Enchantée by Atelier Écluse

Dear Everyone ~

I am deliriously delighted to herald the arrival of my inaugural order of Atelier Écluse (AÉ) handmade papers & blank books at BZS. AÉ is in Montreal, Canada, and I am honoured to be their first stockist in the U.S for their wares!

 From the moment I received lovely photos of AÉ’s new line of papers and books, I knew I had to touch them, fold them, and score them. These papers are even more exquisite in person. As you might imagine, as soon as my experimentation sheets arrived, I had to make a buttonhole-stitch book… and then another buttonhole-stitch book, and another …

The paper is 100% cotton and 100% a dream to work with. It is also incredibly glue friendly. Truly, my only quandary was to decide which pattern and what style of binding to stitch first. These blue & white patterns are so wondrous on paper, a colour combo that we love on Japanese ceramics & textiles, English tea sets, and even envelope inside tints. And the paper feels fabulous, felicitous, luscious. The sheets are 11 x 15 (as large as a Serizawa calendar page), so you can take a single sheet and turn it into a voluptuous casebound or softcover book measuring 5 x 8 x 1¼. 

Yannick Allen-Vuillet, the founder of Atelier Écluse, graciously answered my inquiries about his new enterprise. I learned that he had been a papermaker at Saint-Armand Papeterie! And that experience has inspired him to fully dedicate his career to book craft. Here are some details he shared, the next best thing to being there—for now!

“ Ecluse means ‘lock’. We are situated on the banks of the Lachine Canal, which played a very important role in the industrial development of Canada. The canal has always been a center of craftsmanship and savoir-faire, and our name tries to pay homage to that history and location. ”
 
“ Our studio is situated in a larger post-industrial building that used to be an industrial ceramics factory. We're just across the street from Saint-Armand. ”

​​“ The decorative papers are all printed in our studio on our etching press. We had a polymer plate made with our design, and then we printed with high pressure on slightly damp paper so we could get a good impression. For our patterns, I got inspired by fabric and textile patterns, and I tried to emulate a woven surface.”

I am also stocking AÉ’s dreamy Saint-Henri blank books in both sizes: 5 x 5¾ x ½ and 6 x 8¾ x ½. The pages are also 100% cotton, and are handmade by Yannick. 

Announcing autumnal resplendishment!

Dear Everyone ~

I delight in my daily ritual of wrapping, packing up parcels, and sending them on their way to addresses from coast to coast, and even farther-flung destinations. Part of my pleasure comes from envisioning the recipients of these packages and their anticipation… As for me, parcels arriving at BZS are always exciting. I find the process of decanting…enchanting, and then there is the displaying and the photographing. September so far has been a boon for refreshing, restocking, and re-energizing. Read on for uplifting details of what’s new and what’s renewed.

For starters, I’m beyond delighted to report that after many, many, many moons, my little linen-covered books have been assembled, hand-stitched & restocked! They debuted in the summer of 2019, as we wrote about here. For this latest edition I have chosen Plover Bond for the pages, and cashmere yarn for the Japanese style binding. Ruby, my nimble shop assistant, bonded with the Plover by testing out each of the inks, pens & pencils I stock in the shop, as you can see below. From woodless graphite pencils to Kyo-no-oto fountain pen inks, Ruby can confirm that the Plover Bond takes all manner of medium beautifully!

Speaking of mediums, let’s talk of Kuretake: I am now stocking the warm-grey fudegokochi brush pen. The ink in this felt tip pen is the same pigment-and-water base as its black counterpart. The warm-grey colour is great for layering from lighter to deeper shades. It’s lovely on its own, or as a companion to the black pen. The Kuretake Fine White brush pen has been restocked, and Ruby has given it high marks on both a textured black watercolour paper and on Euro-kraft notebook paper.

