Saturday, December 16, 2017

paper fiber/fiber paper

 antidote for a bad cold:
kitchen papermaking
i made the pulp over at Zone 4 (school)
and brought home a couple of quarts.
(below you can also see one of hannah's dish cloths, water, a split rock and some dyed fern spores in the jar.)
i'm using carriage house flax and it's delicious and beautiful pulp.
it takes such a short time to beat, less than an hour in the valley.
but the cold meant that my energy lasted only until i'd finished the beat,
so just like the times when i have some pulp left over from the big vat, i bring it home to make some little sheets in a little vat. it's a way to use it all up.
so having a tiny set up in the kitchen means i can make paper,
sneeze and cough, drink medicinal tinctures and teas, 
and nap between posts (wet sheets). i can even take it all out to the hydraulic press and leave it for a while, press slowly, and then retrieve, then put in blotters and press in the iron book press and change them every few hours. this is easy in my house, especially since my kitchen is not the kitchen of someone who loves to cook.
this wouldn't work for normal size paper, but for these tiny ones, it's a pleasure.
my beautiful moulds, one laid, one wove, were made by lee macdonald,
and i got them during one of handpapermaking's auctions.
i absolutely love them.
 i can't imagine that i'll ever be able to afford a larger size traditional mahogany and brass mould, but i have these sweet minis.
 i can fit 10 on a half felt, fold it over and make 10 more. i usually make about 100 at a time.
it's funny, this has been a constant for years, no matter what size sheets i'm pulling, i have about a hundred. not always 100 good sheets, mind you. 
 right now i have a bucket of flax left at Z4, and 5 quarts here, and i've started to experiment some with earth pigments again. i bought the maiwa set, three jars in melbourne, (trace willans sent me some, too, but those are for surface work)
 above is the sum total of the good part of a bad cold.
about 350 sheets.
i've placed them on a handwoven hemp cloth from mjolk.
 here you can see them with as much detail as i could tease out of the iphone
which admittedly is not much.
flax is beautiful,
and takes some getting used to after my years working with foraged plant fibers
and relearning rag processing this past year.
how many items from my closet are now editions of paper?
and one or two are now books in process.
this work is in preparation for two things on my horizon, PBI (paper and book intensive) in may, and a papermaking class for fall 2018 at SLU. imagine, an entire semester of papermaking with a sustainability theme!
aimee posted some books and birds in the works and newly completed. i love them.
and sarah challenges me to see life though comic eyes, a good thing. both of these women draw comics which i think frame life in a way that reminds me of funny medieval marginalia doodlers mixed with the sunday papers.

10 comments:

  1. Beautiful mini-papers! I hope you feel better soon.

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  2. (((Velma))) such beautiful papers!

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  3. donna, i do feel much better, it was a doozie!
    mo, hugs back, and thanks.

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  4. You have some beautiful papers to show for a long long week!

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  5. thanks, nan, it was two + altogether... thanks to antibiotics, the sinusitis part cleared quickly.

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  6. beautiful little papers, can't wait to see what they become?

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  7. neki, just some nice little sheets...
    jean, i have a few ideas, and another bucket or so of pulp before i beat the next pound.

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  8. V - gorgeous mini paper making frames. B

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  9. barry, they are traditional wove and laid moulds, made by Lee MacDonald. he makes nifty papermaking tools.

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