Holiday Hours: Shop in our oasis of festive calm

Dear Everyone ~

 
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I’ll be here (and happy!) to help you with
stellar gifts to put in a stocking or a handmade box.
It’s also a fine time to pick up desk-organizing
New Year’s resolution tools & accessories, notably
binder clips covered in Japanese papers,
assorted stationery bundles,
and pages stocked with useable vintage postage.
All with our guarantee of no holiday music and no seasonal scents.
As always, we’ll be delighted to provide complimentary
gift wrap in our signature style (white tissue, bakers twine &
our favourite washi tape of the day)
while you wait—or wander on our excellent block.

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Holiday Hours

OPEN:
Monday, Dec. 23, 12–6pm & Tuesday, Dec. 24, 11am–3pm

CLOSED:
Wednesday, Dec. 25 & Thursday, Dec. 26

OPEN USUAL HOURS: 
Friday, Dec. 27, Saturday, Dec. 28 & Sunday, Dec. 29

CLOSED: 
Wednesday, Jan. 1 & Thursday, Jan. 2

USUAL HOURS RESUME: 
Friday, Jan. 3, at noon

Crisply,

Bari

Workshop your way onto the new decade!

Dear Everyone ~

 
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I will be teaching six different classes this winter season,
including one I’ve never offered before: Quartet of Origami Boxes.
Several years ago, I went through an extended origami-folding phase,
making dozens of boxes in various sizes, from assorted papers.
The “magic moment” when you have finished your two trays
and then fit them together to form a lidded box …
is pure paper joy.

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The Quartet of Origami Boxes workshop will be three hours.
We’ll use Saint-Armand handmade papers, in assorted lovely colours,
to make a trio of boxes that both stack beautifully & nest snugly.
Next, we’ll back a Japanese decorative paper with
a text-weight page (something we also do in
the Buttonhole-stitch class).
This sturdy combo is still supple enough to fold,
making a substantial box you can actually use
for desk accessories or collectibles.
And, of course,  an origami box makes a
wonderfully engaging gift box.

* * * * *

Speaking of Buttonhole-stitch,
I’m often asked to recommend a “first bookmaking class,”
and I have found Buttonhole-stitch to be brilliant for this.
The stitch is rhythmic and, I think, intuitive,
and there’s no gluing involved.

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The Coptic-stitch with Hard Covers workshop
results in a lovely book in a single session,
though it requires a bit of dexterity.
This binding style combines gluing and stitching.

 
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And the triple-hyphenated Long-stitch-link-stitch Binding
workshop has become one of my favourites — I love how
this binding literally allows for endless stitching patterns on the spine.

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I’ll also be teaching Introduction to Boxmaking,
in which you construct a box from pre-cut pieces of binders-board,
cover it with a combination of Japanese bookbinding
fabrics & papers, and tie it off with a lovely ribbon.
This box is ideal for holding postcards or photos.

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And I will be teaching Introduction to Drawing
with Brush & Ink as a group class.

 
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As always,
if the date of a group class doesn’t suit your schedule,
you are welcome to request a date for a private
or semi-private class. The energy and creative camaraderie
in a workshop is wonderful, but I will say that 2019
has been a very big year for private and semi-private classes,
and students really seem to enjoy the extra attention.
And gift certificates are at the ready for personalization,
should you decide to treat someone you know….

Buttonhole-stitch
NEW Quartet of Origami Boxes
Coptic stitch with hard-covers
Long-stitch-link-stitch
Introduction to Boxmaking
Introduction to Drawing with Brush & Ink

Stay cozy, Bari

*T*H*A*N*K* *Y*O*U*

Dear Everyone ~

 
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In honour of Thanksgiving, I’d like to express my gratitude for your gratitude, my thank you for all of your thank you’s! And to let you know that each week as I prepare & craft my emails, one of the things that I most look forward to is receiving your replies: your appreciation, participation, enthusiasm, and, foremost, your connection to my studio & shop. My heart smiles from ear to ear each and every time.

I remain amazed & delighted by your sentiments. No matter how quick or detailed, they remind me ofthe sensibilities we share. And not only via email but even via postcard (hint) … and in person when you visit the shop.