Watercolour postcard pads are a staple for any art supply kit, in my opinion. Having a pad at hand while you are padding around provides a noteworthy way to doodle & draw whilst you dilly & dally. As seen here, I’ve painted a few colour swatches using the Japanese Sumi-e watercolour set, and Ruby has illustrated every other medium in the shop. Note to self: be sure to keep a few postcard postage stamps on hand—our current fave is the sailboat—so you can promptly post your card while it is at its freshest.

Pencil Shaving greeting cards have been a perennial favourite since I opened the shop in 2015. I’ve added an endearing couple of new designs, the birthday pheasant and the birthday penguin, and restocked umpteen classics.

Also from across the pond, Molesworth & Bird seaweed postcard sets have been amply replenished—A faint seaside scent floats by when you open each portfolio—not exactly, but we can dream.

Washi tapes. Need I say more? Yes absolutely, the more the merrier!  My largest shipment in a long while rolled in last week. After decanting & unwrapping, oohing & aahing, we stacked them on the counter—their original configuration in the shop pre-pandemic days—and proceeded to photograph them with glee. Then Alyson, my beloved postal muse, couldn't resist naming them, so we have: Cute Fruits, Flower Album, Foxy Moxie, Floradorable Sweets, Chevrons, Musical Notables, Acorn-ucopia, and Floating Birds to name a few. 

Falling for it all, Bari

Bookful musings on art inspirations from the palette palace

Dear Everyone ~

Bookful of Art Inspirations, my 11th Bookful collaboration with Cat Bennett, begins on Saturday, September 16, just before the autumn solstice! As I type, all kits have been dispatched, three to Canada, and a huge armful to students stateside, from north to south and east to west! This past week, the palette palace was a hive of kit assembly: measuring, trimming, colour coordinating, and mixing & matching the assortment of Japanese decorative papers and bookcloths (and thread & button combinations). Then counting, stacking, wrapping, and packing up all the kits. Three students ordered an extra kit, and several students expressed an interest in having the materials to make three books, one for each of the three accordion blocks we will fill in the Bookful. That inspired us! Before I provide those details, I want to share with everyone something from Cat that continues to resonate with me.

When Cat and I were talking about “inspirations” as the theme for this Bookful, I asked her if there is an artist who particularly inspired her in her career. I was rewarded with her insightful reflection:
 
“ When I was starting out as an illustrator in my twenties, I took a lot of inspiration from the British artist David Hockney. His early work was full of playfulness, bold color, distorted perspectives and patterns. And also the truth of his life as a gay man, which was the boldest thing of all. It wasn’t that I wanted my drawings to look like Hockney’s, but I wanted to grow my own playfulness, my love of color and disregard for realism and perspective. It was Hockney's free spirit that inspired me! And when I was most myself in my work, I found a ready  audience for it. What we’re attracted to in other artists may well be something we want to grow in ourselves and in our own art. Looking forward to being inspired in this Bookful by Vanessa Bell, Sonia Delaunay and Rose Wylie—3 wonderful and quite different artists. ”

Our inspiration for students who would like to make two additional books is a supplementary kit (shown below). All three of your accordion blocks (Vanessa, Sonia, and Rose) can be permanently beautifully housed. The kit provides all the materials you need to make a pair of “matching” drop-spine accordion books, so that you will have a trio in toto. Gentle reminder: The “standard” kit included with your Bookful registration provides all the materials to make one (1) drop-spine accordion book (5½ inches square) with hard covers and three (3) individual accordion-blocks. The back cover has a vertical pocket that secures your accordion-block in place and also allows you to easily remove & replace it with a fresh accordion-block. 

It occurs to me that you might like to label your three books, so I have devised a delightful way to do that. The supplementary kit will also include a set of five little Stonehenge hand-deckled “labels” that you can use for this very purpose. You can coordinate your ink, you can add a border, you can be inspired!

If you are considering joining us, there is still time to ship your kit(s). As always, Cat & I like to emphasize, especially if you are a Bookful newcomer, that absolutely no drawing, painting, collaging, or bookbinding experience is necessary. The pace and camaraderie are truly zen. (Plus you will have complete videos to watch and rewatch—all 12 hours-ful!)

