Deutsch Ital

$110.00
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This archival, hand-sewn journal/sketchbook is made from 100 gsm, antique white Hahnemühle Ingres mouldmade paper from Dassel, Germany, made on the same site since 1584.  It is sewn with Irish linen thread in the linked stitch pattern that was developed by the ancient Copts.  This stitch allows the book to lay open easily at any page.

 The book’s endbands are pigskin, and its bookmark is goatskin. Its boards are wrapped a 1940 world map with Germany on the cover.  The book is half-cloth, covered in Dubletta cloth from the Netherlands.

The talisman in this book is a 1981 German 1 shilling coin, featuring the Edelweiss flower on its face. Its Latin name is Leontoppodium nivale; because of its rugged beauty, it has long been a symbol of the Alps.

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This archival, hand-sewn journal/sketchbook is made from 100 gsm, antique white Hahnemühle Ingres mouldmade paper from Dassel, Germany, made on the same site since 1584.  It is sewn with Irish linen thread in the linked stitch pattern that was developed by the ancient Copts.  This stitch allows the book to lay open easily at any page.

 The book’s endbands are pigskin, and its bookmark is goatskin. Its boards are wrapped a 1940 world map with Germany on the cover.  The book is half-cloth, covered in Dubletta cloth from the Netherlands.

The talisman in this book is a 1981 German 1 shilling coin, featuring the Edelweiss flower on its face. Its Latin name is Leontoppodium nivale; because of its rugged beauty, it has long been a symbol of the Alps.

This archival, hand-sewn journal/sketchbook is made from 100 gsm, antique white Hahnemühle Ingres mouldmade paper from Dassel, Germany, made on the same site since 1584.  It is sewn with Irish linen thread in the linked stitch pattern that was developed by the ancient Copts.  This stitch allows the book to lay open easily at any page.

 The book’s endbands are pigskin, and its bookmark is goatskin. Its boards are wrapped a 1940 world map with Germany on the cover.  The book is half-cloth, covered in Dubletta cloth from the Netherlands.

The talisman in this book is a 1981 German 1 shilling coin, featuring the Edelweiss flower on its face. Its Latin name is Leontoppodium nivale; because of its rugged beauty, it has long been a symbol of the Alps.