In 1543 he was buyten die Camerpoorte in den Gulden Eenhoren[needs translation], in 1544, at the sign of the Fox, and from 1546, in de twee Oeyvaerts (the two storks) on the Corte Camerstraet.
[2] The younger Nutius was the printer of Jerome Nadal's Evangelicae Historiae Imagines (1593), a project in which Christopher Plantin, who died in 1589, had originally been involved.
The business was carried on under the name "Heirs of Martin Nutius", but as his oldest child was still only 14 at the time of his death, others must also have been involved.
He was received as a master in the Guild of St Luke in 1613 but continued to work under the imprint "Heirs of Martin Nutius" until 1623.
[7] On 15 November 1638, Balthasar Moretus wrote to the bookseller Balthazar Bellerus, in Douai, asking him to take Nutius's oldest son, Martin, as an apprentice.