Rag & Pulp, Bookmarks & Gratitude

Dear Everyone ~

August was so august—and robust—at Bari Zaki Studio. The confluence of Stationery Store Day (SSD) & the publication of Rag & Pulp (R&P) made for a momentous month! I am hugely grateful for the lovely turnout for SSD, both in the shop and online. It was wonderful to see many familiar faces and a handful of new ones, and the day felt so festive! The shop was vibrating with love for stationery & all things paper, and that made my heart smile from ear to ear.

Leading up to SSD, bookmark-with-purchase production was in high gear. I am hugely grateful for my four extra hands: those of Janet Bouldin, dear friend and watercolourist, and Ruby, my new nimble shop assistant, who you will begin hearing & seeing much more of. Janet and Ruby’s creative camaraderie and beautiful handiwork imbued, infused, enthused the bookmarks with joie de papeterie.

Here’s the bookmark backstory: My beloved bonefolder and I folded large sheets of Waterford Saunders watercolour paper down to size. My trusty shipping clerk’s knife deckled the edges. I delivered the stack, and a full set of Le Pens, to Janet’s studio-kitchen, for a delightful afternoon of painting and squiggling. She already had an excellent supply of the other supplies. The bookmark has six undulating “rows,” each featuring one of the assorted pens & inks I stock in the shop. The “equator” is a single row of waxed-linen thread, handstitched by Ruby. And for the seal of approval, Ruby affixed the BZS anniversary seal & Cambridge Imprint paper ribbons. Voilà-là-là!

It has been such a pleasure to inscribe, wrap & beribbon, and send off several dozen R&P! The lovely emails I’ve received from appreciative (and lyrical!) customers were a rereadable bonus! Below are a few endearing acknowledgments.
 
“ A belated note to let you know that your box of goodies arrived, proving that you can never be too old to squeal at mail. I immediately turned to page 76 [where the Bari Zaki Studio section begins], and then back again to page 7 [the first page of the table of contents], then 76, then 7... ad infinitem. Janine gave you a really nice write-up, and the pictures were oxygen, given how long it’s been since I’ve visited the store and you. Your fan, Martha ”
 
“ Received my beautiful Bari-treasure, I am peeling it like an onion, savoring every layer. You create the most amazing feasts for the eyes! Thank you, Mary ”
 
“ Rag & Pulp arrived today along with a lovely collection of Japanese papers from Chicagoland! I just finished reading your chapter and loved it! One day, I hope to visit you in your studio. Congratulations on a celebratory and inspiring story of your career!!! Now on to the chapter about Cambridge Imprint! Karen ”

Deborah e’d me twice. Her first subject line read: “Portrait of an order”, and she sent a photo of her order decanted (seen above). Her second message read: “ Got it!! Thanks for the wonderful surprises and for wrapping everything so beautifully. I’m trying not to drool in the box, and I feel a color coma coming on!!!”

Jill ordered a copy, wrapped in Grafiche Tassotti No. 3, which I shipped directly to a friend of hers. She requested this inscription: “ Happy Birthday Jodi! To a creative genius and wonderful friend. ” I loved writing that—and I also loved composing the inscriptions for customers who asked me to sign their own copies.
 
For me, the excitement around the launch of R&P is ongoing, as I can look over to see the stack of copies atop my Japanese teaboxes. I also have a browsing copy, with bookmark, at the front of the shop. Someone commented the other afternoon how hefty the book feels, and it’s true. The most papery paperweight imaginable!

Rag & Pulp
 
Singing into September, Bari
 
PS:
Speaking of Ruby and Kyo-no-oto inks. Last week two new dreamy ink colours arrived—No. 13 (Seiheki) & No. 14 (Yurushiiro)—which called for a refresh of swatches in the shop. Here is Ruby swooshing her swatches.

And here they are on display. Both colours have been added to the online shop.

Paging all bookbinders!

