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Johnsons Printers adds wide-format and first new site since 1827 Sarah Cosgrove Wednesday, October 21, 2015
Johnsons Printers has invested £750,000 in a new wide-format division, including a £350,000 Agfa spend.
The Nantwich company added to existing litho and digital operations buying a 2.5m-wide Anapurna M2500i high-speed hybrid inkjet printer, Acorta flatbed cutter and Asanti workflow solution from the Belgian-headquartered company, after managing director John McMillan was impressed by the image and colour quality produced by the machines.
For the first time since it was established in 1827, Johnsons has branched out from its packed Nantwich, Cheshire town-centre premises, so it could find room for the new equipment, buying a 280sqm industrial unit in nearby Crewe to add to its 1,115sqm space.
When Emily Dickinson died, nearly two thousand poems were found sewn in booklets called fascicles, written out as fair copies. These manuscripts were done; there were no mistakes or corrections. But also, many poems included a little plus-sign at the end of a word, or line, or whole stanza, and at the bottom of the page, she offered another word, or line, or stanza to read in its place.
Similarly, many of us have our own variations on Emily Dickinson. Just over one year ago (“Since then ‘tis Centuries and yet/Feels shorter than the Day”), the first season of Dickinson dropped. Dickinson’s creator and showrunner, Alena Smith, offered us her Emily Dickinson funny, sexy, angry, desperate, secure, beloved, loving and while it joined other recent adaptations of Dickinson on film, this variant also felt new.