RTÉ documentary series exploring the craft traditions of Ireland. hands.ie/ Narrated by historian Maurice Craig. Filmed in 1981. antiquarianbookcrafts.com
For all who are wondering , this company still exists in Dublin, the name changed back in 1981 to Antiquarian Bookcrafts and moved to Marlay Park, we moved again in 2013 to Ballymount industrial estate in Dublin, my father is in the video, Cathal O' Grady, I have continued on my father and grandfathers profession at Antiquarian Bookcrafts where we still repair and restore books just like in the video.
So glad to hear that! I was trained up in the old methods of letterpress printing. It kills me to see how younger people do it these days. So much of the craft is lost! But here and there you'll find someone, usually older, using all the old brilliant techniques. Like those shown here. Anyway. Good wishes to you from Northern California.
My Dad is a trained Bookbinder but hasn't worked as such for many years, if you are ever looking for more staff with experience, even just for part time work, I think he genuinely misses the work.
I just learned that the librarian at 14:37 recently passed away in August 2021. Kudos to her lifelong dedication to preserving the heritage of mankind. Rest in peace.
My father was a master bookbinder for nearly 43 years. Sadly, he passed away almost 6 years ago. However, the continuity of the craft has been assured. My husband was my father’s apprentice. My husband is now the master bookbinder. I don’t know if the family business will survive this coronavirus. If it doesn’t, I know he will continue it as a hobby. This video brought back memories of helping in the bookbindery as I grew up. The pounding sounds and the smell of glues, machine oil, and leather is unforgettable. My main job was working with the ludlow machine and stamping. However, I had my hand before in every aspect of putting a book together. My interests diverged from bookbinding into healthcare (mainly from collating medical journals for years lol). I’m a registered nurse, now.
This is so intresting, sounds like wonderful childhood memories. Glad your husband learned the trait and continues the work. Would love to learn more and carry out this great tradition.
21:15 He's working on Photius's famous "Bibliotheca" aka, "the Myriobiblon" or "the Ten-Thousand Books". Photius was basically the first book reviewer. In that book are reviews of something like 300 different books he read in his lifetime. Most of them have been lost and are totally unknown today. It's a really important book from the 9th century.
Indeed, a Kindle doesn't quite cut it. It's hard to feel cozy or even nostalgic when reading something off of a lit screen. I like books, no batteries or electricity needed. I love to go into a book store and get hit in the nose by the smell of all that paper, ink and glue. LOL
@@SpiritBear12 I understand what you mean ✌️ I buy lots of books on Kindle, but the best ones, I buy "for real". I read good books several times. Just like I play good CDs more than once.
CZcams has a fascinating collection of master craftsmen plying their trade. I would also recommend Baumgartner Restoration. He cleans and restores old paintings and it is amazing to watch him work and listen to what he is doing. Very "Bob Ross-eqsue". I would suggest The Conservation of The Assassination of Archimedes Narrated Version to start with.
As a book collector, I do appreciate the art and craftsmanship behind precious old books. Sadly every day it is more difficult to find qualified craftsmen who can do the necessary repairs of old books or the binding of new ones. A beautiful art that is rapidly disappearing. Great video, but with a sad and melancholic aftertaste. Cheers
I'm trying my best to learn how to do bookbinding. I've found that my friend's mom does it, and she taught me the flat back binding method. Regardless of the fact that supplies can be rare and expensive and I can't find a class to teach me how to properly prepare traditional books, I'm still looking. The art isn't dead, not yet.
Fret not, there are still some of us who practice the art. And there are quite a few university programs dedicated to papermaking and book binding. And more than a few private institutions.
I am speechless! What a beautiful craft! This is real valuable work, and cultural ware. These books are certainly a national treasure of Ireland, but also a treasure for all Europe!
I was an apprentice at a bookbinding shop in the 80's but I couldn't find any steady job with it. But I have some books that I have made myself. And I'm of course not even close to these people :)
My grandmother and 3 great aunts were all bok binders, and used to rebind my mother's school books and copies for her every year. My grandmother met my grandfather, a printer, in the gap between the printing room and the binding room of their press in Dublin city centre- the name escapes me, and both of them have died, so unable to ask- but he went on to work with the National Print Museum, which I wish would have more about the binding side of the press!
