What It Took To Make A Book

Dorothy Sayer had a wonderful sub plot about the process of writing a thesis, in "Gaudy Night," with the galleys, and hand-written revisions, and dropping the bundle of papers and crawling around the floor shifting things...

Me, I do like to bind a chap book once in a while;
http://probablepossible.com/2011/01/17/book-binding-for-fun-not-profit/

I am a great admirer of 'small press' editions though at over a grand a pop they're completely out of my range. Back at university they had a rather decent collection of books that had been done up by hand after printing on platen presses in editions of less than one hundred. I even gave some thought to learning how to do it but decided against it. Making your own furniture seems more practical.
 
Well yeah. I've never set type-- my books were hand-written when I was a kid, and huzzah for desktop publishing software! This little hobby of mine is the reason I chose a printer with double-sided printing capability.
 
Well yeah. I've never set type-- my books were hand-written when I was a kid, and huzzah for desktop publishing software! This little hobby of mine is the reason I chose a printer with double-sided printing capability.

There are such things? :eek: Hmmm, and we need a new printer, too . . .
 

That's a fantastic film. Notwithstanding all that automation, it's easy to see that the process was laborious. I admit to nostalgia for typesetters, linotype operators, binderies and ink-stained wretches.


 
The narrator's voice sounds hauntingly familiar.

I think it might be Alexander Scourby who narrated many of the National Geographic specials and hundreds of other presentations including the entire King James Bible.
 
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