I’ve chosen a binder’s dozen of replies that I hope will also delight you, as they have particularly touched my heart.

* * * * *

I must start with an email I received from Chuck Izui, the manager, guardian angel, and eventual owner of Aiko’s Art Materials in Chicago. From the moment (at least 30 years ago!) when I first walked into Aiko’s, it instantly became my home away from home, a sanctuary of aesthetic serenity. The shop closed a little over ten years ago, and I am still heartbroken, and continue to miss every aspect of being inspired there. The card cabinet that is now in my shop is one of their original fixtures, and I am always, always, so honoured to be the keeper of it now.

“Dear Bari, I read your updates with fanboy interest. I am amazed (but not surprised) that you are now the diva of refined taste and cultural elegance, seamlessly reuniting the best of the past and present. My sincere congratulations on your current and continued success.”

— Chuck

 
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“Happy greetings, Bari, I love, love, love receiving packages from you!!! Wednesday I received my package and spent an hour meticulously unwrapping it and savoring all the delightful wrappings.”

—Virginia Clinton (Artist, BZS online shopper, and ardent workshop student)

 
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“Good Morning Bari! My heart is so full while I drop you this line. I received your package yesterday and it was like Christmas morning. Everything is wrapped with such care that it almost pains me to open each parcel. I peeked inside one package and left the others on my studio desk so I could see them all wrapped again this morning when I came upstairs to work.”

— Joyce Newcomb, BZS online shopper

 
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“Bari, Well Ann + Robyne’s amazing story also had me swooning, and beyond tearful! After reading this story of madcap mayhem and random acts of kindness, I feel I almost know this special pairand needed to respond to share my heartfelt nuptial wishes. As I sit here writing this reply on my 52nd wedding anniversary [now 53 years!], I wish Ann + Robyne at least 52 years filled with love, respect, joy, kindness and good health. May their lives also be filled with a plethora of magnificent paper pleasures provided by the Paper Princess herself! Joy to the world!!”

— heART, Hallie Redman (children’s art teacher, BZS student & shopper)

 
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“What a delightful 'missed plane' story! I enjoyed reading about the Library and looking at your photos—
it might have been a church! Keep sending us your so very interesting travelogues.”

— ESE, a.k.a. Ernie
(ESE could also stand for Envelope Shopper Extraordinaire, which Ernie is)

 
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“The exquisite emporium of joy!”

— Parastoo (very long-time customer, all the way back to
Mail of the Month and Parcel of the Month; we have yet to meet!)

 
 

“Dearest paper girl, I am becoming a broken record, stuck on the best groove. I love your illustrated story emails. I especially love this story of Robyne and Ann, the gifts they surprised each other with and the items they chose (a box for the post cards and a book of compiled love-gifts). What a great idea—to bind together the bits and pieces we cherish rather than letting them languish in boxes and folders and who knows where. Bari-emails always brighten my day.”

— Nina (art enthusiast, workshop and art class student, in-shop shopper)

 
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“Bari, great email. It had to be a blast having Raquel in your shop. When are U going to Brazil…”

— From my father, my original paper inspirator, in response to my story about Raquel Hetmanek, who I met on instagram and taught a private limp-vellum binding workshop when she was visiting from Brazil in the summer of 2018

 
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“I love being called Dear Everyone, since I am a Gemini and not any one person at all but in happiness with all … You can do what you want with a pencil in your hand.”

— Carol LaBranche (“wonderfully wacky local customer, delightfully uninhibited in her artwork and her spontaneous writing”)

 
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“You are amazing. Your sweet mom is smiling down on you! I loved her so [angel emoji].. Going to see how my train adventure to class does. Then hopefully i can take a pretty book class. But oh my! I see a ruler in the photo [wink emoji!] . Could you handle me? Have fun.”

— Shirley Coppi, who I met while taking classes at the Chicago Botanic Gardens with my mom

 
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“Hello, dear Fabulous Bari!!! I love this post and was delighted to see my little scrawly note in it! Of course, I was and am inspired by YOU!!!”

— Cat Bennett (truly inspiring artist & author & teacher & illustrator from Boston, and now a visiting instructor at Bari Zaki Studio)

 
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“Hi Bari, I am honored to have participated in your latest blog [about his creative endeavors with washi tape]…Thank you! Nicely done and beautifully extended. I found the post to be thoroughly adhesive!”