Wow. I love this. I am so impressed with this degree of beauty and excellence! And the lady who’s been there since age 14! Thank you for this showing these wonderful people to us. I am so grateful! Love and best wishes from Mississippi. ❤️
I can watch this for hours! Thank you for posting! My mother and my niece went to Ireland for my mother's 70th birthday! She loved it! They spent a night in a castle, too! She died a few years ago at 91.
I have always dismissed the gold filigree and rich leather spines on the few eighteenth and early nineteenth century books I possess, valuing only the contribution of the text to my historical research. This documentary has made me examine the bookbinding for the first time, and begun to appreciate the craftsmanship that went into them, even if they don't match that of the Dublin and Paris traditions. Thank you for posting this and adding a value to my enjoyment of these books I never knew I needed.
The skill, artistry, and knowledge these craftsmen, and craftswomen possess are almost irreplaceable and should be considered national treasuries. This is an art form that is almost gone from existence. The Victorian Era had the most detailed and beautiful forms in architecture, clothing, art, furniture, books, and music. Oh, how I wish we could recapture those qualities again.
This brings back wonderful memories of my childhood as my father was a bookbinder. I can remember watching him sometimes as he worked. I still have a small container gold leaf that was his that he'd saved when not all the leaf was used in a project.
I am a junk journal maker and paper crafter. Never did I have a clue of this process. I cannot believe how interesting this was for me, and how much I now appreciate and admire the entire process. Simply unbelievable craftsmanship. Thank you so much for sharing this with the world.
I raise my glass to the art shown here and the artisans at work . This is an art now passed from the general world, but for the few who carry its torch you have my un-dieing respect, as do all those that maintain the crafts of our past to carry such art forward to the times when mankind will once again need its function and form.
It's amazing how these extremely intricate skills can be made to look easy to the point of appearing slightly slapdash in the hands of experts: and yet the end result is always a masterpiece.
I’ve always secretly wanted to be a printer or bookbinder. There’s something about the smell of ink, gold leaf, paper, wood, glue, and the textures of these things, the feel in one’s hands of a freshly bound book…! The few times I mentioned it to the vocational counselor at school, my comment was ignored entirely or dismissed with a light laugh. Even in the early 1970’s, there was no place in the modern world for a bookbinder. Besides, it was not only outmoded, but a manual trade, clearly beneath someone with a university education!
Oh what I have given for the opportunity of being a bookbinder or a jeweler, but alas my mother saw such endeavours beneath her son, so I was swiftly send to a university to later become a chemist. After decades of hating my work and years after my mother's passing I dare buying everything I needed to do bookbinding in my home, i have never sold anything I do, nor i intend to, but it gives me happiness,to finally do what I have always wanted to
It’s amazing to see this artful work. The old ways are fascinating to me. Even though I’m 2 generations removed from my ancestral homeland in Ireland, I’m very thankful to reconnect to the old ways….thank you from the Rocky Mountains of Colorado.
Sadly,the company no longer exists.I looked it up after watching this.Though one can hope that this fine art is continuing in a different establishment.I hate to see these old and beautiful craft traditions dying out.
I have the same thoughts, I decided to take up book binding as a hobby on the side. But I hope to do it for my books to give my family special editions
I have learned to be an Offset-Printer from the year 1991- 1994 and a Book binder in the years from 1994 - 1996. I'm living near the City of Mainz in Germany. There is a Museum about Printing and the Inventor of the printing with moveable letters, Johannes Gutenberg. On some days there are Events for kids where they could see and learn about printing and book binding when old Masters show their works of art. Sadly in our digital time a lot of books are only in bits and bites to read. But also a lot of people love to have a physical book in their hands. And I also love to write my stories first on paper before I tip it into the PC. :)
Though I agree that the oldschool traditional way is dying out bookbinding itself won't so don't worry about it! I myself do it as a hobby and my goal is to create a real "Codex" grade book that even could rival this excellent Dublin book binding quality [I mainly do 2D art so I can fill it with that in a very good way] I already can do "standart" books in a bookshop quality. The only difference would be the cost and time to make it because as a layman I lack the awesome machinery and routine of those professionals which will be lost in time (or at least some machienes preserved in a museum).But if you look around for bookbinding tutorials you will see that there are many people out there still holding that awesome tradition up.
