While living in Strasburg, Gutenberg found a room in an old religious community to use as his private workshop. For a long time, he attempted many different ways to deal with 'moveable-type' printing, however his efforts did not meet success. Unfortunately, the time came when he had no money left. Gutenberg returned to his old home, Mainz, and met a rich goldsmith and legal advisor named Johann Fust (or Faust). Gutenberg shared with him how hard he had attempted in Strasburg to discover some method for making books inexpensively, and how he had no more cash to carry on his experiments. Fust turned out to be enormously intrigued and gave Gutenberg the cash he needed. First of all, it is thought that he made types of hardwood. Each type was a little block with a single letter at one end.The square letters were settled. These letters could not be removed from the word of which they were apart of. The new types were movable so they could be setup to print one page, then taken apart and set up again and again to print any number of pages. This worked much better, and Gutenberg was progressing admirably toward the completion of the first book ever printed by movable type (The Bible, in