Deep Drawn: Presswork Ireland Upd

Eileen O’Maher inherited the press from her father, who had inherited it from his. For three generations, O’Maher Metalcraft had turned flat discs of stainless steel and aluminum into seamless vessels: teapot bodies, fire extinguisher casings, the housing for the first Irish-made satellite component. The process was brutal magic. A punch drove the metal into a die, forcing it to stretch, to remember a shape it had never known.

“I was.”

She heard footsteps. A young woman stood in the doorway, backlit by grey rain. She held a sketchbook. deep drawn presswork ireland

The last true deep-drawn press in Ireland stood in a limestone valley in County Tipperary, humming a low note that felt older than the hills. Eileen O’Maher inherited the press from her father,

“You’re Eileen O’Maher?”

“My name’s Saoirse. I’m a designer.” She opened the sketchbook. Inside were drawings of things Eileen had never seen: a lamp shaped like a bell, a structural column for a tiny home, a modular rainwater collector that looked like an inverted flower. All of them labelled the same way: Deep drawn. Ireland. A punch drove the metal into a die,

Now Eileen stood on the factory floor, alone. The last order had shipped three weeks ago—a batch of medical canisters for a German firm that had found cheaper labor in Poland. The roof leaked onto the 500-ton press. Rainwater traced rust-coloured paths down its iron flanks.