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Tuesday, 23 August 2011

This great book book!

Pictures and useful information from: Avella, N. (2003) Paper Engineering: 3D design techniques for a 2D material. Sussex: RotoVision


Design: Roundel
Client: Zanders
Project: Lanagraphic catalogue

This design (two books attached by the same cover) is called a dos-à-dos, (French for 'back-to-back'). This technique was used to bind together related books such as the old and new testaments of the bible and Homer's The Illiad and The Odyssey. After reading the first book you turn the whole thing over and start again from the back, which is the front of the second book. 

this could be a really cool way to do chapters, to have a different writing sample in each zig or zag. The difference would be that I'd want to have more than two books joint together so you read all the zig books and when you finish those you flip over the the zag books. (19)




Design: Yorgo Tloupas
Client: Eurostar
Project: Promotional packaging

This was designed to advertise the Eurostar overnight to Parisian youths and contains cd and info about clubs, eats, etc. (69) Very, very cool!



Design: Yorgo Tloupas
Client: Intersection (car magazine)
Project: Business cards

(111)



Ron van der Meer
makes pop-up books for adults! This is very cool, however, from the pictures in this book at least they don't really look like books I would be interested in reading: crashes, disasters, architecture........ though I really can't  say no to a pop up book and maybe I should be reading about those things... who knows. These are some very expensive, very popular books. There is one on sailing that, according to this book, sells for around 600US$.
'"The paper we use is 16% of the strength of a sheet of metal and the same thickness," explains van der Meer. "It consists of short fibers which, when folded, give a sharp edge, and in our case allows the paper 'sculpture' to be folder about a thousand times without any splitting. For the average pop-up book we use ten-points paper. In other words 220gsm coated on two sides. The sheet size used is 28 x 40 inches. On these sheets we arrange our book. The individual pieces have to be laid out, or 'nested', next to each other on the sheets in such a way that they take into account the grain of the paper, which helps with the strength of the folds, and also the closeness to the pieces to reduce wasted space, and therefore cost."' (96)

Research shows that readers are likely to retain 75% of the information in one of van der Meer's book, compared to 20% of a normal book because it interacts on more levels, information is not gathered purely by reading.





I want this dress!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Design: Elisabeth Lecourt
Project: Map dresses

The style of the clothes is linked to the place portrayed on the map they are made with. The dresses are in childrens' sizes and deal with memories of childhood. Lecourt doesn't use patterns, and cannot sew. The dresses are not wearable.
(125)


Design: Charlie Thomas
Project: Paper clothes

The paper clothes making came about for window displays. He was then invited to take part in an exhibition at Sothebys called Out of the Closet--Clothes of the Unwearable.
And apparently paper clothes aren't so rare as he was joined by "fellow paper clothes maker Hussein Chalayan" (124).


Makes many creative books, 50 of which are made from just one sheet of paper. 

'Hutchins believe that the structure and design of a book can play just as important a part in manipulating readers through a narrative than text or illustrations. "When there are fewer, larger words on the page, the reader turns the pages more quickly than when there are smaller , densely packed words. The reader will turn the page faster if there is an unfinished sentence, than when there is a complete sentence. It makes a difference whether the reader turns one page at a time, or can view the entire text at one glance when the pages are spread out concertina fashion. With an illustration on the page the viewer looks at the surface. With a tunnel book [a book constructed from a number of planes with die-cuts through which you look] the viewer enters inside the illustration."' (135)
The tunnel book above was made out of postcards collected on a trip across the states. "reminiscent of Victoriana-style peep-shows" (135)

Hutchins' studied here.


(this pie book is Hutchins' as well.)




Design: Zuan Club
Client: Arjo Wiggins Japan
Project: Greeting cards

So cool! (is my critical judgement.)

this is simple and so cool!

Design: hat-trick
Client: Rabih Hage
Project: Identity and promotional items




Design: Ally (now Allies)
Project: Change-of-address-card

Tuesday, 16 August 2011

Architecture lecture


Click on them to see them at a readable size. When I finally finish my graphology post you'll be able to analyse my handwriting...spooky.
















Wednesday, 3 August 2011

NOMNOMNOM I hope you're hungry

I've been working on a post on handwriting analysis, but it's taking quite a while, so I thought in the mean time I'd make you a post of pretty things to tide you over. (You can eat them with your eyes.)


these two, by Joyce Rosenfeld and Thomas Allen are cool things done with books already in existence. I can't see the lamp things relating to anything I do, but the cutouts are something that I have had my coveting eye on for a while now, and if I can find an excuse I intend to have a play. On the otherhad, if I can find some old books and the courage to cut them, I'll jut do it and put it in this here workblog.

Elaine O Chu

Some practical book stitching Thinking this might be an option for binding, but it depends on how thick my book is, I'm not sure that I'll have enough pages.

Heather Lea Birdsall

Box book! This is so cute! I like the idea of having loose pages that you can hold and reorder. And I really like boxes. On the other hand, due to my intention to create a narrative, the ability to reorder would probably to inappropriate.


different book making ideas
booksboooksbooks
These all look like they're pretty basic, they just have bright, patterened colours.
At this stage my plan is to use embroidery on wallpapaer for my cover.


more book making ideas


Elaine O Chu

further book idea
I like the idea of having flaps. I'd like to see a picture of this book closed.

Rebecca Ward

This is that thing I was telling you about earlier!!!! I went trawling to try and find the blog it belonged to, but turns out it was in a real live book instead. This is where my current fascination with embroidered handwriting originated.

Amy Rubin Flett
  and Alison Wilder

Neither of these are really book ideas but they're cool and book related



These are both Diem Chau, 'Grasp' and 'Float',and I know they don't really relate, but this is the last time I apologise for irrelevance. So very, very, very cool.






Joetta Maue, 'Afraid You Will Stop', 'Must Survive', 'Fucked Up and Flawed', and detail from 'In Working Thought'

these are some further embroidered handwriting examples, soon I will put up some of my own! There is just something so lovely about stitched handwriting, like calculated flaws.



Marloes Dukyer

This and the following are examples of interesting and contemporary use of embroidery, mostly done using a machine.


Naomi Ryder



Pattie Chalmers

Marloes Dukyer (again), 'Sweet Finger'


Jarod Charzewski,
I got really excited when I saw this.


Amy Rubin Flett

stuff done with strips of handwriting

the pictures with numbers and caption things are from:

Johnson, G. (2009) 1000 Ideas for Creative Reuse. Massachusetts: Quarry Books

the others are from

Waterhouse, J. (2010) Indie Craft. London: Laurence King Publishing