| To A Friend Going Blind
A tender poem by Pulitzer prize winning poet Jorie Graham paired with an inventive binding.
The Poem
Jorie Graham's poem To a Friend Going Blind is about life's
boundaries. Most of us think of boundaries as limitations, but they
also give life its shape. And what about the gaps—those
seemingly useless spaces—that surprise us with a view into
profound understanding. Graham uses sewing, fabric and dressmaking to
expose the beauty found both in life's limitations and those useless
gaps. Read the poem here.
The Book
To bring Graham's metaphor to life, I've used a measuring tape to bind
the book. The tape weaves into the pages, creating visual gaps. I've
covered some pages with pattern pieces. The pattern paper may seem to
obscure the text, but it also asks the reader to look between the
lines at those seemingly useless spaces and gaps.
The pattern pieces are different in each book.
The Edition
To a Friend... is printed letterpress from
photopolymer plates on a hand-feed C&P platen press,
using Adobe Minion on Copperplate paper.
The binding
structure was developed by Elizabeth Steiner. It is an ingeniously
simple method of allowing single pages to be combined, with each
successive leaf locking the previous leaf in place.
(You can find out more about the binding method
here.)
Designed, printed and bound by Susan Angebranndt.
The book is housed in a clear Denril vellum
pouch and measures 4"x6". An edition of 50.
Out of Print
|