Saturday, October 12, 2019
Latest Salmon Parchment
Used my last piece of salmon parchment to have it tested for fold and tear strength, so had to make a new one. Note the translucency! So glad Wegman's has salmon fillets in a family size. Good to have Fritz Otto around to hold it up for photography...
Friday, October 4, 2019
Thank you Bookbinder Barbie
Very glad to have had @bookbinderbarbie visit this summer – THE highlight in my studio.
Don't stop learning and binding, and keep in touch.
Don't stop learning and binding, and keep in touch.
Honored to have won "Most bookbindery photo?" The NBSS knit hat will keep me toasty during our brutal Syracuse winters and in the slightly warmer studio.
Sunday, September 29, 2019
Fritz Otto Gets Ready for the Week
Fritz Otto says a professional always makes sure their Kittel (lab coat) is clean and crisply ironed to start the week... This tacking iron is almost the right size, still need a proper ironing board though.
Below, the workshop of the Kunstgewerbeschule Hamburg under the direction of Professor Kurt Londenberg, former student of Ignatz Wiemeler. From the December "Bilderbeilage" of the Allgemeiner Anzeiger für Buchbindereien, [after 1957]. Note the nice crisp lab coats.
Fritz Otto washes, bleaches, and irons his lab coat every weekend, well almost every weekend. |
Below, the workshop of the Kunstgewerbeschule Hamburg under the direction of Professor Kurt Londenberg, former student of Ignatz Wiemeler. From the December "Bilderbeilage" of the Allgemeiner Anzeiger für Buchbindereien, [after 1957]. Note the nice crisp lab coats.
Thursday, September 26, 2019
A Bookbinder’s Journey 2: My analog and virtual life in the book arts
A Bookbinder’s Journey: My analog and virtual life in the book arts
48th Susan Garretson Swartzburg ’60 Memorial Book Arts Lecture
Lecturer: Peter D. Verheyen
Thursday, Oct. 17th, 2019 — 6:00 p.m.
Wells College, Aurora, NY
Lecturer: Peter D. Verheyen
Thursday, Oct. 17th, 2019 — 6:00 p.m.
Wells College, Aurora, NY
Lecture poster by Leah Mackin,
with imagery derived from fish skin.
with imagery derived from fish skin.
Saturday, September 14, 2019
Decorated Papers
Recently received 3 years of bound volumes of the Archive für Buchbinderei, 1930-32.
1930 featured 2 tipped in decorated samples, one paste and one oil marbled.
1931 was bound by a first year apprentice and covered with a paste paper of his own making.
1930 featured 2 tipped in decorated samples, one paste and one oil marbled.
"Hand painted" decorated paper from the workshop of Emma Gustorff, Beuel a. Rh. (now a part of Bonn). |
Oil marbled paper from the Workshop of Alex Peltzer, Munich. |
1931 was bound by a first year apprentice and covered with a paste paper of his own making.
Paste paper (and half-linen) binding by a 1st year apprentice. No, the label was not adhered to the cover. |
Sunday, September 8, 2019
Fritz Otto Goes Fishing 2
In the last installment, Fritz Otto Goes Fishing, our hero prepared the fish skin for making parchment, but also trying something new, egg tanning. We're following Nienke Hoogvliet's instructions from her book Fish Leather. Ready? Here we go! Fritz Otto is glad @bookbinderbarbie left copies of her notes.
Taking one of the haddock and stretching it out to make parchment. We'll compare with the egg tanned haddock. |
All right, that's done. Now to let it dry. |
Now, on to the egg tanning!
Why do I always get the grunt work? Beat the egg, oil, detergent mixture until smooth. |
Next, tamp the haddock and salmon so that they are not dripping wet. |
Now we hang them up to drip-dry. When dry, they'll still feel oily/slippery, and we'll need to massage and work them to loosen up the fibers in the skin. We do that for a week. |
Here they are a week later. Time to rinse in soapy water until they feel soft and not oily/slippery. |
Rinse, and rinse some more... |
Let drip-dry. We tamped with a paper towel again, too. |
Then, dump them into a more dilute mixture, work in, and set out to dry. |
Take out the pins and liberate the haddock parchment. Next we'll compare. |
See what I mean by transparent and shiny? |
And here the egg tanned salmon. Less translucent than the salmon parchment that was made when @bookbinderbarbie was here over a month ago. Softer too, but not supple like leather. Still. looks and feels really interesting. Wonder if we'll make anything with it? |
Click here to see where this fishy adventure started.
Book Arts arts du livre Canada (Vol 10., Nr. 2, 2019)
"Fish Tales, experiments with fish skin for bookbinding
The New Bookbinder: Journal of Designer Bookbinders (2020)
"Fish Tales, experiments with fish skin for bookbinding
The New Bookbinder: Journal of Designer Bookbinders (2020)
Monday, September 2, 2019
Always Document Your Work and Keep Notes
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