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Chad Pastotnik, Deep Wood Press

~ Fine letterpress and intaglio printing ~ Celebrating 30 years in 2022

Chad Pastotnik, Deep Wood Press

Category Archives: Presentation bindings

Nice bindings, new books, old ghosts…

24 Monday Nov 2025

Posted by Deep Wood Press in Glenn Wolff, Jerry Dennis, Letterpress, Presentation bindings, The Wind in the Willows

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art, Bookbinding, Books, deluxe edition, fine press books, Jabberwocky, The Wind in the Willows

As we move towards the holidays I’ve a couple extra special stocking stuffers for those whose bookshelves find themselves in need of filling. For years I have extended my book editions by 5-10 unbound copies, making them available to other book binders to play with and it’s always a treat to see what they come up with.

Jon Buller is an old friend and very accomplished binder. His Bessenberg Bindery in the Kerrytown neighborhood of Ann Arbor, MI produced countless bound doctoral thesis papers but also plenty of beautiful one of a kind and editioned volumes – Jon and his team bound our edition of The Heart of Darkness way back in 2007! His nephew has resurrected the bindery as Bohemio in a new location but in the 2000’s the proximity to Hollander’s (who hosted summer intensives from the American Academy of Bookbinding with Don Etherington and Monique Lallier) and the thriving Kerrytown Bookfest made the cozy neighborhood bindery a destination and haven for many of us other instructors. Jon is now mostly retired but taught at the Campbell Folk School in North Carolina this past year. Here is Jon’s version of our Wind in the Willows which he says is meant to reflect the 18th/19th century binding styles one finds in English manor homes of the time. Bound in a beautiful green Sokoto goat skin, sewn headbands, beautiful gold tooling and an inlaid border of tan goat and housed in a beautiful slipcase with a curved matching leather opening.

This one of a kind binding can be yours for $3200 by clicking here.

The standard edition is still available for direct purchase on my website for $2000 but probably not for long. I have not marketed this book to my institutional collectors as yet but I plan to finally send out notice this week.


Another book which has its origins in Ann Arbor from around the same time period is a special rare edition featuring my old friend Jim Horton. Jim established the Wood Engravers Network in 1994 which continues to thrive 30 years later with an international presence and ever growing membership. In 1998 Jim partnered with Schuyler Shipley and Rebecca Shaffer to produce this edition of Jabberwocky with a remarkable wood engraved reduction block of the Jabberwock in 7 iterations. Reduction printing means carving the block, printing it, carving some more, printing it some more which, by its very nature, limits the whole edition quantity to the first press run – the block is destroyed in its journey to become the final product. I was not involved in the printing of this book but always admired the artwork – and often wished I had. So when I was gifted an unbound set of sheets from Karen Hanmer I decided to contribute to the project these many years later. The text is hand composed in Tell Text No. 5 and Virile Open and is printed on thick Twinrocker Feather Deckle which I trimmed to keep some of the massive “feather deckle” on the fore edge. The binding is an interesting amalgamation of styles, sewn onto leather straps creating true raised bands and covered in full blue Sokoto goat merging into a sprinkled Cambridge panel binding with cloth hinges. Gold titling, blind tooling with inlays of black and orange goat for the eyes and spine title. The book is 8×10 ⅜”, 22 pages, with a slipcase.

SOLD!


Work is progressing on Mornings at Jackpine, a collaboration with poet/essayist Jerry Dennis and artist Glen Wolff, with whom I’ve collaborated on projects in the past. The book is going on the press after Thanksgiving and, if all goes well, a few fine edition copies should be available for Christmas. The Printers’ Family Tree project is also progressing and I will be showing completed bindings at the Manhattan Rare Book and Fine Press Fair next May.


OTHER NEWS:

I spent a good part of this past summer (and fall) working on my house. It was 15 years ago when a few friends and I built the timber frame and fieldstone structure I designed, replacing the old shack I purchased 33 years ago here on the Cedar River. I skimped on a few things trying to get occupancy before my son was born (we made it by a week!) and unfortunately the old septic connection to the house and downstairs bathroom finally gave up in the most spectacular fashion (as such things always do). In the thick of busting out cast iron pipes in 4″ of concrete the anniversary of Deep Wood Press quietly came and went in late October. Here’s hoping year 34 will be a productive one in bookish ways! I also didn’t make it to France this fall as I now have custody of the son whose impending birth drove the frantic house construction pace back then. Some exciting changes have happened at the Louis Jou Foundation though, and I’m anxious to return to France soon and work with our new president and board members as we become more active beyond Provence (and even France) in exciting new directions. This month a locally based national arts organization (Crosshatch Center for Art and Ecology) decided to purchase a building in my village and start an art center and I helped them move a former student’s printing equipment into the space. It looks like I will start teaching letterpress and other printmaking processes again – and within easy driving distance of my home! I have kept a very low profile where I live but am intrigued to see where this might lead.