— Robert Petrick (whose wonderful photos of his washi tape applications featured Figure numbers)

* * * * *

Susan Kennedy was one of the very first customers to sign up for one of my bookbinding classes when I opened the shop back in 2015. She was so enthused and inspired by making books, and then embraced making boxes when I added that workshop to my class listings. She literally signed up for every single
bookbinding class, sometimes more than once. She often was the very first person to sign up for a workshop the minute I sent out the class schedule. Several months ago, Susan sent me this postcard, which melted my heart. While I was on my recent trip to England, she succumbed to a rare, particularly nasty cancer. I am so saddened and will miss her very, very much. This postcard is even more precious to me now, a permanent remembrance of Susan’s joie de vivre and her wonderful spirit.

In deepest bow, Bari

Studio Sale turns 21!

Dear Everyone ~

Our twenty-first (XXI) annual studio sale is coming up.

Here is our favourite photo of last year’s main display.
A day or two before this year’s sale,
we will post a picture of the freshly mounded and
spruced table to pique your curiosity.

 
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In addition to alliterative assortments & arrays,
you’ll find ahh-some odds & ends, including,
but certainly not limited to: a smattering of handmade books
& boxes, a big handful of discontinued washi tapes,
a few onesies & twosies.

Main attractions: all manner of writing &
sketching surfaces, writing implements & inks.

As always, your selections will be gift-readied on the spot
in our signature complimentary wrap of white tissue with divine twine
or arty yarn and a bit of washi tape!
And available for purchase will be a rather dazzling selection
of small flat bags handmade right here from Japanese papers.
Each bag is one-of-a-kind, and makes a beautiful presentation,
especially when closed with a little butterfly clip
covered in … another Japanese paper.

STUDIO SALE HOURS

Saturday, December 7 & Sunday, December 8

From Noon to 5:00

Festively, Bari

Beauteous botanical bounty by Kiran Ravilious

Dear Everyone ~

I have been ogling Kiran’s patterns
and colour combinations for many moons.
I have browsed her website several times with the
intention of placing a smallish order …
and I’ve finally followed my heart and done it.

 
 

I sent Kiran an email of inquiry.
She replied that she had in fact just issued
her latest catalogue, featuring many new designs.
Kiran added that I would be her first U.S. stockist.
She’s delighted and so am I.

Kiran’s cards simply speak to me.
Her colour sense is wonderful and whimsical.
Born and raised in Singapore, she has now lived in the
U.K. for twelve years. She comments (on her website) that
“There is always something to discover when you’re
a foreigner in a different country!
Even the stinging nettles are interesting.”

 
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I was a bit challenged to practice restraint on my order.
You’ll find notecards, enclosure cards, and notebooks
in my online shop, and additional designs at the studio.

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Both sizes of card are printed on heavy cover paper.
The notecards measure 4⅛ x 5⅞ (a European proportion I love).
The enclosure cards measure 3⅛ x 4¼ (ditto!).

Enclosure cards come in two lovely leafy assortments,
No. 1 and No. 2. The No. 1 presents illustrations, on a range of
blue backgrounds, depicting: rain leaf, vine, daisy, olive, palm, and neem.
The No. 2 presents illustrations, on a range of earthy backgrounds,
titled: vine, tropical palm, fern leaf, two leaves, palm leaf, and oak.

Garden Cuttings notecards present six vases with various verdure,
and the Bowls of Fruit assortment features five familiar fruits
plus something delightfully named honeydrops.
All six designs are pear-fectly lovely.

 
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Additional assortments will be available at the studio, including
one showcasing oranges, pears, and lemons with their foliage.
One eager customer has already asked if I think
hand-tinting them with coloured pencil
or watercolour might give a nice effect.
I do!

 
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The notebooks measure 5¾ x 8¼, with 48 unlined pages.
The cover is delightfully heavy, and the notebooks are staple bound;
natural white interior pages are toothy and light-ish,
but definitely can support whatever medium you’re using.
They feel a bit delicate, and that makes my heart sing.
The notebooks come in pairs:
two Palm or two Polka.

