Volume 9, Number 4
Jul 1985
Supplies &c.
Column Editor: Robert Espinosa
For Sale By Owner
- Kwikprint gold stamper (no model no. given), Pratt Bookbinding
Unit (double handle vise-press), hand typeholder, 3 sets small brass
type, sewing frame and backing hammer. All reasonable offers
considered, plus shipping. Contact Joseph Follmar, 1032 Caledonia
St., La Crosse, WI 54603.
Suppliers
- A new source for Japanese papers direct from Japan is Paper Nao,
whose papers were included in a study by Sue Murphy and Siegfried
Rempel presented at the recent AIC conference in Washington. Paper
Nao will supply a list of types and prices of paper available, as
well as detailed specifications on each type of sheet including cold
extraction pH, handmade vs. machine-made, cooking method, drying
method, and fiber type by writing Paper Mao, 1-29-12-201 Sengoka
Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 112 Japan.
- Another source for parchments and vellums, offered for
manuscripts, binding and restoration work is Benyon Ltd., Morrison
Yard, 551A High Road N. 17, Tottenham, London.
- Japanese papers impregnated with wheat paste and a fungicide to
be activated by brushing with water for mending and the hinging of
works of art on paper under the trade-marks INSTA-MEND and
INSTA-HINGE are being marketed by Archival Products L.A., 12021
Wilshire Blvd., Suite 23, Los Angeles, CA, (213) 826-5250.
- Andrews/Nelson/Whitehead announces price decreases on all their
bookbinding leathers, including Chieftain goatskins, Aniline
bookcalfs, and Alum-tawed pigskins and goatskins, due to the low
value of the English pound sterling. The Hewit Alum-tawed pigskin is
available in white, cream, and can be special ordered in a deep
cream similar to the aged color. In addition they are now stocking
an acid-free and buffered phase box board in 58 pt thickness, in
sizes 30 x 40, 33 x 58, and 58 x 66. Contact your local distributor
or A/N/W, 31-10 48th Avenue, Long Island City, MY 11101, (212)
937-7100.
- Huckleberry Finn, a mail-order business supplying dental tools
to craftspeople, sells brand-new tools, as well as like-new but
discontinued items, factory rejects, and special, made-to-order
tools. The 10-year-old firm obtains tools in quantity from
manufacturers' overstocks and quality-control rejects, which they
say often "look and handle just like the perfect tools," but usually
cost less than one-third of the tool's original price to the dental
profession. For more information, write Huckleberry Finn, PO Box
305, Cold Hill, OR.
- Rio Grande Albuquerque, a jewelry supply house, offers many high
quality tools useful to bookbinders and conservators. They have been
an especially useful source to the column editor for such items as
pliers, snips, pin vises, precision tweezers; miniature burrs, buff
wheels, and abrasive points for flexible shaft or high speed hand
tools; buffing compounds; and all manner of files and other tools
useful for clasp-making. Two favorite items are their spring-loaded
palm grip pliers, made in Japan in a variety of nose shapes, used as
forceps while sewing through heavy materials, and their Glasgow
brushes, a stiff, short natural bristle brush used to bring up the
grain of the leather after covering. Contact Rio Grande Albuquerque,
6901 Washington N.E., Albuquerque, New Mexico 87109, (800) 545-6566,
for catalogue and price list.
Recommendations
- The day of the brush for the application of paste and PVA may be
coming to a close. Gary McLerran, who works with Craig Jensen in his
new business in Austin, Texas, has introduced us to the use of the
paint pad, sometimes called an edge trimmer, for the application of
adhesive. It is nothing short of revolutionary for the fast, even
application of a coat of adhesive on paper, cloth, board, etc. It is
especially useful when large areas need to be coated quickly,
particularly with the faster drying PVAs. The pads come in a variety
of sizes from about 9" x 5" to 1" x 1", and one will quickly develop
one s own preferred size for any particular job. They are made of a
fine napped synthetic bristly layer about 1/8" thick embedded in a
thin sponge layer about 1/4" thick. The thinner the sponge the
better, as thicker sponges tend to hold too much adhesive. They are
available in almost every paint and brush section of your favorite
hardware store, made by a variety of manufacturers, with replaceable
pads or in the throw-away variety. They wash up easily, seem to last
well if well cleaned, and are quite reasonable, anywhere from $1 to
about $7, with the pads in the $2 to $3 range. They not only result
in greater working speed and efficiency, but they contribute
enormously to those delicate jobs where the fast positioning of two
materials to be bonded is crucial to the effectiveness of the
operation, e.g. avoiding rapid expansion and cockling of the
material.
- Mindy Dubansky informs us of a source for leather paring. She
writes, "Mr. Castrogiovanni's business hasn't been tapped by binders
yet. He pares all leather in long strips but only 10" wide... For
leather hinges, labels, and onlays. People can send or take him
leather and specify how thin they want it pared. He does edge paring
also... and you get both sides of the skin back, hair and suede
side, nothing wasted." Contact Mr. Pat Castrogiovanni, Acme Leather
Trimmings, Inc., 245 W. 29th St., New York, MY 10001, (212)
947-4360.
- As a result of the announcement about the all-linen book-cloth
from Islandreagh Dyeing and Finishing Co. In the Dec. '84
AN, the column editor has received only two letters
indicating interest in a group order. The March '85 issue of
Designer Bookbinders Newsletter indicated Paul Collet, 36
Marlborough Road, London M19 4NB, is trying to organize a similar
group to make up the minimum order of 1000 meters. He says people
must be willing to take at least 20 meters. Perhaps those interested
in this country could become a part of that order, and should write
to him to pursue this option.
Equipment
A couple of articles in Fine Woodworking Techniques
2, Newtown, CT: Taunton Press, 1980, which is a selection of
articles from Fine Woodworking magazine, may be of
particular interest to bookbinders. A very inexpensive dust
collection system is described in detail in "Dust Collection System"
by Doyle Johnson, pp. 22-24, using an industrial collector or vacuum
and PVC pipe. An article on wooden screws and clamps in the same
issue, "Wooden Clamps" by Richard Showalter, pp. 42-49, gives
detailed information about their construction.
Note From the Column Editor
I am interested in compiling a list of those firms who will
manufacture custom fit book boxes from measurements supplied by the
client, including phase-type boxes/wrappers and clam-shell boxes. It
would also be useful to know the type of materials used in their
manufacture. If you can supply such boxes please contact the column
editor (6339 HBLL, Brigham Young Univ. Library, Provo, UT 84602,
801/378-7654).