Friday, April 11, 2014
And now for the annual paper decorating orgy
an on again off again sort of tradition in the bindery. gather a few friends, boil up a little paste and "commencez l'emeute!''
bookbinding II winter 2014
nice results from the bookbinding II class this winter. everyone glad to have the split board binding done and dusted. (last class on Sunday and we're kicking back with a German case binding.)
Friday, March 7, 2014
Now on Display at Massey College
Just installed this at Massey College, U of T:
DON TAYLOR
Stealing Time: Design Bindings and Artist’s Books
www.dontaylorbookbinder.com
In the past 30 or so years, seemingly whether time has permitted or not, I have occasionally caught myself taking this precious commodity away from my work as a bookbinder and restorer to produce what I have always called “my own” work. This has usually taken the form of design bindings, i.e. interpretative fine bindings of an existing text, and artist’s books in which I have acted as creator of both text and binding.
The impetus has frequently been to take part in book arts exhibitions such as “The Art of the Book”, a major Canadian show mounted every five years by The Canadian Bookbinders and Book Artists Guild. And in recent years, I have had to sneak periods of up to a few weeks on the trot to take part in shows conceived and executed within the small community of letterpress printers, binders, calligraphers, and others committed to the book arts. These are my friends and colleagues. I have tried to spin the enormously creative contact available from such people as George Walker, Will Rueter, Margaret Lock, Susan Warner Keene, Nancy Jacobi and my studio partners, Reg Beatty and Kate Murdoch, into experiences that take me deeper into exploration of skills or new directions. These moments of stolen “me time”, as much as they are challenging and even infuriating, are as wonderfully luxurious and satisfying as an extended bubble bath.
Nevertheless the market for such work lies in the range between small and non-existent. So what is the point of this kind of larceny? Love of the materials, respect for collaborators, and the desire to “make”- that’s what makers do-all in the name of keeping books, in all their incredible variety, going strong. After all, the book is of course incomparably civilization’s greatest achievement. Let’s not forget that.
I am grateful to Massey College for the opportunity to show these results of my long-term embezzlement. DT March 2014
Friday, January 31, 2014
Submission to the "Contemporary Bindings of Private Press Books Touring Exhibition 2014-15"
A new binding for submission to the "Contemporary Bindings of Private Press Books Touring Exhibition 2014-15". "Tonge's Travels" was published by The Old School Press in Bath and features watercolour illustrations by John Watts. The original was a manuscript travel diary from 1857 recording Mr. George Tonge's boat trip through the Mediterranean. I used my paste papers cut into strips and onlaid onto the full calf binding to suggest both water and the notion of a hand-written document. I added a couple of Moleskine style touches including a pocket in the back which I supplied with paste paper "postcards" of sights along the route, and a foredge strap, here depicted lying in front of the open book. The show opens at St Bride's Church, Fleet St., London on May 14 of this year. See you at the opening!
Friday, January 10, 2014
Sherlock for Christmas
A Xmas present for my wife, a big Sherlock fan from way back. Mary cautiously permitted me to rebind her taped up 2 volume set of the Complete Stories that she has had since the early '70's. She had indicated a liking for one of my recent paste papers-this one with added black ink details that gave it a certain spikeyness. That and a bit of green goatskin did the trick. She liked the result -which made two of us.
Monday, December 23, 2013
Merry Christmas
At the Koffler Gallery. Sara Angelucci's contribution to "We're in the Library" dedicated to the opening of the new Artscape building on Shaw St. Sara had us make concertina books of increasingly dark prints made from tintypes of 10 unidentified schoolchildren. The children "disappeared" as the prints darkened to obscurity. The books were then housed in clamshell boxes that also hold the original tintypes and the books and boxes displayed on a custom made library cart equipped with headphones on which are playing children's voices reading stories. This was a project that we got more and more attached to as it neared completion. See the article in this week's NOW magazine.
Congratulations Sara.
UPCOMING COURSES:
Gothic Bookbinding and......
Gothic Book Furniture
see the CBBAG.ca website for details.
and a MERRY CHRISTMAS TO YOU ALL
from Don, Kate, Reg, Laura and Lee.
(Kate did this Xmas binding just for you. Well actually it was a movie prop but it fits here)
Friday, December 6, 2013
Finishing Book Arts 3 and My Contribution to the Book Arts Fair
Recently wrapped up my Bookbinding 3 class. Here's a couple of nice results by the students:
Paste Decorated Papers
Half Binding in Goat
Also, the 29th Annual Book Arts Fair was last Saturday. A student from Bookbinding 3, Brian, came by and took a couple of photos:
Talk to the Hand TShirt
A shot of me modelling the shirt, with Manu of Deer Press fame.
If you'd like to purchase a shirt of your own, send me an email: dstbook@gmail.com.
PayPal accepted.
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