Handbound Books

A book for a three-year-old

Monday, May 9th, 2011

One of my very favourite gifts when I was a kid was the board book my mom made me of all of the things my three-year-old self could do – swing, colour, kick soccer balls…so when my favourite three-year-old had a birthday recently, I decided that it was time to make him a “Rudi can…” book of his own.

Read more about how I made this personalized board book on my guest blog post at The Paper Place!


38 things I love (and Truman Capote’s colour coded drafts)

Tuesday, March 22nd, 2011

Sometimes, when one of your leading ladies turns 38, you need to write a list of awesome and turn it into a book (including such salient points as “that you love caramelized bananas”).

And something else I’ve been loving lately is interviewing musicians including Justin Rutledge and Basia Bulat (and here’s the Truman Capote interview she references – such a fascinating read!)


2010: A year of handmade book

Sunday, January 23rd, 2011

2010, hand made books, lindsay zier-vogel

On January 1, 2010, I set out to write a poem a day and make a book a month. The daily poetry component petered out in mid-June, with continued fits and starts for the rest of the year, but the book-a-month project continued all year through…a whole year of handmade books – quite exciting!

January: a map-inspired book that I gave away before snapping pics…

February: a flower-inspired book that I also gifted pre-photos…

March: caught and gone: a conversation

April: bloom

May: forget-me-not

June: love.

July: A miracle somehow

August: mountain girl

September: I don’t have a pic of the September book, which is a shame, because she was a beaut and created with my favourite Nepalese paper.

October: letting sunday in

November: fall joy

December: …you’d be home by now

It was so exciting…and somehow so manageable to create at least one book a month. I found myself really looking forward to the whole process – compiling the writing, sketching out the cover ideas and layout ideas and most excitingly, playing around with ideas I’ve always been meaning to try – paper cut covers (in March and November), letterpressing (in June and July), collage (in December), accordian books (in October and April), incorporating pressed flowers (in May), and even a softcover (in August) which was only because I ran out of coverboard, but something I’ve been meaning to play around with for awhile.

All in all, a pretty fabulous 2010. So exciting, in fact, I’m going to continue the book-a-month project for 2011.

I’m thinking some collaborations might be in the works…

(ps: some more book-a-month musings on The Paper Place’s blog…)


fall joy

Sunday, January 16th, 2011

fall joy, handbound book, lindsay zier-vogel

This fall was a doozy. A blind-siding, topsy turvy season. But on November 1st, a dear friend on the west coast sent me a note, suggesting we send each other a ‘hurrah, it’s fall’ daily moment.

And so, the daily joy project was born. I will admit, I was not on board at first. All I saw were grey skies and rain puddles. At first, I was humouring her…but then, as it always does, the joy crept in…

…the first snowfall (Nov. 20th in Comox!), putting up my Christmas tree (it’s in all caps on Nov. 23rd), bike rides and brunch and white squirrel spottings and chai lattes and surprising moments of sunshine and gingerbread cakes eaten over heel-turning knitting parties (complete with balloons).

In reading through this compiled joy, it seems there was a lot of gingerbread involved…

handmade book, lindsay zier-voge, fall joy

I turned this month of joy into a book, complete with a paper-cut cover. Alongside the quilt I made for my favourite newborn, I think this is the most exciting piece I created in 2010.

It is so full of goodness and joy, it makes my heart nearly burst.


letting sunday in

Saturday, January 1st, 2011

handmade book, lindsay zier-vogel, letting sunday in

handmade book, lindsay zier-vogel, letting sunday in

letting sunday in

found paper, metallic thread, Nepalese paper cover

a falling sky collects on
the edge of the
sidewalk grey.


Mountain girl

Saturday, January 1st, 2011

mountain girl, handmade book, lindsay zier-vogel

In my make-a-book-a-month-for-2010 goal, I realized in the last few days of August that I didn’t have any cover board. So, I decided to go with a soft cover creation, inspired by Susan Kendal’s newest choreography, Mountain Girl (co-choreographed and performed by Brittany Duggan).

mountain girl, handmade book, lindsay zier-vogel

With a glacier deep skirt burying her thighs,

and topographical maps printed

on the insides of her wrists,

her elbows, the hollow of her throat,

(north, north, northwest, north),

she carries with her

skies that are wider than

the reach of her arms.

~ Lindsay Zier-Vogel


A miracle somehow

Sunday, July 25th, 2010

a miracle, somehow, nebraska, letterpress, handbound book

a miracle, somehow, nebraska, letterpress, handbound book

a miracle, somehow, nebraska, letterpress, handbound book

embroidered cover detail

A miracle somehow
Hand-embroidered cover, printed on a 100-year-old letter press at Art Farm in Nebraska, USA.

Even with all of her swimming badges
sewn onto old bathing suits,

and the lifeguard whistle

around her neck,
it seems impossible
not to drown.


love.

Wednesday, July 21st, 2010

love nebraska book

love nebraska book

love.

Nebraskan inspired love letters, printed on a 100-year-old letter press at Art Farm.

The green that goes on
and on
and on,
the copycat
sky.



Embroidered prairie plants

Friday, July 16th, 2010

embroidered prairie flowers, nebraska

embroidered prairie plant, blue eyed grass

Blue-eyed grass

embroidered prairie plant, Queen Annes Lace

Queen Annes Lace

embroidered prairie plant, Coneflower

Coneflower

Embroidered prairie plants on Japanese Kozo.


Paper art in Nebraska

Friday, July 16th, 2010

cardinal, nebraska paper art

oriole, nebraska paper art

house, victoria, nebraska paper art

telephone wires, map, nebraska paper art

nebraska corn field, paper art

Paper art from my time in rural Nebraska.