Skip to content

Cart

Your cart is empty

Article: publisher textile's mark cawood

design

publisher textile's mark cawood






Mark Cawood and his former partner Rhynnie started Publisher Textiles in 2002, and it remains one of the few hand screenprinting studios in Australia. After getting his start printing tshirts, Mark went on to perfect his trade at one of Sydney's other large independent traditional printers, Signature Prints. He also worked at Billabong for many years before that company's operations went offshore. Today he focusses on the art form of traditional printing in his Leicchardt studio, which houses two 20m long printing presses. It's a time-intensive process whereby even the colours are mixed in-house. But the results are celebrated and coveted, as anyone who has seen the interiors of many of Sydney's top bars and restaurants will attest. A shop on the site of the studio also sells many of Publisher Textiles designs in a range of homewares.

Which five words best describe you? 6ft2, slight build, brown eyes, balding and blue overalls.
How did you get your career start and what path have you taken since? Fell into screen printing with Signature Prints back when I was 19, worked for a few years with them, wanted to learn more, with this it excited the passion, enrolled myself in Tafe Trade Screen Printing to learn all of the nuts and bolts, then set up my own backyard business out of my mum's garage at 22. With the knowledge of screen printing, I needed to also learn business so I sent myself on the Neis Business Programme (highly recommend). 23, first child on the way, had to get my shit together. Went to Billabong, did my tour of duty before they printed off-shore. Returned to Signature Prints, to launch the Florence Broadhurst Range. Creative differences meant that there was only one way, to go solo, Publisher Textiles was born.
What’s the best lesson you’ve learnt along the way? If there is a job worth doing, do it yourself. A Jack of all Trades, a master of none. SEE! the lessons keep coming.
What’s your proudest career achievement? Keeping this place of work running
What’s been your best decision? Going solo.
Who inspires you? Depends on the day... for example, stumbled across this, Dick and Rick Hoyt: Truly Inspirational.
What are you passionate about? Exploration.
Which person, living or dead, would you most like to meet? I think I could have great little chinwag with William Morris.
What dream do you still want to fulfil? Have a break and anything can happen.
What are you reading? Mr Nice.

images courtesy of publisher textiles

Read more

art

artist jacqueline rose

The art of Jacqueline Rose is often informed by other artists, and art forms. She did one series inspired by the last story of writer Franz Kafka. And her latest works play with the idea of move...

Read more
interiors

freedom styling shoot

One of my first jobs as a freelance stylist was for Freedom - an advertorial, which is in the (current) April issue of real livingmagazine. Naturally, all the furniture and homewares were from Free...

Read more