Type Chess

Type Chess Set from Tossed and FoundThis chess set made from wood type and a type tray aren’t from someone who loves type or even chess, but from a book by 2 designers called Tossed and Found.

What some view as trash, Linda and John Meyers see as raw material. The wife-and-husband team—subscribers to the “reduce, reuse, recycle” ethos—have perfected a design strategy that will save you money, help the planet, and provide hours of DIY fun. The strategy? First, visit a yard sale, construction-site dumpster, or even your own attic. Select something that somebody (even you) thought had outlived its usefulness. Then, transform that castoff into a piece that’s interesting and usable.

You can see projects from the book here, and read how they made the chess set here.

{via printinteresting}

Summer 2009 Ampersand

Summer 2009 AmpersandThe Summer 2009 Ampersand, quarterly book arts journal of the PCBA, recently came out. This is my last issue as editor — after 5 years I’m ready to hand it off to someone else! Yvonne Tsang, a letterpress printer here in San Francisco, takes over with the Fall 2009 issue. The Summer issue features a “how-to” article by Ginger Burrell on making two variations of the star book. You can see 2 of Ginger’s star books here and here.
Back issues of the Ampersand are here.

Muybridge Zoetrope

Muybridge Zoetrope papercraft 180px-zoetrope.jpgA zoetrope is a device used for displaying animations. Inside a cylinder attach a set of sequenced images, then cut slits in the cylinder. Looking through the slits as the cylinder is spun, the succession of images produce the illusion of motion. Eadweard Muybridge, through a famous set of photos he took of a horse running, answered the question “do all four of a horse’s hooves left the ground at the same time during a gallop.” Those pictures are perfect for a zoetrope or flipbook. There’s a free zoetrope you can cut out and make here using the galloping horse pictures. It spins on a pencil…

Navigating

Horton Family MapsWhen we returned home from Santa Fe, there was a comment on one of my recent posts about maps that said “maps are almost obsolete with GPS and all…” and that made me think about our experience navigating and learning the layout of Santa Fe.
Before we left, I got a AAA map, but it required a magnifying glass to read the street names so it proved useless. From the Santa Fe tourism board, I had several sketchy maps that it turns out didn’t extend to the little casita (small short term rental in the back of someone’s house) we’d booked for the week. I printed a handful of maps + directions from Google, giving the path from the casita to various restaurants and tourist sites (these were the most useful). And I also brought our Garmen GPS system that plugs into the cigarette lighter of my car.
I bought the Garmen several years ago because I have no sense of direction and am more apt to get lost than make my way directly to wherever I’m going. I give it a mixed review — on the plus side, I’ve always gotten where I need to go. On the negative, it can take 10 minutes to get a satellite signal at night or if it’s rainy or cloudy and worst of all, it invariably picks the dumbest route ever. Once, in San Francisco, it took me through Chinatown then the busy shopping district in Union Square, and finally asked me to make a left hand turn with a lot of traffic and no light. There had to have been a better way!
We used the Garmen the first day or 2, all the while discussing how we might learn the layout of the neighborhood where we were staying. There were lots of streets with similar names, streets that dead-ended and several more going only one way. My husband tried to identify & remember landmarks, I tried memorizing the street names.
Then someone we met suggested the Horton Family Maps. It’s a book of street maps of the area, and almost instantly I was able to get a big picture of the town and figure out the distance between places (the Garmen will tell me how many minutes to get somewhere, but it’s awkward to figure out how many miles). We still used the Garmen, but with the book we were able to figure out alternate routes to the inefficient ones the Garmen suggested. (The map guide is family owned and only covers Santa Fe, Taos, Los Alamos area. There’s a nice article about them here.)
I must admit that I found it fascinating watching us attempt to learn to navigate a new place! What do you like to use to learn how to get around a new town?

Visiting Santa Fe

Outdoor sculpture in Santa Fe, NMThis past week my husband & I took a short trip to Santa Fe, NM. We saw outdoor sculpture on what seemed like every corner, and in front of many galleries, including this bronze archway made of books with a child reading at the top. Santa Fe has a very active book arts group; you can see their recent group show here.
One highlight of the week was my visit to Suzanne Vilmain’s studio. She’s lived in and around Santa Fe a long time, but I met her when she lived for a year in Berkeley and attended book arts meetings at SFCB. Since returning to Santa Fe, she’s acquired a letterpress, and I got to see her work plus her large and wonderful collection of wood and metal type. The visit made me itch to get back to my studio to print!