Dear Everyone ~

I’ve been percolating about new workshops to encourage students to rethink how you think about your pages: how they function, and how you can decide which binding style best accommodates them. I am delighted to announce that I have come up with not one, but two, workshops, which I will preview by saying: Pages are all the rage!

Book of Engaging Pages is a two-part workshop in which you will learn to make four different styles of page: a pocket-page, a 4-page signature; a 3-panel gate-folded page, and a “booklet-within-the-book” holding a 4-page concertina. You will bind your pages into a beautiful book measuring 6 x 7½ x 1½, using the Long-stitch technique. As the frosting on the binding, you will make envelope/pockets inside your front and back covers. 

The materials I’ve selected for your Book of Engaging Pages are themselves engaging, of course. You have three options for your kit, from my current favourite Japanese Chiyogami & Katazome patterns: Wild Strawberries, Cloud Peaks, and Woven Mums, each with complementary waxed-linen thread.

In Pocket Book, you will learn to make a Japanese 4-hole binding with an articulated cover, measuring 7⅛ x 7¾ x ¾. Your book will have 12 pages: 5 hand-folded, hinged pocket pages, interleaved with 7 pages of Stonehenge drawing paper. Students will also learn how to make spine spacers, which increase the thickness of a spine and provide space between pages. Spacers are important when you’re making a book to hold photographs, swatches, or ephemera, or, in this instance, pockets that need room to hold things.

The materials I’ve selected for this kit are also three of my favourite Japanese Chiyogami & Katazome papers: Celebration, Village, and Classic Mums—paired with complementary bookcloths & waxed-linen thread.

 No previous bookbinding experience is necessary to have your book(s) be a paging success!  For Pocket Book, a bit of glueing experience is a plus but not a must. You will have ample time during each step to ask questions while we work. As always, I will live record all workshop sessions, and these will be available to you later the same afternoon to watch and rewatch at your leisure.If you have any questions now, please feel free to call or e me to discuss!

Book of Engaging Pages
Pocket Book
 
Flipping excited, Bari

Announcing Bookful of Art Inspirations

Dear Everyone ~

Bookful of Art Inspirations is my eleventh Bookful collaboration with artist, author & dear friend Cat Bennett. Our four-session workshop via Zoom will begin on Saturday, September 16, a scant week before the autumnal equinox.

In this series, we will explore the themes & styles of three wonderful women artists: Vanessa Bell (1879–1961), sister of Virginia Woolf; Sonia Delaunay (1885–1979), who lived and worked in Paris; and Rose Wylie (b. 1934), who is still  painting huge canvases in Kent, England and achieved artistic recognition at the age of 80! 

The structure you will learn to make in this series is a drop-spine accordion book measuring 5½ x 5½ x ¾, with hard covers. Your accordion panels, each measuring 5 x 5, will open to 5" x 8-plus ft. when fully extended. Displayed upright on a ledge, mantel, or shelf, your panels will look lovely opened to 4 or 5 or 6 ft.

The back cover has a cloth-covered vertical pocket that secures your accordion-block in place and also allows you to easily remove & replace it with a fresh accordion-block. We love the idea that you can refresh the contents of your book whenever, or even share or exchange them with another person—that would be lovely! You can create a series, or seasonal swap, of accordions over time.

The kitful of materials I’ve selected for this Bookful includes a particularly yummy selection of Japanese decorative papers & bookcloths from my reserves. As you know, I delight in mixing & matching colours and patterns. If there’s a particular palette or combination that strikes your fancy, please feel free to e me and I will do my best to accommodate your request.

In weeks #2, #3, & #4, Cat will begin the workshop session with a curated slideshow. She will then lead the class in painting & drawing exercises using a variety of mediums, including coloured pencils + watercolour, pen & ink, and collage. We’ll also explore painting with gouache, which is opaque, and wondrous for the layering of colours. 