I’d like to note the passing of some important people (to me) in the fine press book world. Bob Baris (Press on Scroll Road) passed away in late October. He and his wife Freddie were regulars at the Oak Knoll Book Festival where we enjoyed much camaraderie with other printers along with a fun exhibit with the Rowfant Club they helped organize in Cleveland. Jean-Francois Vilain left us earlier this month as well. He and his partner Roger have for many years been outstanding participants as customers, judges, observant intellectuals and most importantly, as a friend. Eventually their extensive collection will fill a new vault at the University of Pennsylvania libraries. I know this is just normal, we lose more people as we get older, but I’m discontented with only just memories of too many friends in recent years.

I will most likely bother you again in the near future when Mornings at Jackpine starts becoming photogenic – it is always a cherished moment to take a freshly finished copy of a book and place it on my backdrop, light it, and capture the details of its construction and finished presentation. I’ll get a few pictures of Jerry and Glenn as they work alongside me in the studio as well.

And one last temptation if I may. My partner Madeleine Vedel happens to be a French trained chocolatier and is beginning sales of this years very limited holiday seasonal selections. Earlier this week she was in the studio hand setting the new menu in Garamond and printing on the Vandercook. Find out more at on her website: Cuisine Provencale, peruse some of her French tour offerings and come say hello to us at the table next spring at the Manhattan Book Fair.

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Castles to trout streams ~ further adventures making books

27 Wednesday Mar 2024

Posted by Deep Wood Press in In the Penal Colony, James Bernard Gross, Letterpress, Louis Jou, Manhattan Fine Press Book Fair, Presentation bindings

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Books, history, James Bernard Gross, Letterpress, literature, Presentation bindings, reading, The LIQUORSTORE pomes, writing

Much has happened in the months since my last post including a trip to the Oxford Fair in December. In a couple weeks I venture forth once again for the 9th Manhattan Fine Press Book Fair and this time I will be bringing along the prototype for the newest book THE LIQUORSTORE pomes by James Bernard Gross as well as a couple presentation bindings to display before they go off to their permanent homes with collectors.

James approached me about his book well over a year ago and details around production finalized before heading to France last September so I could at least start on a couple of the wood engravings while overseas. In December, before and after Oxford, I was busy on my Linotype casting the text for the book. New acquisitions of logotype and diacritic matrices for one of the house typefaces, Garamond, have made typography on the machine equal to hand setting for letter fitment and it is always a joy to print from fresh type. The book will come in just under 100 pages for the 36 poems with an introduction from Toby Olson and will be printed on Hahnemühle Biblio paper in 12pt Garamond, an edition of 50 books in a 6.5 x 10 inch format. I’m still working on those wood engravings (the one shown below is a mere 2.5 x 2.25″) but the plan is for 3 or 4 within the book to illustrate. With luck the book will be in the bindery by June and will be available shortly after. Stay tuned here for more production pictures and details in the months to come.

Another commissioned binding for my edition of Kafka’s In the Penal Colony was recently completed for a collector in Australia. I’ve done five variations on this theme of a rugged leather coast with topographic features blind tooled into the sea for this book and I’m pleased with the way this one has evolved as well. A burgundy Sokoto goat hide for the spine and river grained goat on the boards which is heavily tooled. My usual treatment with thinly pared onlay and inlay work completes the scene. This closes the sale of the edition as well though I might be able to get a book or two from my co-conspirators on the project – Dellas Henke and Breon Mitchell (etchings and translator).

Oxford was a wonderful show and it was a pleasure to see so many of my European printer and binder friends gathered together just before the holiday. It was wonderful to hear so many impressions and stories about encounters with the work of Louis Jou from my European peers and even more encouraging for me to keep up my activities in Les Baux. The true highlight for me was spending time with one of my oldest friends who is currently teaching in Bath. “One cannot make new old friends” as the saying goes…

Finally, stretching back to last October in Les Baux at the Louis Jou Foundation, I taught a typography and linocut workshop for a couple students after the wood engraving class I brought Joanne Price over to teach. With both of them already possessing skills with lino cutting we dove in immediately to 2-color and reduction block work and in the period of 4 days the students came up with some very good broadsides! Working with Jou’s incredible typefaces and using his iron hand presses for production is an experience in itself. I spent a month in Les Baux last fall organizing Jou’s type, the leading and furniture and also breaking down old type forms lying around the studio gathering dust and being destroyed. While we have a supply of his type in book sizes the display type will never be able to be replaced so this was an important personal task for me to undertake. I’m pleased to say that our lovely museum is now a fully functional printing space. If Jou were to rise from the dead and return to his studio he could immediately begin production again.

And to conclude this foray into the world of Deep Wood Press I would like to invite all who can come to the 9th incarnation of the Manhattan Rare Book & Fine Press Fair on April 6th. Our usual location in the basement at The Church of St. Vincent Ferrer, 869 Lexington Avenue just across the street from the ABAA New York Antiquarian Book Fair at the Park Avenue Armory. Join me and 35 other private presses, book artists, makers and takers from around the world as we bare our souls in the city that never sleeps.

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