Anna Magdalena GodicheW
Anna Magdalena Godiche

Anna Magdalena Godiche née Høpfner was a Danish book printer and publisher. She managed the biggest printing company in contemporary Denmark.

Cornelia Smith BradfordW
Cornelia Smith Bradford

Cornelia Smith Bradford was a printer and newspaper editor located in Philadelphia. She is one of only eleven American women known to have supported themselves as printers before the American Revolution.

Anna Maria de NeufW
Anna Maria de Neuf

Anna Maria de Neuf (1654–1714), was a printer. She was the manager of the famous Plantin Press in Antwerp in 1696–1714. She was the widow of Balthasar III Moretus, and mother of Balthasar IV Moretus and Joannes Jacobus Moretus. She was the manager of the Plantin company after her late spouse.

Mary Katharine GoddardW
Mary Katharine Goddard

Mary Katharine Goddard was an early American publisher, and the postmistress of the Baltimore Post Office from 1775 to 1789. She was the second printer to print the Declaration of Independence. Her copy, the Goddard Broadside, was commissioned by Congress in 1777, and was the first to include the names of the signatories.

Anna GoosW
Anna Goos

Anna Goos (1627–1691), was a printer. She was the co-manager of the famous Plantin Press in Antwerp from 1674 to 1681. She was the widow of Balthasar II Moretus, and the co-manager of the Plantin Press with her son Balthasar III Moretus.

Bertha M. GoudyW
Bertha M. Goudy

Bertha Matilda Sprinks Goudy was an American typographer, fine press printer, and co-proprietor with Frederic W. Goudy of the Village Press from 1903 until her death in 1935.

Jane Bissell GrabhornW
Jane Bissell Grabhorn

Jane Bissell Grabhorn (1911–1973) was an American artist, typographer, bookbinder, and printer.

Anne Catherine Hoof GreenW
Anne Catherine Hoof Green

Anne Catherine Hoof Green was a printer and publisher in Maryland.

Charlotte GuillardW
Charlotte Guillard

Charlotte Guillard was the first woman printer of importance. Guillard worked at the famous Soleil d'Or printing house from 1502 until her death. Annie Parent described her as a "notability of the Rue Saint-Jacques", the street where the shop was located in Paris, France. She became one of the most important printers of the Latin Quarter area in the city of Paris. As a woman, she was officially active with her own imprint during her two widowhood periods, that is to say in 1519–20, and in 1537–57. While she was not the first woman printer, succeeding both Anna Rugerin of Augsburg (1484) and Anna Fabri of Stockholm (1496), she was the first woman printer with a significantly known career.

Dora KaminskyW
Dora Kaminsky

Dora Deborah Kaminsky (1909–1977) was an American artist.

Martina PlantinW
Martina Plantin

Martina Plantin (1550–1616), was a printer. She was the manager of the famous Plantin Press in Antwerp in 1610–1614. She was the widow of Jan I Moretus, and mother of Balthasar I Moretus and Jan II Moretus. She was the manager of the Plantin company after her late spouse.

Jane SwisshelmW
Jane Swisshelm

Jane Grey Cannon Swisshelm was an American journalist, publisher, abolitionist, and women's rights advocate. She was one of the first women journalists hired by Horace Greeley at his New York Tribune. She was active as a writer in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and as a publisher and editor in St. Cloud, Minnesota, where she founded a string of newspapers and regularly wrote for them.