
We now have 26 leather-bound copies of "The Joiner and Cabinet Maker"
available for sale that will be individually lettered, signed by both
Joel Moskowitz and myself and include the DVD in a sleeve that can be
affixed to the book.
The leather-bound edition is $165 plus $8.50 for priority mail shipping
anywhere in the United States. (Foreign orders will cost more for
shipping. Contact Sharon at sharon@lostartpress.com for a quote.)
This edition is quite special. I picked up the 26 copies on Wednesday
from the bindery, which is located in the basement of the Ohio Book
Store, a Cincinnati institution since 1940. The two brothers who work
there, Jim and Michael Fallon, have been binding books using
traditional methods and materials for more than 20 years. (Their father
owns Ohio Book Store.)
When I picked up the books Michael gave us a tour of the bindery and
the processes he used to take our unbound copies of "The Joiner and
Cabinet Maker" and add marbled end sheets, stout boards, a hand-aged
leather cover and the gold lettering on the cover and spine.
The process uses many 19th- and early 20th-century machines (one
machine was clearly once attached to a line shaft), plus many
traditional tools and materials, such as hide glue and simple knives,
and modern ones, such as PVA.
The 26 unbound editions had to be trimmed slightly to tidy up the
edges, some of which were damaged in shipment. The books were trimmed
with the guillotine. Then the books were taken to the rounder machine
to have the spines rounded. This curved shape on the spine is a
traditional touch and is done by pressing the spine against bar that
squeezes the book, allowing the operator to shape the book to the
desired shape.
A second machine squeezes the spine again to create a lip for the
boards. Then the leather is trimmed to size and thickness (a tricky
process that involves skilled handwork at the corners). Then the book
is assembled and pressed overnight.
The foil lettering is added to the spine and cover by first creating a
stamp using a Ludlow machine, which casts the stamp from lead – much
like an old Linotype machine. The slug is then chucked into an arbor
press. The press first debosses the leather (which simply creates an
impression). Then the foil is inserted and the book is stamped again.
The work the Fallons do is very nice – I looked at a lot of their
volumes before selecting them to bind these copies of "The Joiner and
Cabinet Maker." And if you have binding needs of your own, I highly
recommend them. The prices are reasonable – I shopped around – they are
fast, easy to work with and do jobs for people all over the country.
For those of you who can afford a leather-bound edition of this book, I
can promise you that you will be impressed by the craftsmanship –
you'll find that the same care that we put into writing the book is also in the binding job.
— Christopher Schwarz