Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Friday, August 02, 2013
Tuesday, January 08, 2013
The Book Club of California Centennial
The design for the centennial celebration of The Book Club of California via Felt & Wire.
I am completely charmed by the idea of a book club devoted to the love of the printed book, whose members include artists, collectors, and printers. If you're one of the 1000 members you receive a letterpress printed "Quarterly News-Letter" ("QN-L" for short) and other exclusive printed perks. Sweet.
The claim is that the newsletter is the only letterpress printed newsletter in the U.S. There are pictures of various covers of previous newsletters on the site, and a notice that some issues can soon be read via a PDF.
This logo was designed by designer Michael Osborne, and I took particular note because I just designed, in my own bumbling Illustrator way, a similar rectangle as a return address for myself.
Monday, January 23, 2012
50/50
An annual exhibit at the AIGA National Design Center presents the best in book design and book covers published in 2010 in the 2011 competition.
All of the book covers are in the design archives here.
A few of my favorites ...
This book is a memoir of two years in the life of a Jewish librarian in a Boston prison. The portrait is made up of colored library date stamps.

This is one of my favorite reads of 2011.

And this one was gifted to me by my daughter for Christmas.
This book is a memoir of two years in the life of a Jewish librarian in a Boston prison. The portrait is made up of colored library date stamps.


And this one was gifted to me by my daughter for Christmas.
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Book of the Month Club
| Via Spoon & Tamago |
The concept is a mobile pop-up book shop, and this second iteration was called Numabookcat.
This sculpture in books is great, but there's more. After a conversation with the bookseller and the exchange of 4200 yen, you would be mailed a book every month for a year based on this interview. Kind of like telling your fortune in books.
How often would the book selection be just right, I wonder?
Saturday, August 15, 2009
Not Mastering the Art of French Cooking
Looking forward to seeing "Julie and Julia" after having read the book for book group this year.
When at the Smithsonian Museum of American History this summer we saw Julia's kitchen on display. It would no longer be possible to place a stick of butter, or any other tribute, actually in the kitchen. It's all behind plexiglass now.
Sunday, September 07, 2008
Anthropologie



Pictures are from (1,2) casasugar, (3) apartment therapy through aesthetic outburst, and (4, 5) dreambirdz.
These displays almost make me want to buy some overpriced clothing... or at least a doorknob.
Labels:
altered art,
altered books,
book arts,
books
Sunday, August 03, 2008
Breaking Dawn Masquerade Ball
Barnes and Noble announced a masquerade ball for the book release party of Stephenie Meyer's Breaking Dawn, and we decided to make masks for the event. M. and friends gathered on a Friday night and decorated paper-mache covered plastic masks with paint, fabric trim, feathers, sequins, jewels, etc. We made a fine mess.
I decided to make one at the last minute. You never know when you might be invited to a ball.
At the ball, there were many fans who were dressed in prom/homecoming type dresses or vampire black and fancy and not so fancy masks. I don't think I've ever been to a midnight release party, but it was kind of fun. I pulled up a footstool and browsed through several art/collage books after admiring all the finery. We chose not to dress up, but did carry the masks with us.
This young couple, who had made their masks that day, using plaster strips to form them, allowed me to take a picture of them. They and we were at the very front of the line, along with others who had submitted art (M.s friend!) or had been to all three of the release parties.
At one minute to midnight, the wrappings were torn off the cases of books waiting behind the counter. By 12:05 we were out the door and on the way home...
M. finished the book before she went to bed tonight. I still have two more to go before I can read it.
Wednesday, October 10, 2007
Mississippi Houseboat
My book group took a weekend excursion on the Mississippi on a houseboat, courtesy of the planning and piloting of a member and her friend who loves being on the river. We had to have a book, of course... and that book was The River Queen.
Houseboats in a row.
Home away from home. Very cozy, with electricity and a real live bathroom.
Close quarters, but comfy nonetheless.
Our main activities were kayaking, eating, reading, eating,
talking, eating, admiring the views as we toodled up and down the river,
and eating.
The food... many thanks to the book club members, all of whom it seems are quite accomplished cooks. My contribution was an appetizer of hot spiced pecans, and a Red Velvet Cake, a redux of a club meeting for Getting Mother's Body.
The views... the houseboat as we traveled up and down the river or were anchored on a beach, from the kayaks... lazily paddling through the back byways and collecting monkeypods, riding along with or struggling against the current of the Mississippi.
Though it looks idyllic... there were a few "inconveniences" ~
the unexpected and unseasonable heat wave, the flies, the no-see-ums.
Just a little reminder.
Monday, January 02, 2006
60 Books Project

This is my first page for the 60 Books Project. Sketched with a pencil and then a micron pigment pen. Used watercolor pencils and an alpha rubberstamp set. (There's a message in amongst the letters. Pay no attention to the word "stork" though... that happened before I realized that it's much easier to spell words when you're not trying to than one might think. Why I'm not better at Scrabble I don't know.)
Funny that I heard about the 60 Books Project through a yahoo group - Everydaymatters - even though it takes place in my own hometown. I looked up the details on the Wisconsin Book Festival site, though. My book group went to see Isabel Allende (http://www.isabelallende.com/) when she lectured as part of the Festival. We read "House of the Spirits" prior to seeing her, and will be reading another of her books for our January meeting.
Labels:
altered books,
art stamps,
artists,
book arts,
books,
drawing
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