Archive for Paper

Making a Cased-in Photo Album: Casing In the Book Block
September 4th, 2007 | Link

Previously, I explained how to cut the cover boards and spine piece, how to cut the decorative paper and book cloth, and how to assemble the case for a photo album.

In this section, I’ll explain how to case in the album block. This is the last step!

Rather than stopping to take pictures every few minutes while I was dealing with fast-drying glue and trying to hold the book in position at the same time, I decided to create a video tutorial.

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Making a Cased-in Photo Album: Assembling the Case
September 3rd, 2007 | Link

Previously, I explained how to measure and cut the cover boards and spine piece and how to measure and cut the decorative paper and book cloth for constructing the case.

In this section, you’ll learn how to assemble the case. Put down some waxed paper or scrap paper, because today we’re going to glue!

Keep a damp cloth close by when gluing, and change out your scrap paper or wax paper frequently. It’s very disappointing to discover that you’ve accidentally set your beautiful paper or book cloth in some leftover glue. Wipe your fingers quickly whenever you touch the glue. I like to rip off a dozen sheets of wax paper and stack them beside me before I start gluing. I fold over the glued part as I use each sheet, and grab a new sheet as I need it.

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Making a Cased-in Photo Album: Cutting the Book Cloth and Cover Paper
September 2nd, 2007 | Link

Decorative paper and book cloth, cut in preparation for covering the case

Previously, I explained how to measure and cut the cover boards and spine piece for the case.

In this section, you’ll learn how to measure and cut the decorative paper and book cloth to cover the case. How much of your cover is book cloth and how much is decorative paper is a matter of personal preference. Common proportions are for the book cloth to take up 1/3, 1/5 or 1/8 of the cover board width. You’re going to need a little math for this.

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Making a Cased-in Photo Album: Cutting the Cover Boards and Spine Piece
September 1st, 2007 | Link

Front and back cover boards and spine piece

Previously, I talked about tools and materials you’ll need for making a cased-in photo album.

In this section, you’ll learn how to measure and cut the book board and spine piece. My sample book block is a 30-page, medium-sized album block from Hollander’s, but I’ll explain how to measure for any block size.

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Making a Cased-In Photo Album: Tools and Materials
August 31st, 2007 | Link

In this section, I’ll cover some of the tools and materials required to make your own hard cover photo album.

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Bartering Lines
March 8th, 2007 | Link

One of my coworkers, Jos, made one of my other coworkers (or actually, her bandmate) a steel device to help in measuring sound waves. It has a flat round base with a rocket-ship-shaped thing welded to it, the tip of which is really pointy and sharp. How pointy and sharp? Well, let’s just say that after playing with it for a bit the other day it’s a good thing I’m up to date on my tetanus shot.

On what would normally be a completely unrelated note, I finished a bunch of new photo albums last night (starting here on Flickr) and brought them in to work today to show to yet another coworker. And since Jos has a deep respect for handmade things (he’s building his own electric car) and he happened to ask whether I’d made any new books lately, I showed them to him, too.

When I first picked up the pointy sound-wave-measuring device, one of the first things that came to mind was that the base would make a good weight for bookbinding. It’s the right size, and heavy (being steel), and would be perfect for weighing down sections while I’m sewing. I bought two three-pound weights from Hollander’s a couple of months ago and those have worked out well, but I would like more, perhaps heavier, weights and between the cost of the actual weights and the added cost of shipping them I have held off getting any.

While Jos was looking at my books I asked where he’d gotten the steel for the sound-wave thingy, and what grew from that was a barter. He is going to make me a couple of steel weights to my specifications, with welded-on handles; in exchange, I will make him a custom photo album. I’m super excited about the idea. Bartering just seems so much cooler than selling.

Long Stitch Variations
July 23rd, 2006 | Link

Long stitch binding variations

I’ve felt like I’m in a Japanese-paper-covered-photo-album rut in bookbinding, so this weekend I broke out Keith Smith’s Volume I Non-Adhesive Binding:
Books Without Paste or Glue
and armed myself with some handmade paper from Flax and tried something I haven’t done before.

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Three Small Photo Albums and a Journal
June 29th, 2006 | Link

Kilim woodblock print photo album (approx. 8 inches by 6 inches, 30 pages)

Creativity is not necessarily tied to prolificacy, and I can be prolific, if not creative. These are all from last weekend. The nice thing about bookbinding is it’s easy to get handsome results without a great deal of skill. Much as I hate to admit it, the only real skill involved when using premade text blocks and beautiful papers is cutting a straight line and not getting glue all over everything.

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Grown-up’s Album
April 23rd, 2006 | Link

Small brag book with 10 black pages (approx. 6 inches square)

Around the same time I went through my baby-album-making frenzy, I also finished up this small photo album I made for my husband. I made the book block months ago but only got around to casing it in recently. The album is about six inches square with 10 pages of black Arches Cover paper which are glued together. I’m not thrilled with the book block, but it was an experiment. I like the dramatic cover though.

At some point I will fill it with small black and white photos. But that’s for another day.

Baby Albums
April 22nd, 2006 | Link

Floral photo album (approx. 12 inches square, 30 pages) and matching journal (approx. 9.75 x 5.75 inches, 144 pages)

A couple weekends back I got into a bit of an album-making frenzy. I’d purchased a number of album blocks from Hollander’s in two sizes, and I spent a day just cutting bookboard and book cloth and Japanese papers, and another day gluing cases together and casing in the album blocks. The result was five albums (three large, two small) and a matching journal for one of the large albums.

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About

My name is Shannon Hale. This blog is on indefinite hiatus, but it contains archives of the last 10 years of posts about bookbinding, knitting, sewing. and other random things in my life.

Previously

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2006: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

2005: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12