Hands is a real great series of short films. I have been watching many recently and they are all wonderful and interesting. This one was particular fabulous. Tradition and skill within all trades should never best lost forever, and only hands do it better than anything else.
There is a wonderful series of DVDs available from the filmmakers with old skills from boatbuilding to lacemaking and saddle making. Twenty hours in total. I'd heartily recommend them all ! They are produced by David and Sally Shaw-Smith and will be come one of your most treasured possessions if you can buy them
I'm so glad this bookbinders is still in business and John still there. So nice at the start they gave the exact address which is within the first page Google results. I remember working in old street London, on the way there through Mount Pleasant there was a very old looking binders. I mean the place looked like it hasn't been cleaned since the1920s/30s. I went in and the guy looked just as old and we talked, I offered to help him clean and restore and do general diy in turn for learning to bind. I was set to to two days a week Sunday and Monday, 5 hours each day. Each day I would take an hour doing what he needed, mainly cleaning and installing electrical features and rewiring. So 8 hours a week which I was really excited to do, especially from someone with so much experience. He was over 70 and had learned his craft from childhood. I arrive on Sunday at 11am to no answer, I knock and knock and he answers really angry and smelling badly of booze. He'd forgotten our talk and thought I was running a scam, he was shouting something about calling the police. Really wish he wasn't so unstable because the few times I passed by I really wanted to ask again
If my Mother could't find me the first place she called was the library. I actually got lost in the first grade trying to go to the library by myself. As soon as I realized I could read I was hooked on the library.
Thank you for posting this. This is satisfying in so many ways: historic preservation, art, expert craftsmanship, love of books and more. The librarian at 14:35 seems to me to be much more than a librarian( no disrespect to librarians, their work goes unsung), I would also call her her a curator, and I thank her for that. Also , the young woman at 0:52 , to have started this craft at fourteen and to stay with it is amazing. With young people like her I feel comfortable that after I am gone the world might just be ok.
Thanks very much for uploading this fascinating programme. I really enjoyed it. The makers of older TV shows could still assume that viewers had intelligent interests and grown-up attention spans! My "pandemic project" was actually to learn some basic bookbinding skills. If nothing else, the experience taught me the real cost and value of handmade bindings. Our modern consumer culture expects things to be cheap and available instantly. If we're ever to attain a "sustainable" way of life, we'll have to get used to paying more and owning less-and therefore also choosing to own only those things that will really last.
Can't see if anyone else noticed this but the timing of the end of the music and the guillotine blade around the 7 minute mark is genius editing. Whoever did this, if it were done on purpose, was ahead of their time!
Wonderful documentary! I have few old books, but only maybe 100 years old. I appreciate them very much. So I have to tell a story, a sad one. I looked forward to an auction. On arrival it was already raining hard and not everything fit under a tent. Including at least 50 boxes of old books that took up a side yard. They were covered in plastic, but it rained so hard the plastic filled. And people pulled it back to inspect the books, & water dumped into the boxes. There were many old old books and many bibles. The old kind that were huge with padded leather decorative covers, and family trees and inscriptions/documents preserved inside. I never forgot standing there in the rain watching all that history being ruined.
I have an equally sad story. My college library had tons of old books. Some were interesting to read. I was shocked how many were almost 90-100 years old but they were in pretty poor condition and falling apart. I think that as millenials slowly take over and ruin everything, there will never be any old books replaced. They'll just whine "scan it to the cloud." I hate e-books. The one thing that a book still beats out a Kindle on: it doesn't need batteries. Also, Kindles are unreliable. Mine failed after only 2 years. It's not worth taking it apart to fix the battery. I still buy paperback books but sadly, Barnes and Noble is closing so many stores that I can't find any in my city any more.