Let me repeat myself:
Kiran’s colour combinations are beguiling,
and each one is as delightful as the next.
May I say that they are all my favourite?

Lovely Little Leafy Enclosure Cards
Tutti-frutti and Spriggy-twiggy Notecards
Irresistible Notebooks With Illustrated Covers

Spriggily,

Bari

The Case of The Missing Flight

Dear Everyone ~

Missing a flight is rarely a good thing, but in this instance,
we really did maneuver a zoo animal into a silk purse.
We hadn’t allowed enough time to get to the Manchester Airport
in morning rush hour traffic … but, in our defense, the traffic “sitch”was
made worse due to the “Animals in road — SLOW” signs.
We didn’t actually see any animals, but it turns out
that these signs alert motorists to the possibility of animals that
have wandered off the premises of the Chester Zoo.

 
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Well, the next flight home was the following morning,
and we would be flying stand-by. No use crying over clotted cream, right?
We booked ourselves into a hotel right at the airport,
deposited all our luggage, and taxied into Manchester.

Prior to any trip, I google around to see what museums, galleries,
and bookshops I might find to visit wherever.
I had thought perhaps we’d stay in Manchester for a day
or two on this trip, but after arriving at the farm in York,
I didn’t want to give up any of our time there.
But now, we could go to the John Rylands Library
and the Manchester Art Gallery!
To the library forthwith!

 
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All the images I had seen online look as though the
John Rylands Library is situated in a park or on an expanse of land
somewhere out in the open. But when I looked on maps and saw it was relatively
“in the city,” I was intensely curious. As our uber driver pulled up to the building,
he actually had to point it out to us. A modern building now “encases”
the original library, and from the entrance, you cannot see the majestic facade
I was anticipating ... Once inside, we made our way to the original portion
via what felt like a labyrinth.
I was so eager to see this enchanting place.

Most of the books were under glass, or in extraordinary hand-carved
wood desks, cabinets, or other display pieces, likewise behind glass,
so photographing them was a challenge. There was much overhead lighting,
making for numerous reflections. However, as we made our way
around the grand nooks with desks for people to sit at, we saw a very large book,
resting open-faced on a book cradle, (which gently allows the book to lay open
without harm to the spine). O, swoon, it was a special edition of
R. Bowdler Sharpe’s “Birds of Paradise,” with a foreword
by David Attenborough, my favourite ”interpreter” of the natural world.

The edition was reproduced from a copy of the first edition at
The John Rylands Library, University of Manchester.
The detailed colophon includes credits for the digital photography,
the reproduced graphics, the book printer, the paper (Modigliani!),
and, my favourite, the binding: “by Felz Fine Books, Bad Langensalza,
Germany, is in Nigerian goatskin leather and
canvas sides blocked with a design by Neil Gower.”

Zak and I savoured the entire book page by page,
taking pictures of nearly every page. The lighting was still a challenge,
so I shot at an angle to minimize any glare, and I am fairly chuffed with the result.
I was profoundly grateful for this unexpected interlude,
sitting at one of these grand desks, turning through pages of an enormous,
breathtaking volume! I would happily have sat there all afternoon…
but it had been a very long time since breakfast.
And what about a stop off at the library’s gift shop
for a look around at all things postcard and paper related?
So, we pried ourselves out of our noble nook.

 
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I knew that the Manchester Art Gallery was close,
because I’d seen it on the map. But lunch was by then our top priority.
We had a place in mind, from a book we’d purchased in York of indie cafes ...
We ventured out into the rain (it’s always raining in Manchester),
and resolved to walk to the cafe. Minutes later, before we even got to the cafe,
we came upon the Gallery!
Oh my goodness, I was feeling extremely good about this,
but it was 3 o’clock and we were truly famished.
One delicious hour later, we were fortified with
homemade soup, warm bread, and delightful cappuccino.
Our phones were charged, and so were we!
We walked back to the Gallery with time to spare.
And there was no admission fee — which was the case at
several museums we visited.
How civilised!

 
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Up the wide, very old concrete steps we went,
past glorious architectural columns, through large doors,
and up beguiling staircases. The smell of a museum,
like the smell of a library, just fills me up.
And this one felt as if I had stepped back in time.
Plus they had great postcards!
I seriously did not have an ounce of space remaining
in my suitcase or carry-on—but that did not stop me
from purchasing more postcards.

