Subject: A death
Stella Patri, Doyenne of S.F. Bookbinders Eric Brazil, Chronicle Staff Writer, Friday, April 6, 2001 San Francisco--Stella Nicole Patri, who became an icon among American bookbinders and manuscript restorers during a career she began when she was in her 60s, is dead at age 104. **** Moderator's comments: Because this material is protected by copyright, only a brief fragment is quoted here. The complete article, which provides much biographical information is available at <URLhttp://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/ article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/ 2001/04/06/MN11029.DTL NB: The above URL is wrapped for email. There should be no newlines. Mrs. Patri's eventful and adventurous life touched on three centuries, from her birth in 1896 in Montreal, Canada, to her death March 31 at the Sonoma home of her son Remo Patri. "She was the grand dame of bookbinding and an incredible friend," said Johanna Goldschmid, a bookbinder and rare book specialist, "She was a great inspiration. No superlatives could reach how wonderful Stella was." ... Mrs. Patri was a survivor of the 1906 earthquake in San Francisco, and before embarking on her life's work had been a wife and mother, an expert milliner, a welder, a bookseller and a committed social activist. The Hand Bookbinders of California, of which she was a founding member, lavished tributes on Mrs. Patri on her 100th birthday and called her "a model of a persistent spirit." ... It was while working at Newbegins and Paul Elder San Francisco bookstores after her divorce from art school founder Giacomo Patri that Mrs. Patri became interested in the physical structure of books. In 1962, she sailed for Rome to study the restoration of antique documents at the Istituto di Patologia dei Libri, which became the foundation of her professional career. She also studied bookbinding in London and fancy book finishing in Paris. When the Arno River flooded Florence, Italy, in 1966, soaking whole libraries of valuable ancient documents in mud and slime, Mrs. Patri, who spoke Italian, was among the "mud angel" volunteers who repaired and restored the damaged books. She later became an instructor for other volunteers. ... Plans for a celebration of her life are pending. Mrs. Patri's family requests that donations in her name be made to American Indian and AIDS causes and to the United Farm Workers, all of which she supported during her life. San Francisco Chronicle, 6 April, 2001 (c) 2001 San Francisco Chronicle Stella Patri joined the Guild of Book Workers in 1962 and was made an Honorary Member of the organization in 1993. She was a founding member of the Hand Bookbinders of California. She will be missed. Betty Storz Mendocino, CA Book repair and restoration *** Conservation DistList Instance 14:55 Distributed: Thursday, April 19, 2001 Message Id: cdl-14-55-001 ***Received on Friday, 13 April, 2001