Cat & I want to assure you, especially if you are a Bookful newcomer, that truly no drawing or bookbinding experience is necessary—all levels of artistic skill & interest are welcome. Our pace is relaxed & supportive, and the camaraderie is delightful. Plus, you will have four complete workshop videos (recorded in real time) to watch and rewatch at your leisure. We look forward to seeing you soonish via Zoom!

Bookful of Art Inspirations

Zooming, Bari

PS:
Stationery Store Day was the least stationary day ever at Bari Zaki Studio, both in person and online. It made my heart smile from ear to ear to see so many familiar faces and several new faces waltzing in the shop, all basking in papery pleasures. It was a particularly grand day for sales of “Rag & Pulp.” The very elaborate multi-medium bookmarks-with-purchase were ready in record time, thanks hugely to my two nimble collaboratrices: Janet Bouldin and my new shop assistant Ruby! Next week I will showcase the assembly process in squiggly, stitchy, seal-of-approval detail!

Glimpses & Deliria of “Rag & Pulp”

Dear Everyone ~

I am over-the-moon delighted to announce that Volume R for Rag & Pulp (R&P), in the Uppercase Encyclopedia of Inspiration has just arrived at Bari Zaki Studio. We are honoured, chuffed, and thrilled to be included in this international assemblage of people who make their living (and their lives!) using paper. BZS is doubly happy that Janine Vangool, designer and publisher extraordinaire, chose a photo of one of my books (Coptic-stitch binding) to grace the spine of R&P. 

I mused with Alyson Kuhn—my postal and everything-paper muse—about ways to personalize copies of Rag & Pulp for customers. We entertained several embellishments, and settled on a multi-medium BZS bookmark on Saunders Waterford watercolour paper: gentle undulations (bordering on squiggles) of the various writing implements stocked in the shop—Lyra Colour Giant, Kuretake brush pen, Kyo-no-oto fountain pen ink, Le Pen, and sumi-e ink. For good measure, a row of hand-stitching with waxed-linen thread. As a footnote, my anniversary seal-of-approval with Cambridge Imprint chevroned paper ribbons.

If you’ve e’d me to request your copy of R&P, I have set it aside and will e you a direct payment link. If you fancy having your book personalized, please e me what you’d like me to write, whether you are acquiring a copy for yourself or for a friend. And if you had already pre-ordered or purchased your R&P through Uppercase, but would enjoy receiving a bookmark, please e me for details.

 As you might imagine, I’m also offering dressy gift-wrapping. We’ve chosen the Genius Geometric palette by Grafiche Tassotti, beribboned with a 2-inch double stripe ribbon by Studio Carta, with a tiny pencil we've covered in Japanese paper tucked into the bow. 

Correy Baldwin, the writer extraordinaire of Rag & Pulp, included several of my direct quotes in my—count them!—five spreads, one of which I’d like to wrap up with here, because it distills the essence of why I love books and why my collaborations with customers and students alike are so meaningful to me.

“ I think of a book or box I’ve made as being at the beginning of its functional life. My part is finished, but it's the customer or ultimate recipient who determines what it will become and what its future will hold. Once you begin using the book, it actually gets more beautiful! Yes, the book itself is a lovely object, but it is what’s inside that makes it engaging to flip through, and therefore memorable. ”
 
Volume R for Rag & Pulp

Book bliss, Bari

Stationery Store Day encore galore!

Dear Everyone ~

Hark & Huzzah! This Saturday, August 5, is the second annual international Stationery Store Day (SSD). Last year, BZS and A. Favorite Design were the first two Chicago stationers to hop on the Stationeryland bandwagon. This year, the Chicago metro area has eleven participating stationery shops! There are hundreds of shops across the U.S. and abroad, from Amsterdam to Zealand, New—all celebrating the joys of written communication and the love of all things paper &tc. Bari Zaki Studio is beyond delighted to be part of the festivities!

This year's swagalicious SSD loot is illustrated by Providence-based artist Eloise Narrigan: posters, postcards, stickers, and of course a tote bag! Seen here is the poster in my shop’s front window. 

