March 15th is the Ides of March. It is on this day in 44 BC that Julius Caesar, the emperor of Rome, was assassinated.
For today, Jared letterpress printed the last words of Caesar. While we truly don’t know Caesar’s last words, the quote “Et tu, Brute?”appears in Act 3 Scene 1 of William Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar, where it is spoken by Caesar to his friend Marcus Junius Brutus, upon recognizing him as one of the assassins.
The phrase “Et tu, Brute?” was typeset in 30 point Engravers Old English font. This was printed with black rubber base ink using a 3x5 Kelsey Excelsior tabletop printing press.
satoru sitting between your legs as you watch some film that you have seen before and know by heart with a vibrating dildo up his hole that you lazily thrust it into him as you watch. you spend most of your time ignoring him and explaining what's happening on screen as he's trembling and squirming in your arms.
the most acknowledgement satoru gets is you wrapping an arm around his middle to get him to stop thrashing about.
even better! his mouth his duck taped. his whimpers muffled and his whines sound even more pathetic. but it's worth it so he doesn't talk throughout the film.
In our print shop exhibit at the Sacramento History Museum, we like to discuss history while letterpress printing. However, sometimes we like to just highlight the sounds of the printing process.
In this video, Jared letterpress printed an image depicting the first printing press in what would later become the United States, which was Stephen Daye’s wooden common press from 1639. This was printed in green rubber base ink using a 3x5 Kelsey Excelsior tabletop printing press. 70 prints were made during this press run.
These are prints we hand out to visitors when they stop by our print shop and mention they watch our videos. Quite frankly, we hand these out to anyone!