My cabinet card sketchbook, along with the book that helped me to create it |
For my first project, I've created the cabinet-card sketchbook from Jeannine Stein's Re-bound, in which she encourages the use of recycled and re-purposed materials for creating books.
The cover of my hand-bound book is a cabinet card purchased from the Allentown Paper Show.
I see the man in the cabinet card on the back cover as a kind of spouse or companion of the woman on the front:
It wasn't until I had the project underway that I realized that I was actually binding three different books for the project, all using a stab binding technique. Inside the outer cover are two smaller books. On one side, the book has drawing paper, while on the other side the book has notepaper.
Each pad has a sturdy piece of cardboard at the back, which fits into a sleeve I made on the inside of each cover. The pad slips in and out of the sleeve, and I can make new pads to replace them when I am finished, so that the cabinet card cover is re-usable.
Ingenious design, no?
I was thinking about giving this blog post the title: "Bookbinding is not for the faint of heart."
But through the process of binding this rather complicated book, I realized that there is definitely a simple secret to making the activity easier: punch yourself large enough holes so that you are not fighting your needle's way through each one!
An awl is a fine way to start, but the Japanese screw punch is really indispensable for the bookbinder or book artist. I'm no expert, but as a beginner, I'm finding that these are a few of my favorite things:
My favorite adhesive (UHU glue stick), Japanese screw punch, awls for punching small holes, ruler, sharp utility knife |
And, really, isn't that pretty much true of any creative endeavor?
I'm on a bit of a bookbinding kick, it seems, so there may be a lot more where this came from!
5 comments:
Ha ha -- I like the faint-of-heart comment. I find bookbinding tricky......and I cheat and punch holes and add rings. I love what you did using the old cabinet cards. Very cool. You've been busy!
Fabulous project, and yes a great design. I bet stab binding would be great for working out frustrations. I have an identical awl - which should have been required to have a cap - as I stabbed myself with it several times getting it in and out of my tote bag at last weekend's crop.
This is so COOL! I would never had thought to use those old cabinet cards (and I have a bunch)...you've got me thinking!
Brilliant! I've dipped my toe into book binding recently and it us satisfying. You've convivced me I need a srew punch!
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