Here is a preview of the BZS gift-with-purch ($50 pre-tax) merch: a ½ sheaflet of 3 x 5 drawing paper held together with a madam butterfly-clip covered in Japanese paper, and a mini-pencil covered in ditto. The ensemble is ensconced in a glassine sleeve sealed with my anniversary seal. We will include an SSD postcard or sticker (while supplies last). With a purchase of $100 (pre-tax), you will also receive an SSD cotton tote bag in which to transport (and perhaps flaunt!) your new supplies.

Speaking of mini-pencils, may we draw your attention for a mini-moment to the charmola Tinyconderoga that Eloise has installed on the mezzanine of this stationeryscape? Our mini is a non-Tinycon, that you can both  jot with, and also use on a package or as a hair ornament.

BWTW! Behold the official SSD washi tape! We will of course use this to wrap and embellish all purchases. And we will share the washi love for your own wrapping, sealing, and journaling re-use. Our gift-with-purch includes a wide washi bookmark: three 5" strips of official SSD washi on a piece of cardstock. It peels off easily and borders on genius!

We will be OPEN for business and giddiness from noon to 5pm, no appointment needed! Because we are ardent equal-opportunity shopkeepers, online shoppers may place their Stationery Store Day orders beginning at noon (Chicago time) on the 5th to receive the BZSSSD giftie (while supplies last). 
 
Looking forward to seeing you very soonish, Bari

Midsummer refreshment(s) in the shop

Dear Everyone ~

I’m delighted to showcase several of my handmade books that have just been listed in the online shop: six Buttonhole-stitch books, two Long-stitch-link-stitch with hand-folded envelopes, and one Case-binding. I’m also pleased to announce that various customer favourites—awl you needle for stitching and punching and so forth—have been restocked, re-upped, and re-adied for you.

Buttonhole-stitch binding happens to be one of my favourite styles, and I recently experimented with miniaturizing it. I’ve made a quartet of these amuse-books, covered in the Grafiche Tassotti Sprigs & Twigs palette.

 The two Long-stitch-link-stitch books with stitched in hand-folded envelopes feature Cambridge Imprint Peggy Angus-from-all-angles. These books are wonderful for an ephemera album or travel diary, as the pair of envelopes with string & button closures are perfect for filing this & that & what-have-you!

This Case-bound book is my very most recent book, made alongside two students via Zoom this past week. The Hahnemühle Bugra signatures alternate Light Grey & Marble Grey. Covered in Japanese Chiyogami, it measures a charming 5½ x 6 x 1.

Speaking of bookbinding, let’s! We have two new bookbinding needles in stock, one straight and one curved. I find that, depending on the book and the day, I might prefer a smaller or larger…and it’s nice to have a choice.

 Our Winsor & Newton pen point selection has grown by two. We now stock the 0.05 (divinely fine line), and the 1.0 (thoroughly thick line). 

Season Paper notebooks have been replenished in eight new designs. 

Coccoina glue-sticks in the extra-grande 40g size are back in stock. If you haven’t tried this size before, we recommend it for sealing bigger envelope flaps, larger works of art, and collaging. It spreads evenly and allows for movability before it dries. And the best bit is that it smells like maraschino cherries! 

Also back in stock are the tiny & charmola 2 x 2 (and 2 x 16-ish when open fully) concertina books from Hahnemühle. Perfect for watercolouring, swatching, collaging and … whatever-do-you.

Washi of the Season is now in full bloom, presenting an assortment of summery patterns & colours from Rainbow Plaid and Strawberry Fields, to Pale Pink Sakura and Colour Pencil Stripes. 

 I’ve also added a new Minä Perhonen washi pattern by Japanese textile designer Akira Minagawa: Keru neko—it’s the cat’s pyjamas!

