Gorgeous! Upon a Fold


A reader in Australia sent me a link to this amazing webshop, Upon a Fold, dedicated to the art of folded paper. It is such a beautiful website with a smart and inspiring selection of products, plus a great blog.

Owner/designer Justine writes: "I live in Sydney, Australia, and this paper store and blog is something I've wanted to embark on since I was a kid. And now that I’m all grown up I finally have a place where I can gleefully revel in my passion for paper and then share all my new finds with you!

I've been collecting and making things with paper for as long as I can remember. When I’m not working as a graphic designer, I’m still busy cutting, folding and finding inspiration from other paper shapers, artists and engineers. Whenever I come across a beautiful object made of paper I wish I had a place to put it on show for all to see and enjoy. So, ta-da, here it is… Upon a Fold."

Super!

Type Tuesday: Wood Type WOW


Click here to be immediately transported to Bethany Heck's amazing and gorgeous letterpress blog and resource, EndGrain.

"In addition to being a growing directory and aggregator for wood type and letterpress works and information on the web, the EndGrain features my humble collection of wood letters. I also want to use the blog as an opportunity to do experimental printing with my type and to do a little digging into the history of the different typefaces."

I love the large images of wood type, you can almost smell them! And the site design is lovely, too, with great typographic touches.

Bethany's an UPPERCASE subscriber as well! Such a talented and inspirational bunch you are.

All the pretty typers...


I would have titled this post "No typewriter for old men," but The Guardian beat me to it! Cormac McCarthy, author of aforementioned novel, All the Pretty Horses and The Road has auctioned off his trusty old Lettera through Christies. His workhouse machine since 1958, he has composed all manuscripts with it. It sold for an incredible $254,500 to an anonymous bidder: over 10 times the estimated price.

"I have typed on this typewriter every book I have written including three not yet published. Including all drafts and correspondence I would put this at about five million words over a period of fifty years..." he claims in the accompanying letter of authentication. He also states that the only maintenance done over the years involved "blowing out the dust with a service station air hose." Hmmm, maybe that's how he came up with Anton Chigurh's murderous weapon of injecting compressed air into his victims?

Read more about the Lettera at The New Yorker.

Type Tuesday: Crispin Hellion Glover


You might know Crispin Hellion Glover best for his role as George McFly from the movie Back to the Future. ("My density brought me to you," is one of my all-time favourite movie lines.) Through his publishing enterprise Vulcanic Eruptions, Glover has also published some book works, in which the meanings of old texts are modifed with blackouts (or "spindles" as he called them) and other obfuscations. "Studies in Rat Catching" is a bizarre and afflicted publication which is best read after watching the Glover movie Willard.

Long ago, I saw Glover read from his books through a presentation called the "Big Slide Show." Hosted in the dankess of Calgary's Republik nightclub (circa mid to late nineties), it was a strange evening, at once oddly unsettling and strangely exhilarating. Following the presentation, I mustered the nerve to ask Glover to sign my sketchbook, in which he drew one of his spindles.

Seemingly stuck in a time warp, Glover's website looks the same as it did back then. He is still performing the Big Slide Show, in Olympia (Washington) later this week, and then in Helsinki on October 30.

{View images from Glover's book on Austin Kleon's flickr. Cover image from Reality Studio}

The Gentleman's Emporium


Looking to the past for your fashion inspiration? Head on over to the Gentleman's Emporium for entire outfits, plus a fashion gallery:

"Step into our Victorian gentleman's portrait gallery to get costuming hints and sartorial cues from the gentlemen themselves. Our fashion timeline highlights certain details specific to each decade, however you will see that the basics of men's fashion remained remarkably stable. A gentleman would often choose a style that suited him and stay with it for many years, thus you will see frock coats as well as tail coats and town coats (sack coats) throughout the period. When considering your own outfit, remember that there are a variety of styles which are all authentic, and you should feel free to take a measure of poetic license in combining historic authenticity with clothing that suits your own personal preferences."

A strange and wonderful journey...


Insel Verlag books, above, found in an amazing website of epic and curious proportions: Full Table. "It's bigger than you could ever think — just explore — no clues from me," says the site author Dr. Chris Mullen. This is a website experience equivalent to visiting the Museum of Jurassic Technology. Confusing, confounding, crazy… awesome! I'm posting this on Sunday evening so if you happen to be looking for something to take up the last hours of your weekend, I recommend clicking through Full Table.