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The union was founded in 1893 in Boston, as the National Steel and Copper Plate Printers' Union of the United States. It was chartered by the American Federation of Labor on July 2, 1898. In 1901, it changed its name to the International Steel and Copper Plate Printers of North America , to include members in Canada.
The 1899 ITU convention at Detroit approved the name Union Printers Home. The home, a hospital and sanatorium, was staffed by its own doctors, nurses and other medical technicians. The lands of the home grew to 260 acres (1.1 km 2 ) to accommodate a dairy, farms, gardens, power plant, and workshops to help make the UPH self-sufficient.
FESPA are also an events and exhibitions organiser for the wide format printing, screen printing, textile and digital printing community. [ 1 ] The organisation provides a forum for information exchange between member associations resulting in help from the larger to the smaller Associations in recruitment, training and technical studies.
Logo of Printing Industries of America.. The Printing Industries of America was a nonprofit trade association that advocates for the United States printing industry.. It was the world’s largest graphic arts trade association, representing more than 6,500 member companies and an industry with more than $174.4 billion in revenue and one million employees.
When hearing that Mass Appeal Specialties was up for sale, Matt and Becky Vanden Avond had immediate interest. The specialty products printing business, established in 1972 by Tom Wilkinson, had ...
Print Club of Albany 1934 Indiana Society of Print Makers 1934 Washington Etchers 1935 Southern Printmakers Society Mount Airy, Georgia 1935 Dallas Print Club Dallas, Texas 1937 Lone Star Printmakers 1940 Princeton Print Club 1940–41 Friends of Contemporary Prints c.1945 Iowa Print Group 1947 Boston Printmakers Boston, Massachusetts 1952
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Formed as part of the New Unionism movement in September 1889, the union was originally named the Printers' Labourers' Union and was led by George Evans. In 1899, it was renamed the Operative Printers' Assistants Union , and in 1904 it became the National Society of Operative Printers' Assistants , taking the acronym NATSOPA for the first time.