On the 1st of April, the pre-media service provider Meyle+Müller celebrates its 100th anniversary. The foundations of today's company were laid in 1910 by the repro-photographer Eugen Meyle and the collotype printer Karl Müller with the "Graphic art institute for collotype printing, halftone, color etching and woodcuts" (Graphischen Kunstanstalt für Lichtdruck, Autotypie, Farbätzung und Holzschnitte). After the death of Karl Müller in 1922, his then 19-year old son Eugen Müller took over his part of the company. Eugen Meyle left the company after World War II.
Today's company premises in the Maximilianstraße were built in 1958, which was also the year that the company moved in. In 1981 - a few years following the death of Eugen Müller Sr - his grandson Eugen Müller joined the company. In the 1980s and 1990s, Eugen Müller pressed ahead with the conversion from the analog craft to digital technologies and turned the company from a repro company into a state-of-the-art online and pre-media service provider.