The Miniature Book Society, Inc. is an international non-profit organization chartered in 1983 by the State of Ohio. Its purposes are to sustain an interest in all phases of miniature books; to provide a forum for the exchange of ideas and to serve as a clearing house for information about miniature books.

MEMBERSHIP

Membership in the Miniature Book Society, Inc. is open to all who have an interest in miniature books. USA dues are $25 individual and $35 couple/corporate; Non-USA dues are $40 individual and $50 couple/corporate. You may obtain a membership request form from Loretta Gentile, 10 Albert St., Waltham MA 02154. Current offices are held by: Doris Selmer, President; Donn Sanford, Vice President; Michael Canoso, Secretary; Loretta Gentile, Treasurer. As of August, 1996, we have 410 members, and growing.


We would like to welcome our newest members: Peggy Whitney Hobbs, Bethlehem PA; Lynn Berkowitz, Slatedale PA; JoAnna Poehlmann, Milwaukee WI; Elizabeth Sica, Kutztown PA; Robert C. Bradbury, Worcester MA; Kandy Vermeer Phillips, Gaithersburg MD; Ronald Wood, Louisville KY.



CONCLAVE XV

The MBS Conclave XV will be held in Bethlehem PA on Labor Day weekend 1997, August 29, 30, 31 and September 1. The committee, which is already working hard to make this a great conclave, is headed by Jane W. Conneen, proprietor of The Little Farm Press. Others on the committee are: Olga Conneen, coordinator of youth services at the Bethlehem Public Library; Larry M. Miley, treasurer and menu planner, proprietor of Sunflower Unlimited; Philip Metzger, curator of special collections at the Linderman Library, Lehigh University; Diane Shaw, curator of special collections at the Skillman Library, Lafayette College; Kathy McAuley Richards of the Lehigh College of Arts and Sciences, publicity; Alden Jacobs, recently retired from the Life Insurance and Hotel & Motel Associations, arranging side trips to good book, museum and art locations in and near Bethlehem.


More activities are planned. Stay tuned!


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ARTICLES

THE EARLY MAKING OF MANUSCRIPTS

by Sandra Miesel

Manuscripts were created to suit different classes of consumers. Book loving aristocrats sometimes maintained artists on retainer,as the French Duke of Berry did with the three Brothers Limbourg, the finest miniature painters, about 1400. Later in that century, Cosimo de'Medici kept 45 scribes busy for two years copying 200 volumes for his new library in Florence. Specially commissioned religious books often included a portrait of the owner at prayer.
Books were also made to order, according to a verbal (or more rarely written) contract. For example, in 1398, Master Jean Demolin agreed to produce a Book of Hours of specified design for a French merchant in three months with materials supplied by the customer. For his efforts, Demolin was paid at a rate of about four times the salary of a skilled laborer. A good Book of Hours was a status symbol equivalent to a modern luxury car.


Books much in demand - such as Bibles, Missals and Books of Hours - could be bought unbound "off the shelf" in big cities such as Paris. The purchaser's coat-of-arms (if he had one) could be painted onto a shield left blank for that purpose. The customer took the manuscript to a different craftsman for binding in stiffened leather or leather-covered wood. The practical aspects and design features of manuscripts tended to become somewhat standardized over time.
Bibles had study aids - a letter of St. Jerome as a preface, canon tables to cross reference equivalent Gospel passages, outlines and introductions of each book, or a glossary of names. Psalters had a lavishly decorated "Beatus page" to open Ps. 1. Books of Hours had local liturgical calendars decorated with the Labors of the Months.
Book making workshops divided the responsibilities among several scribes, artists and decorators. Parchment was purchased in standard sizes comparable to modern book dimensions. Stationers prepared it from the skins of sheep, goats or young calves (vellum) by soaking the hides in lime solution, then scraping, stretching, drying, smoothing with pumice and whitening with chalk. Paper made from linen rags was also available, but was not used for the best books. Fussy Italian collectors had their books made on vellum and illuminated by hand.


