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The Last Bookbinder on the Lower East Side

62 points| bryanrasmussen | 9 years ago |lithub.com

17 comments

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[+] seliopou|9 years ago|reply
Bookbinding is a fairly easy hobby to pick up. Besides the paper, all it really requires is a flat surface, a bone folder, an awl, an x-acto knife and some needle and thread. For those in New York, SVA offers evening courses in bookmaking. The Center for Book Arts is also located somewhere in Flatiron, I believe, and offers occasional workshops on specific binding techniques.
[+] woodpanel|9 years ago|reply
I absolutely can echo that the basics are pretty simple and fun. With some creativity it makes for great gifts. I used to make docking-stations and other desk-appliances with it.

Having worked for a bookbinder for about a year though I absolutely can assure anyone "hobbyist" binding has little in common with what professionals do. There is more tooling, more (expensive) machinery, more steps and more process refactoring. As can be expected, if someone's hobby is another one's craft and income. It's less of "The journey is the reward".

[+] chx|9 years ago|reply
And dexterity and time.
[+] HillaryBriss|9 years ago|reply
I admire a guy who works for so many years. He's just gonna keep going until he literally cannot make it to the shop any more.

He likes the work. He likes what he makes. He likes the customers. Seems like a good life, a good career path -- the kind of path programmers don't necessarily get to traverse.

Pictures of his shop: https://www.yelp.com/biz_photos/henry-bookbinding-new-york

[+] caycep|9 years ago|reply
Maybe not NYC but I randomly bumped into a young woman in her 20's who was a professional bookbinder and restorer in Boston on the T about 7-8 years ago...so there is at least one representative the younger generations doing it somewhere..
[+] vachi|9 years ago|reply
He did my Masters thesis from NYU Poly, actually everyone in our department for like 30+ years was getting done with him. It was an experience that I would never forget.
[+] Animats|9 years ago|reply
But not even the last bookbinder in Manhattan.[1]

Some on-demand printing services offer hard-cover bookbinding.

[1] http://www.ivrybookbinding.com/

[+] HarryHirsch|9 years ago|reply
Some on-demand printing services offer hard-cover bookbinding.

That's not bookbinding, it's a cheap not-quite-replacement for the real thing. When difficult-to-replace volumes from your personal library start losing pages you see a bookbinder, not your corner photocopying business. University libraries used to have them on the staff, but they seem to have gone the way of the glassblower in the chemistry department. I understand that one can find still find bookbinding shops in strict-orthodox communities, people like to keep their prayer book, even after the original binding has given up.

[+] jawbone3|9 years ago|reply
Yeah, I could find at least three here in Stockholm, so it would be a pretty damning sign of american book culture if NYC couldn't produce more than one...