 
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After our jam-packed day, we ensconced ourselves
in our airport-hotel room and ordered room service:
delicious thick “chips” and hummus. Then we watched an episode
of Miss Marple, a perfect ending to our “bonus day.”
The next morning, we got on our flight with no drama.
Everyone we encountered was so friendly and helpful,
and it truly couldn’t have been a grander finale to a wonderful trip.

Happy Go Lucky,

Bari

Make my heart go pitter-pattern

Dear Everyone ~

 
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I am truly rather chuffed to announce the arrival of luxurious
colourful greeting cards from The Pattern Book in the U.K.
I discovered a smattering of them when I was shopping or sleuthing,
or both, in York some weeks ago. I had happened upon a bookshop that was
closed for the day, and when I went back the very next morning…
it was closed for holiday.

 
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I was standing there in the drizzle,
wondering what good might come of this disappointment,
when I stepped into an adjacent little foyer. I was greeted with some
lovely ceramics and abstract paintings that looked intriguing.
I made my way up a narrow flight of stairs to the gallery above the bookshop,
which was not closed for holiday, and which, in delightful fact,
is owned by the daughter of the woman who owns the bookshop.
And, in a little basket, a selection of these cards,
some of which leapt into my totebag.

 
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The next week, I saw more of these enchanting cards at the
John Rylands Library in Manchester (about which, more next week!).
And, of course, I bought additional designs.
Now, Bari Zaki Studio is one of the first three shops
in the U.S. to stock Pattern Book cards
(neatly between one on the Left Coast and one in Massachusetts).

These cards are lovely to write on.
The stock is heavy and a bit toothy … and very receptive to pen-and-ink,
fountain pen, and even a Sharpie. The cards are approximately
(because they are metric) 4¾ x 6⅝. Their matte kraft envelopes
have a nice deep flap with a rounded tip.

 
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Delight is in the details:
The back of each card features a tasteful snippet
or miniature of the design on the front,
plus an extensive attribution.
Here are several of my favourites.

[Silk] Adapted from The Aniline Colours of the Badische Anilin
& Soda Fabrik…and their Application on Wool, Cotton, Silk
and other Textile Fibres
(1901). The Baden Aniline and Soda Factory
as it is known in English, or BASF, is now the largest chemical company in the world.

 
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[Yellows] Adapted from Werner’s nomenclature of colours:
with additions, arranged so as to render it highly useful
to the arts and sciences, particularly zoology, botany, chemistry,
mineralogy, and morbid anatomy: annexed to which are examples
selected from well-known objects in the animal,
vegetable, and mineral kingdoms
(1821).

 
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[Strawberry] Adapted from a watercolour by
Deborah Griscom Passmore (1891). Passmore painted more than a thousand
detailed watercolours of fruit for the US Department of Agriculture,
where she led a team of artists.

 
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Eight designs are in my online shop,
all to do with colour in some delightful way,
either theoretical or swatchful. Several additional designs
are available in-store only.

Dramatic Chromatic Greeting Cards

Chromatically,

Bari

Modern means to a very romantic end

Dear Everyone ~

 
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Once upon a recent time,
a young man named Spenser wanted to propose to his true love.

Being a modern man, he sought inspiration … well, I’ll let him tell you.
“I kept Googling ‘proposal suggestions’ to no avail.
After talking with my mom, I thought having a beautiful book
would be a great tool for expressing my feelings during the proposal!”

Spenser rang me mid-summer and explained his mission.
He acknowledged that he was not a paper person in the least
and that he would welcome my suggestions for what
he should collect to make the book charming & perfect.
I would get to handle the entire project from beginning to end:
print out all the photos, assemble the pages in sequence,
calligraph the headings for the pages,
and attach all the bits and pieces.
And, of course, make the book cover.
Spenser came in and selected two blue fabrics
and an adorable photo of Emily & himself for the cover.

 
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Spenser then set about documenting his & Emily’s romance,
from their first date, to the upcoming trip on which
he planned to propose with the finished book in hand.
Because he’s not (usually) a paper person,
he needed to collect ephemera after the fact—including receipts—
to tell the story of their dates and other memorable moments.
Here’s how he did it.

