Oh Domino!
This journal is made from 85 gsm Arches hand-laid, all cotton rag paper from France. It is sewn with Belgian linen thread in the linked stitch pattern that was developed by the ancient Copts and discovered in Nag Hammadi, Egypt in 1945. This stitch allows the book to lay open at any page.
Its endbands are red and yellow cotton, and its bookmark is grosgrain ribbon. The spine is covered in dark green Dubletta cloth from the Netherlands.
Treasure binding began with monks in the 6th Century who would encrust volumes with jewels. During the Renaissance, there was a resurgence in treasure binding. This is a contemporary revival of the treasure binding in which a lucky charm has been embedded in the cover of this book.
The talisman in this book is a Bakelite, double two (snake eyes) domino. Two plus two will equal four when you tell your story from your own point of view.
This book is roughly 6.5 x 10” with more than 150 blank pages inside.
This journal is made from 85 gsm Arches hand-laid, all cotton rag paper from France. It is sewn with Belgian linen thread in the linked stitch pattern that was developed by the ancient Copts and discovered in Nag Hammadi, Egypt in 1945. This stitch allows the book to lay open at any page.
Its endbands are red and yellow cotton, and its bookmark is grosgrain ribbon. The spine is covered in dark green Dubletta cloth from the Netherlands.
Treasure binding began with monks in the 6th Century who would encrust volumes with jewels. During the Renaissance, there was a resurgence in treasure binding. This is a contemporary revival of the treasure binding in which a lucky charm has been embedded in the cover of this book.
The talisman in this book is a Bakelite, double two (snake eyes) domino. Two plus two will equal four when you tell your story from your own point of view.
This book is roughly 6.5 x 10” with more than 150 blank pages inside.
This journal is made from 85 gsm Arches hand-laid, all cotton rag paper from France. It is sewn with Belgian linen thread in the linked stitch pattern that was developed by the ancient Copts and discovered in Nag Hammadi, Egypt in 1945. This stitch allows the book to lay open at any page.
Its endbands are red and yellow cotton, and its bookmark is grosgrain ribbon. The spine is covered in dark green Dubletta cloth from the Netherlands.
Treasure binding began with monks in the 6th Century who would encrust volumes with jewels. During the Renaissance, there was a resurgence in treasure binding. This is a contemporary revival of the treasure binding in which a lucky charm has been embedded in the cover of this book.
The talisman in this book is a Bakelite, double two (snake eyes) domino. Two plus two will equal four when you tell your story from your own point of view.
This book is roughly 6.5 x 10” with more than 150 blank pages inside.