Subject: Papermaking video available
Handmade-paper producers Kathryn and Howard Clark and their Twinrocker Mill in rural Indiana are featured in this half-hour documentary titled, "The Mark of the Maker." Amidst the story of the Clarks' business, the video shows and describes flax being "cooked" in a caustic liquid to eliminate non-fibrous portions prior to beating, a home-made hollander beater pounding cotton fiber to create pulp, various molds being used to form paper, the hydraulic press squeezing water out of newly-made sheets, watermarks at various stages of production from on-the-mold to dry, and the Clarks dipping sheets of paper in vats of gelatin size to produce watercolor paper. I saw only a half-length preview of the video, and there is probably even more in the full version. "Mark of the Maker" does have a self-promotional feeling to it, and I wondered about some of the statements made including this one by Kathryn Clark: "[Fifteen years ago, when we started making paper in the San Francisco area] paper was the medium that had been forgotten; somehow no one knew how to make it in this country." Still, the video provides very nice pictures of the process of making paper. "The Mark of the Maker," 1991, 28 minutes. McGowan Film and Video, Inc.; 4926 North Wolcott; Chicago 60640; 312/271-0793. 16mm film print $450. 1/2-inch VHS cassette $285. 16mm film rental $125. Free preview (15 min.) 1/2-inch VHS. *** Conservation DistList Instance 6:34 Distributed: Sunday, January 3, 1993 Message Id: cdl-6-34-005 ***Received on Friday, 1 January, 1993