Three Pointer
This book is made from 80# sulphite drawing paper sewn with Belgian flax thread in the linked stitch pattern that was used by the ancient Copts and re-discovered in Nag Hamadi, Egypt in 1945. It allows the book to lay open easily at any point.
The endbands in this book are brown and yellow silk, and the bookmark is calfskin. This book is completely wrapped in calfskin, and its endpapers were hand-marbled in Bangladesh.
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 mid-century basketball medal showing two players in the foreground and two in the background. It is a bronze relief sculpture that is slightly larger than 1.25” in diameter. Shoot from far out, in spite of the obstacles and odds.
This book is made from 80# sulphite drawing paper sewn with Belgian flax thread in the linked stitch pattern that was used by the ancient Copts and re-discovered in Nag Hamadi, Egypt in 1945. It allows the book to lay open easily at any point.
The endbands in this book are brown and yellow silk, and the bookmark is calfskin. This book is completely wrapped in calfskin, and its endpapers were hand-marbled in Bangladesh.
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 mid-century basketball medal showing two players in the foreground and two in the background. It is a bronze relief sculpture that is slightly larger than 1.25” in diameter. Shoot from far out, in spite of the obstacles and odds.
This book is made from 80# sulphite drawing paper sewn with Belgian flax thread in the linked stitch pattern that was used by the ancient Copts and re-discovered in Nag Hamadi, Egypt in 1945. It allows the book to lay open easily at any point.
The endbands in this book are brown and yellow silk, and the bookmark is calfskin. This book is completely wrapped in calfskin, and its endpapers were hand-marbled in Bangladesh.
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 mid-century basketball medal showing two players in the foreground and two in the background. It is a bronze relief sculpture that is slightly larger than 1.25” in diameter. Shoot from far out, in spite of the obstacles and odds.