Ok so but after I figured out the leather and pared it down jsut right and attached it to my cover boards, Brenda decided to use it as an example for how you do Titling, which we weren't realy meant to cover but we did anyway, and it is really cool! This machine is called a quick print, and that bar in the front can hold up to like 4 or 5 lines of type, and so you position your cover (or whatever) it the right place and then pull down on the lever and it presses the type into the leather (or whatever) Oh and also we were doing it with gold leaf ( I don't know if you can do it with regular printing ink or anything---like many things in this class, I understand enough to go step by step through the one process, but I have no real idea of the greater issues or theories at work here. which....kind of sucks.) But ANYWAY what is awesome is that we used gold leaf so you jsut have this little piece of gold foil-stuff and you put it down between your book and the type and press it down and the type is heated and...yeah, you know, i have no freakign clue how ti works, at all, but the result is: |
3 comments:
So THAT'S the paring knife that was so hard to find. I was WAY off. (I have reservations about leather because remember what a jerk that guy was at the leather place? Chump.)
SERIOUSLY! I was thinking about him yesterday and how I want to go back to that store and throw my pared leather in his face and then perhaps my paring knife (Which TOTALLY EXISTS AND IS A REAL THING) at his throat. Thoughts?
I'm a little sad that you're ending the conservation part of the class, but I take solace in knowing that straight bookbinding will be even more awesome.
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