I saw this on NPR's website and
wanted to share with you.
When Making Books Was As Much Of
An Art As Writing Them
Listen·4:
When was the last time you picked up a book and really looked at
how it was made: the typeface, the feel of the paper, the way the words look on
the page? Today, when people can read on their phones, some books never even
make it to paper.
Once, bookmaking was an art as refined and distinct as the
writing it presents. And in some places, like Larkspur Press in Kentucky, it
still is.
For more than 40 years Gray Zeitz has been creating books one at
a time in his two-story print shop near the town of Monterey. He works with the
some of the state's finest writers, including Wendell Berry and Bobby Ann Mason,
and his Larkspur Pressturns
out just a few editions a year.
"I have had, and still do have, printers that come in that
used to work on presses like this and they are just tickled to death,"
says Zeitz, 69, showing me his 1915 Chandler & Price printing press. He
cuts stacks of paper on another machine that dates from the late 1800s.
Zeitz left the University of Kentucky in the winter of 1974,
half a semester away from finishing an English degree. He'd been learning
letterpress work – the way individually set type makes an impression on
high-quality paper –- and he wanted to make fine books, especially poetry. At
that time, the letterpress craft was fading as printers moved to faster offset
printing.
But to Zeitz the moment seemed right. He didn't need electricity
at first, or indoor plumbing. He'd grow tobacco to sell and they'd raise
calves. Kentucky writers would be featured.
Later, to pay the bills, he added in smaller print jobs.
"There was a point when my wife, Jean, came up to me and said, 'Gray,
you're either going to have to start doing some of these jobs — job printing —
or you're going to have to go out and get a job."
He began taking orders for things like business cards and
wedding announcements. "That became interesting to me as well."
In those days, Monterey was attracting hippies and musicians and
artists and candlemakers. Early on they started a fall festival at Larkspur,
and people come from all over the country to see the books Zeitz creates — to
touch and feel their hand-sewn bindings and see the perfection Larkspur strives
for in the pages.
"This whole concept of texture and lightness, there's a
kind of sensual quality just to the book itself," says his friend Jack
Campbell, who works in industrial design.

Gabrielle Fox is a professional bookbinder who's done lots of
high-end work for Larkspur. Every summer she goes out to Colorado to teach at
the American Academy of Bookbinding.
"And the books that they sell to their students to begin learning are Larkspur Press books," she says. "The students come from all over the world to that school."
"And the books that they sell to their students to begin learning are Larkspur Press books," she says. "The students come from all over the world to that school."

Zeitz has one full-time employee: Leslie Shane. "I have
just sewn 20 of this little book of poetry by Erik Reece," she says. "It's called Animals
at Full Moon. Now I'm just cutting
them
Larkspur only brings out about four books a year, and they can
be two years behind. If Gray Zeitz knew how to use a computer he could open the
Larkspur Press home page and see the covers of 100 books he has on his shelves
in inventory.
Some of the prices reach $200 for special editions, but the
press is best known for the books they can sell for $20 or $25.
In another part of the shop, Gray Zeitz shows me the lead type,
which he sets — each letter and space — by hand. "When the ink's ready
we'll put this on the press and pull a proof and see what we have."
At day's end Zeitz shuts down his shop and walks up the hill to his house, which is a fading purple.
At day's end Zeitz shuts down his shop and walks up the hill to his house, which is a fading purple.
It's a quiet house; Jean passed away four summers ago. His two
dogs come over from playing in the creek.
"Well, I don't intend to retire," he says. "If I
did retire then I'd just print books, so I might as well stay in business."
Happy Reading!
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