Manuscript book

A simple manuscript book, with notes and calculations.

As I mentioned yesterday, I’ll be teaching a manuscript book class this winter and spring — 8 weeks, mostly weekly but with some breaks. A few days ago, as an aid to outlining the curriculum,  I decided to go through the steps of making the simplest manuscript book. Simple is not so easy for me, but I did make this book entirely in an evening, from start to finish.

What was simple: First, the size of the book is mostly dictated by the grain and dimensions of a parent sheet of Strathmore charcoal paper. Second, I wrote with a pencil. This simplified matters when I wrote the wrong word on the penultimate page of the text block. Third, I chose a relatively short text. Besides making the lettering process shorter, it allowed the entire text block to be only 16 pages long. That meant that I could have 4 sheets folded together to make a single signature, the simplest codex structure. Fourth, I chose to make a soft binding and sew it along with the text block. Fifth, I chose the simplest end paper — a single sheet which covers the inside of the cover — and I didn’t choose to paste it down to the cover.

What I could not bear to make too simple: The pages are laid out based on the Von de Graaf canon of medieval page design. I guess would have simpler just to randomly choose where to put my lettering, but I would have hated the result.

Click on the image for a closer look. The open manuscript lies on top. Below that is an offcut of the end paper and the cover paper — a piece I painted and wadded up and painted and drew on in a Laurie Doctor workshop. Below that is the layout template based on the Von de Graaf canon. Below that are my notes which set out the division of the text amongst the pages, and some trial lettering which loosely served as copy fitting.

Even a simple manuscript book has a lot of steps. But it’s satisfying.

Eight-week class: making a manuscript book

manuscript-book-class

I am offering a 8-week class on the manuscript book that will begin January 18 and run, with some breaks, through April 11.

In this class we will examine a variety of handmade books, learn about the parts of a book. Then we’ll design, make and bind a manuscript book.

We’ll choose content, materials, and layout. We’ll learn how to copy fit, good ways to practice the lettering, and much more before finally creating and binding our own books.

To read more or register for the class, go to callibeth.com/class-2016/.

New York Public Library digitizes of 180,000 public-domain images

1904 letter from PW Costello to Horace G. Healey
1904 letter from Patrick W. Costello to Horace G. Healey

On January 6, 2016, the New York Public Library announced that it has digitized over 180,000 public-domain images. Cool! It’s available here at www.nypl.org/research/collections/digital-collections/public-domain. You can try searching for an image, as I did to find this 1904 letter from Costello to Healey. It was interesting to see that in 1904 he was writing on city stationery; images of later letters are shown written on his own letterhead.

Also interesting is this remix by Brian Foo of NYPL Labs that provides an interface for searching by color, dates, genre, or color. The usability leaves something to be desired, not the least of which is performance. Ideas for improvements come to mind immediately. Of course, the remix is only as good as the data, which seems to still be somewhat spotty. If you’re a techie (or even a wannabe like me), see the source code (mostly Python) for the remix on Github. I’m tempted to try my hand at it. The data is here, and the API.

via Colossal

Free stuff from my dealer

ZIG Clean Color Brush Pen on a multi-media sheet
ZIG Clean Color Brush Pen on a multi-media sheet

So I got this ZIG Clean Color brush pen from my dealer, with a note wishing me happy holidays and inviting me to “enjoy this free gift”. This is a good thing, right? So why does it feel like they’re just hoping to engender a new dependency on a new drug writing tool?

It’s an interesting brush pen, very brush-y rather than pen-like.

 

Andrew Fox’s calligraphic animals

Calligraphic animal drawings by Andrew Fox
Calligraphic animal drawings by Andrew Fox

I’ve seen Andrew Fox’s calligraphy animals several times over the past year or so, and I now I see that he has an instructional book out. Not having read it, I can’t vouch for the book, but his animals — and bugs and robots and sushi and bombs and so on — are trés cute!

Most lately via Colossal.

Farmer’s Wife quilt — values

Talking with my sister about yesterday’s blog post, I said that it’s clear that I need more light blue. Then I clarified that I need more full-hue light blue, and that I have plenty of low-hue light blue. I just confirmed that when I de-saturated the image:

Farmer's Wife quilt so far -- in black and white to check value distribution
Farmer’s Wife quilt so far — in black and white to check value distribution

Progress on the Farmer’s Wife quilt

We’ve been traveling a good deal lately, and the calligraphy that I have done has mostly consisted of private commissions, so I don’t have much to show right now.

But my Farmer’s Wife sampler quilt is coming along. Back in April, I mentioned the quilt-along that my sister and I embarked on at the beginning of the year. The quilt consists of 111 unique blocks. This image shows, in chronological order of construction, all the blocks I’ve completed so far. At 64 blocks, we are more than halfway there!

Farmer's Wife quilt blocks completed so far
Farmer’s Wife quilt blocks completed so far