David Lance Goines (May 29, 1945 – February 19, 2023),[1] was an American artist, calligrapher, printmaker, typographer, printing entrepreneur, and author. He was born in Grants Pass, Oregon, the oldest of eight children. His father was a civil engineer and his mother a calligrapher and artist.
Waters' and Goines' weekly cooking column in the San Francisco Express Times, book, 30 Recipes Suitable for Framing (1968),[6] and the series of lithographs Goines printed at his shop that sold out its many printing runs, earned the money to buy the Berkeley Free Press[7] print shop, in Berkeley, in 1968, from Leo Bach,[5] renaming it, Saint Hieronymus Press.[8] The major output of the press consists of Goines' limited edition poster and calendar art, distributed by Dow and Frosini.[9] Portal Publications issued reproductions of forty originals.[10]
In addition to his artistic and calligraphic work, Goines was also a non-fiction author who had written about political activism. His book The Free Speech Movement: Coming of Age in the 1960s, was published in 1993.
Goines had enjoyed a friendship with the restaurateur Alice Waters since they were both teenagers. Every year Goines created a Chez Panisse anniversary poster and has illustrated many Chez Panisse cookbooks. He also designed the logotype and lettering for a number of Berkeley-based businesses, past and present, including Velo-Sport (a bicycle store) and the Scharffen Berger Chocolate Company.
A strong advocate of the voluntary blood donor system, Goines claimed to have donated a cumulative total of 20 gallons of blood so far during his life.[13]
Goines died in Berkeley, California, on February 19, 2023, at the age of 77.[1]