 
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“I contacted everyone by email and/or phone.
For some, I picked up the trinkets in person.
For others, I asked to have them mailed to my office or apartment.
Surprisingly, most of the restaurants, bars, etc. were very responsive.
Many of them went ‘above and beyond’ and included
multiple trinkets, receipts, etc. that could be used in the scrapbook.
I suspect this was in part due to my giving them full details up front,
so they knew it was for a worthy cause!”

 
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“I also sent Bari probably two dozen emails full of photos.
And I checked various dates in my Outlook calendar
to ensure I was giving her the right ordering.”

In mid-September,
Spenser came to the studio to pick up the completed book,
which he then smuggled to Europe in his luggage.
After running the Berlin marathon, he & Emily proceeded
to the South of France, where Spenser planned to propose.
And several days after that,
I received a triumphant and exuberant three-word email:
“She said yes!”
Of course I knew she would!
And then Spenser, bless his romantic heart,
sent me two photos of The Proposal Moments,
annotated with a note.

 
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“The first photo is right after the proposal.
The second one was when I gave her the scrapbook,
before flipping through it and proposing.
We went through it page-by-page, and as we turned to the last page,
I got down on one knee. She said yes, and we were both ecstatic!
She loved the scrapbook.”

 
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The next week,
Emily & Spenser were surprised at the Chicago airport
by both sets of parents. Spenser adds,
“We immediately showed them the scrapbook.
They, too, loved it!”

 
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Fairy tale ending,

Bari

A Tale of Royal Mail

Dear Everyone ~

I’ve recently returned from two glorious weeks in England.
One of Zak’s nephews was getting married in Chester,
a town where we’ve stayed many times—and
with whose post office I am well acquainted.
We spent our first week on a farm in Yorkshire,
which was perfectly pastoral.

The wedding festivities were glowing,
and the city offered up several magical interludes.
As you might imagine, a couple of them involved the posting of mail—
a ritual that is of course preceded by the affixing of stamps.
I was delighted to find that the post office had relocated
to the basement of a W.H. Smith, the venerable British emporium
for magazines and books, stationery and office supplies,
pens and chocolate bars.
More than convenient—divine.

 
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When we travel overseas, one of my favourite things to do
is accumulate current stamps, which I select for their design.
I’m also fond of collecting Par Avion labels and stickers.
This trip I decided to take my entire British postage collection
with me, so that I could enjoy using all the lovely stamps
I had acquired over the years, including
King Henry VIII & All His Wives.

 
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In England, like in the U.S., if you have vintage stamps
that haven’t been used, they’re still valid for postage.
However, many of my British stamps have no denomination
printed on them, so I can’t really figure out which stamps
to use to add up to international first class mail. And,
even if there were denominations, I realize that I have no idea
what the current rates are for sending postcards and envelopes to the U.S.
Hmmm.

 
 

I want to arrive at the P.O. somewhat prepared,
so I decide to start adding stamps semi-willy nilly,
the more the merrier. I wield my Italian gluestick,
with its delightful aroma of maraschino cherries.
As my postal muse says, “When in doubt, overfrank!”
And then when I get to the P.O. if I need more postage on anything,
I can purchase it at the source.

 
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Well, when my mail and I present ourselves at the P.O.,
the clerk is a young lad who has never even seen some of the stamps I’ve used.
He is patient and efficient and helpful, weighing each
and every one of my letters and postcards to be sure I have
enough postage. He proceeds to show me the current offerings.
I choose some classic Q.E. stamps
(which are now self-adhesive, but still in assorted beguiling colours)
to add on to the few envelopes that require more postage than I had attached.

 
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Here comes the endearing bit:
The clerk places the needed stamps for each card or
envelope on top of it, carefully making a stack, so that I can then take
them aside and enjoy the moment of adding the stamps.
I loved his thoughtfulness— his concern for organisation
and my desire to enjoy attaching the stamps myself.