Working at slanted desks, scribes ruled double-page spreads of parchment, allowing so many lines for text, initials and borders. They wrote with goose quill pens and ink made from lampblack or iron and oak gall. Marginal notes or sketches cued the artists - "prophet with scroll here. King David with harp there"
One or more artists produced decorated letters in varying degrees of intricacy, panels of illustration and borders. The latter might include geometric designs, fantastic creatures ("drolleries"), scenes from everyday life or naturalistic images of real objects such as flowers or jewelry. The artists sketched their subjects with a metal stylus, inked the outlines and painted them with vegetable or mineral pigments mixed with egg, gum, sugar or even earwax. Gold was applied as leaf or ink. A lower-ranking artist "flourished" the initials with curlicues of penwork. The finished pages were folded into packets called "gatherings," which were sewn together to form the book, ready for binding. Manuscripts were carried around in protective leather "book chemises" or packed in hard leather cases. Only books in semi-public scholarly libraries were secured with chains.


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LETTER FROM LODZ

The Polish Adventurer - Karen Stahlecker

I arrived just fine via my Chicago layover and then a Warsaw arrival January 15th. Although it's truly winter here, I'm settling in well. Prior practice in both Chicago and Anchorage were helpful, I'm sure, but recent time in California & Washington diluted my blood for cold weather. Never underestimate the power of jet-lag... rule of thumb is one day per hour of change, so 9 hours of change...ouch!! And it did, in fact, take over a week. I've begun to cook and to make art with gusto... very positive signs regarding my soul's health.

Poland has made some huge changes since my visit here in 1994, and I'm just delighted I decided to take the chance with the Fulbright and to just come over. My hostess here at the Academy, Aleksandra Manczak, Head Professor of Fibers, and I are preparing all kinds of interesting experiments in both papermaking and art making. I will be using the Textile Studio for papermaking, and for the moment, have space at my new apartment to go further as needed. There's an Academy gallery opening Friday at noon where I hope to meet more prefessors. It's a pretty large school.

Due to some assumptions about "AOL in Poland" that weren't quite true, I must still be contacted by email at Stahlecker@aol.com which is still the US connection. I'll get it all straighted out soon, I'm sure.
For now, please keep in touch and do widzenia (goodbye). Karen

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PUBLISHERS

AN AMERICAN HORNBOOK, Juniper Von Phitzer

POE - MASTER OF MACABRE by P.H.Bellas

THE OATH, Pequeño Press

YOU CAN JUDGE A BOOK BY ITS COVER by Bernard C. Middleton


THE SHAPE OF THINGS by Edward H. Hutchins


A 1000 MILE MILE WALK TO THE GULF by Peter & Donna Thomas


OLD GROWTH ALTAR by Karen Stahlecker


LETTERS TO EMILY by Glen Dawson


THE MALVERN STORY by De Walden Press


ETIQUETTE by Mark Twain


NADIE, by Soraya Marcano

MY ADVENTURES IN MINIBIBLIOMANIA, by Kathryn I. Rickard


THE BENJAMIN FRANKLIN PRIMER, Old Farmhouse Press


THE MICROBIBLIOPHILE, Published by Jon Mayo


DEALERS

Miniature Book Society member book dealers

A want list by Carol A. Bowie



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COLLECTORS


"TINY TOMES" The Charlotte M. Smith Collection of Miniature Books



C'mon MBS members... we need more news about your collection in here!

Please send an article on your (or anyone else's) miniature collection to Webmistrix, Pat Baldwin pat@membrane.com

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Here are some links for miniature book enthusiasts.

Rebecca Saady Bingham

David Horner's Impressions Press

Pat Baldwin's Pequeño Press

John Schori's page for The Press of Ward Schori

University of South Florida

Jane Conneen's Little Farm Press

W. Trevor Blake's miniature book page

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Internet Link Exchange
Member of the Internet Link Exchange

Please send any new Miniature Book news to Webmistrix, Pat Baldwin pat@membrane.com

© 1996 Miniature Book Society

Last update: February 3, 1997

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