Ontario
This archival journal/sketchbook is made from 120 gsm Arches hand-laid, all cotton rag paper from France. 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 at any page.
Its endbands and bookmark are goatskin. The book is half-cloth, covered with Dubletta book cloth from the Netherlands, and its boards are wrapped washi paper that was silk-screened in a factory in Japan where kimono silks are printed.
The talisman in this book is a souvenir coin from Ontario, Canada, depicting the white trillium. The famed white trillium is propagated mostly by ants spreading their seeds; from the mighty efforts of the small come great rewards.
This archival journal/sketchbook is made from 120 gsm Arches hand-laid, all cotton rag paper from France. 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 at any page.
Its endbands and bookmark are goatskin. The book is half-cloth, covered with Dubletta book cloth from the Netherlands, and its boards are wrapped washi paper that was silk-screened in a factory in Japan where kimono silks are printed.
The talisman in this book is a souvenir coin from Ontario, Canada, depicting the white trillium. The famed white trillium is propagated mostly by ants spreading their seeds; from the mighty efforts of the small come great rewards.
This archival journal/sketchbook is made from 120 gsm Arches hand-laid, all cotton rag paper from France. 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 at any page.
Its endbands and bookmark are goatskin. The book is half-cloth, covered with Dubletta book cloth from the Netherlands, and its boards are wrapped washi paper that was silk-screened in a factory in Japan where kimono silks are printed.
The talisman in this book is a souvenir coin from Ontario, Canada, depicting the white trillium. The famed white trillium is propagated mostly by ants spreading their seeds; from the mighty efforts of the small come great rewards.