We love these letterpress printed, pinhole-perforated red-bordered labels from Portland Stamp Co. They are included in our MORE Art of the Hand-folded Envelope kit, and we are now delighted to be offering them on their own. Ten labels of assorted sizes per sheet (5½ x 8½) available with square-corner borders or round-corner borders—and a sweet discount if you buy a sheet of each. The stock is not sticky-backed—all the better to deploy your maraschino glue-stick!

Almost SSD @ BZS, Bari

My idyllic interlude at Cambridge Imprint

Dear Everyone ~

Back in May, Zak & I were visiting family & friends in the U.K. Some of our travels took us to the Suffolk coast, which is close-ish (a verdant, rural two-hour drive, unmarred by billboards) to Cambridge. As soon as our plans were set, I sent word to Susie at Cambridge Imprint—who I’ve been e-communing with for over four years—to arrange a visit to their new studio space at Chesterton Mill, an urban renovation project on the outskirts of Cambridge. They had moved in a couple of months prior, and I was hugely excited to meet them in their new atelier! It just so happened that there was just a single day in all our schedules that meshed perfectly for my visit—a gorgeous & sunny day in so many ways!

I walked s-l-o-w-l-y up the inside stairs to their space, taking in the moment entirely. Cambridge Imprint occupies two stories, the upper of which is very loftlike. I was mesmerized with just about every corner, table space & shelves in their studio—colour, pattern, p-a-p-e-r! We drank tea from mugs with Cambridge Imprint patterns (not currently available for purchase, alas), and chatted about this & that & these & those.

My favourite scarf (knitted by my merchandising angel, Jamie) is my constant companion when the weather is chilly). It looked right at home at Cambridge Imprint, next to Claerwen, then Susie, then Jane. Perhaps they favour wardrobe solids so as not to compete with their patterns. There is no mistaking that mixing & matching is the name of the Cambridge Imprint game. The more you have, the more you see! I asked the Cambridge crew about their favourite combos: 

Claerwen: “My current preferred mix would include the Charleston border, Dancing Hares in violet and Peggy Angus tile prints together. It isn't very summery, but I love the combination of brown shades, for example Animalcules in cocoa and the Dancing Hares in bronze”.

Ali: “Brown horses and Wave indigo and Persephone grey & crimson.  
I also love the Smocking and Threadwork patterns we did for the Whitworth—we’re planning some new colourways of Threadwork.”

Jane: “Quercus sap, Wave orange and Charleston ripple”

Inspired by my private tour, I have brought in several new Cambridge Imprint papery provisions. I’ve increased my inventory of parent sheets with 21 new patterns, bringing the total to 40. I’ve created a new assortment of six patterned envelopes, paired with six leafy-bordered postcards. (A few sets of my original envelope assortment remain; ditto the original postcard sets.)

 The new Tall Softback Sketchbook is available in four patterns (seen above), and a Trio of Tri-fold Document Portfolios is available in two colourways (seen below).

It has just occurred to me that a parent sheet can make a 9 x 12 or 9½ x 12½ envelope to hold a document portfolio (or two). Like a sweater set! Here is my freshly folded Seaweed Paisley Prussian Blue 9 x 12¼,  
lined with Kaleidoscope Red and Blue.

And here is the sweater set, all dressed up and ready to go!

Cambridge Imprint parent sheets
Trio of tri-fold document portfolios
Tall softback sketchbook 
Patterned envelopes & postcards
 
Mixing & matching & delight & delirium, Bari
 
PS:
Speaking of delirium, Volume R, for Rag & Pulp, in the Encyclopedia of Inspiration, created & published by Uppercase, is, to quote the promo card, “freshly printed.” Bari Zaki Studio is honoured to be included in this international extravaganza of people who make their living (and their lives!) using paper. I will be selling Volume R online and in the shop. As you might expect, I will be adding custom embellishments. Whether you are acquiring a copy for yourself or for a friend, I will also be happy to personalize. And, inevitably, gift-wrapping will be offered in several papers for a nominal fee. I anticipate receiving my order early in August and will keep Everyone posted.