next time I’m in Silverton, if time allows, I will look again at the Vandercook export data. I have compiled a list of 15 dealers in the US, Canada and Europe, but the are some discrepancies in it.

  3. 3
    Eric Holub Says:

    By 1905 Soldan (”Everything for the Printer” their motto) was already selling Lightning proof presses of a very advanced design. The simplest was like a Poco, but better models had grippers, feedboard, form and distribution rollers, etc., and got as large as 27×39.
    I don’t know why these presses never made it here.

  4. 4
    Ben Brundell Says:

    I’ve been through the small numbers of ‘British Printer’ I have. Soldan does advertise in 1962 and 1965, but never with the initials SRL.

    There is one firm — Sydney R. Littlejohn & Co. Ltd. — which advertises, and this would match SRL.

    In 1962 they advertise ‘Fastcoat’, an enamel for metal printing; and ‘Graphicolor’ a massive colour camera.

    In July 1965 they advertise the ‘HPL Littlejohn Pin Register System’ the footer has two addresses — Equipment Division, Sydney R. Littljohn, Brewery Road, London, N7; and Chemicals and Sundries Division, Hunter-Penrose-Littlejohn, 109 Farringdon Road, London, EC1. Branches are shown in Manchester, Birmingham and Glasgow.

    While neither ad shows a proofing press, it does establish a firm with the initials SRL which presumably did link with Hunter-Penrose who made proofing presses.

  5. 5
    Paul Moxon, Moderator Says:

    Thanks Ben. In the Vandercook serial number model cards at NA Graphics Hunter Penrose Ltd. is listed as a UK dealer in 1947 and affixed their logo to presses they sold. See this photo sent to Fritz of a No. 4 now in Israel. Note the name Littlejohn on the cabinet.

  6. 6
    Paul Moxon, Moderator Says:

    Awhile back Eric Holub sent me a copy of an ad from The Penrose Annual for The Littlejohn Press. I have posted it here. One can just barely make out the “SRL” logo on the cabinet end. This model looks similar to a 219 Newstyle, right down to the two swing-out paper tables.

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