 
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Royally chuffed,

Bari

Nothing sheepish about learning to bind a book in Iceland

Dear Everyone ~

 
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A couple of weeks ago, I received a surprise postcard from Iceland.
The sender’s message was endearing:
“I just finished my very first buttonhole stitch book,
guided by your lovely instructions.
It was so wonderful to bind a book after a long day
away for work, in my hotel room late in the evening.
So this is a BIG thank you card from Iceland!”
It was signed “@annainpaperland,” which is the sender’s Instagram address.
The watercolour illustration by Patra Tawatpol is charming —
its title is Flock of Love – Iceland.
I’m sure this is my first piece of mail from Iceland,
and I also appreciated the neatly hand-cancelled postage stamp.

 
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As you might imagine, I reached right out to Anna in Paperland,
first to see if I could share the particulars of her experience of
taking my online buttonhole stitch course.
When she replied so graciously, I gently barraged her with questions.
Here are some of her responses, plus her lovely photos.

“I live in The Netherlands, and I have been taking weekly bookbinding classes
for a year in the evening. They are held at a bookbindery called Papyrus,
nearby in Leiden. I discovered you on Instagram and have been following
@barizaki for awhile. I always check out the workshops you give in your studio,
but as we are over 6,500 km apart, I was thrilled to find out you have an online course
as well. I’d never made a buttonhole stitch book.”

“It was wonderful to follow your class and make the book in Reykjavík
in the evenings, after a long day standing on my feet.
I was working at an international civil engineering conference.
Back in my hotel room, it was like sitting next to you,
sharing bookbinding jokes and even saving all the paper scraps
as paper lovers do. I found your instructions very clear — and funny too.”

 
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“I love making books, and seeing what you can create with paper still amazes me.
The idea of being away for a week with nothing to bind in the evenings
made me look for a project that I could take with me.
I usually bring some bookbinding tools and basic things
like beeswax on my travels.”

 
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“Paper is everywhere. You only need a few things to make a book!
In this case, I printed out your list and brought the supplies
(paper and yarn) with me, as I didn't know when or where to get these in Iceland.
As far as I know there are no bookbinders in Reykjavík.
Then, it turned out that the yarn I had brought with me was too thin.
It cut through the paper.”

“So, the next day after work, I went to the wool shop
run by the Handknitting Association of Iceland
(at Skólavörðustígur 19, Reykjavík — in case anyone wants to make a note!).
They were really helpful in finding thicker yarn, and,
of course, since I was in Iceland, it had to be Lopi Yarn
made of wool from Icelandic sheep!”

 
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“At work, I only use paper for writing notes, designs and printing.
At home, it's different. I've been writing letters and sending postcards
since I was little, and to my delight I was invited to join the snailmailcollective
on Instagram some years ago. I really love exchanging letters —
although I myself need some handwriting improvement. Haha!
And now I have the added bonus of creating books and boxes.
My workspace has doubled since :)”

 
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“On September 1, 2018, I ‘introduced’ Anna In Paperland and posted on Instagram.
For me, Anna In Paperland is about the magical wonderworld of paper,
binding books and making boxes, exploring art —
and a reference to one of my favourite books, Alice in Wonderland.
It still amazes me who I have met through @annainpaperland,
what I learn, the fun and the support you can share.
When I received a request to make a wedding guest book,
I created my own blind embossing stamp to use
for each paper treasure I get to make.”

 
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“My Icelandic buttonhole stitch book will be on display for awhile,
but as it is filled with lovely watercolour paper,
I plan to bring it on my next holiday near the sea
and use if for my watercolours. I will also make another one to further practice
the binding and to have a go with proper 7-ply yarn. Actually, at first,
I didn't use any of the books I bound, but you quickly get quite a collection :),
so now I’ve started using the books, giving them away,
or creating a book especially for somebody.”

“I sent quite a few postcards on this trip: to my family, and two friends at home,
and my snailmail friends overseas in Australia. I bought the postcards
for you and others at the bookstore Mál og Menning, right in the city centre.
I was lucky that it was open every weekday till 10 pm.
I wrote the cards in a cozy coffee house, Kaffibrennslan, across the street.
It's not every day you get to send postcards from Iceland.”

 
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* * * * *

My heartfelt thanks to Anna,
for every wonderful detail of her online bookbinding adventure,
and for her fabulous photos.
I am so excited to have Anna in Paperland in my cosmos.

Enchanted,

Bari