Students can use the workshop to familiarize themselves with boxes, dots, zigzags, as well as to make compositions, control the blanks and form a well-made branch for later printing. "It's a great opportunity to get back to the physical medium in the midst of so much digitization. There is handmade action and full of random components such as pressure, the body of the paper or the particularities of the ink that make each result unique and more organic," says Garrigós. She also points out the authenticity of the process that "has hardly changed in centuries". The lead of the movable type has been replaced by wood and now recently by plastic and the ink "remains practically the same".
