Bookbinding Class in upstate NY
Tuesday, March 30th, 2010OK, it looks like my summer class at the West Kortright Centre will be August 10, 11 & 12 from 6-9 pm; here is the description. I’ll post the link for registration as soon as I get it. Let me know what you think!
In this workshop, students will learn techniques of hand bookbinding such as assembling the text, creating hard covers and covering them with a multitude of fabrics, marbled papers, and other materials. The finished projects can be used as journals or artists’ books, and can be replicated at home with basic art supplies for more book making.
Students will learn about paper grain, gluing techniques and working with a bone folder. We will be working with glue so wear an apron, smock or old clothes. Each participant gets a bone folder to use during class and keep afterward.
Although most books in the U.S. are made by machine, there is a small but active population of hand bookbinders spread across the country whose work ranges from conservative to cutting edge. They use everything from rag paper, linen thread and wheat paste to sheet metal and glass.
Equipment ranges from 19th century presses and cutters to Teflon spatulas and sheets of spun-bonded polyester, but in the end it all comes back to hand skills at the workbench.
Paper Moon Bookbinding was founded in 2006 by Amy Morris Pickens with the goal of making books which are beautiful and useful. She uses papers and cloth from Asia, Europe and the U.S., and has over a decade of experience in binding, sewing, non-adhesive structures, editions, repair & restoration and box making. Amy recently moved to Delaware County after living in Northern California; she is glad to be back in the Northeast and to be able to share her expertise with her community.




