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01 October 2007

A Book of Magnitude

On Saturday, authors from all genres and categories gathered on the Mall in Washington, DC for the National Book Festival.

I'm a book nerd so I had to attend, especially since Terry Pratchett, one of my favorite authors, was going to speak and sign books.

The event was thrown by The Library of Congress (and Laura Bush), so they had a tent set up with plenty of relevant resources and interactive displays. A big graffiti wall stretched across a whole side of the tent and volunteers stood before it offering sharpies to the masses. Said masses were guided by three questions (here paraphrased): What books have influenced you or shaped your life? What would you preserve at the Library of Congress? What will you write?


Hundreds of adults and children have signed the wall. For the question pictured above, I scribbled "books about books" and "hand-bound art books," because I was in an artsy mood.

A display at the other side of the tent contained a large, naked book. Its leaves were poster-sized sheets of foam covered with sharpie signatures from visitors of all ages. One folded sheet made a signature, although normally a signature is made up of several folded sheets. The signatures are sewn together at the fold to form the pages of the book. Along the spine, white rope represented the thread used to sew each signature together. Thick brown rope formed bands around which the "thread" was sewn, creating raised bands that, were the book to be given a cover, would show up as the thick raised bands of leather on the spine. The leather on books with that feature is actually fitted over the thicker thread that the thick rope represents.

Here you can see the scale of the book:


Here you can better see the stitching:


The top three signatures are not sewn into the rest of the book, yet.

The Library of Congress lugs this book around for demonstrations about books and book binding. It's nice to know that they save some of their attention for the restoration and preservation of books as well as the digitization of them.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

That was so much fun!!! The pictures turned out great, as well. Nice job tying in fun-time with class-work ;)