@@largol33t1 I hear what you're saying. I tried a Kindle and lost patience with it. Guess I never really learned how to navigate, which wasn't exactly it's fault? I often leaf back through a book to find an old passage, to re-read a detail, to re-remember a character. Physical books are a treasure. However, I have begun 'reading' audiobooks using an MP3 player, and I love them. I listen while I'm cleaning, driving, washing dishes, doing yard work, walking the dog. It's most addicting. And they're all free from my public library online using Overdrive.
Magnificent. What a joy to behold the work of such highly skilled conservators! Thank you to everyone who had a part in producing this superb video record.
Ever since I was a child I have enjoyed the artistry of these type of lovely books. I have been known to purchase old books just because of their binding! Then I put them on display in my house so I can enjoy them. Thank you for this most informative and interesting video presentation. I am glad that the business continues to thrive in this day and age of computer technology.
Incredible, that such an old bookbinding workshop still exists in our time. I never thought I would feel the power and emotion in old methods. Maybe it's because I'm completely exhausted from industrialisation.
Awsome skills and techniques - thanks ever so for making the video available. Fascinating! :-) Love the section where Des and Muriel discuss the details of some special book restoration (14:53) Bless them and their patience and attention to detail. Where would we be without folks like these ?? History in the making.
This documentary was first broadcast in 1981. I wonder if this shop and others like it are still open 37 years later? It's a beautiful craft, bookbinding, but I fear it is likely not as appreciated now as it was then.
Now this is true craftsmanship and tradition! Such important and beautiful workmanship is priceless. I would love to visit Ireland and see this very shop. What a true honour this would. Warm regards from Canada. Just pure magic.
A friend bequeathed an important book to me. The book was a pile of ragged, stained paper, had a moth eaten leather cover, and was basically destroyed. I scanned the entire book into tiff file images, discoverd, and then added the missing text. A book binder in the city where I live restored to book. It now appears to be very old, a book that has been well preserved.
Thank you for uploading this... I visited John's business many times over the years. Was so sad to hear he passed away last year. He had some lovely old books in his home many rebound by himself. I'm so glad his business is still going.
Beautiful craft. I've tried my hand at bookbinding but this is at a level so far above anything I've ever accomplished, it leaves me humbled and amazed. Thanks for sharing.
Wow, that was fascinating. I never realized that books like the ones shown at about 14:45ish could be restored so well. It's too bad nothing like this documentary is made any more..
I first thought I wouldn't watch it because the quality of the video is sadly very low... but here am I, at the end and amazed by what I just watched...
For all who are wondering , this company still exists in Dublin, the name changed back in 1981 to Antiquarian Bookcrafts and moved to Marlay Park, we moved again in 2013 to Ballymount industrial estate in Dublin, my father is in the video, Cathal O' Grady, I have continued on my father and grandfathers profession at Antiquarian Bookcrafts where we still repair and restore books just like in the video.
This comment should be pinned. Brilliant that you are still going strong.
So glad to hear that! I was trained up in the old methods of letterpress printing. It kills me to see how younger people do it these days. So much of the craft is lost! But here and there you'll find someone, usually older, using all the old brilliant techniques. Like those shown here. Anyway. Good wishes to you from Northern California.
@@jasborb I was just thinking that same thing: Needs pinned.
That is the best news I've heard for quite awhile! All success to you and for all of your endeavors.
My Dad is a trained Bookbinder but hasn't worked as such for many years, if you are ever looking for more staff with experience, even just for part time work, I think he genuinely misses the work.
I just learned that the librarian at 14:37 recently passed away in August 2021. Kudos to her lifelong dedication to preserving the heritage of mankind. Rest in peace.
What happened? It was only 5 years ago right? She looks healthy.
@@parkavenue6970 ...the film was made in 1981....so she died 40 years later
Sure, she was probably lovely, but why did you feel the need to make it something it's not?
@@rykerhasyounow Make what into something it's not?
R.I.P. Muriel. Such an interesting job she had and she was very knowledgeable.
My father was a master bookbinder for nearly 43 years. Sadly, he passed away almost 6 years ago. However, the continuity of the craft has been assured. My husband was my father’s apprentice. My husband is now the master bookbinder. I don’t know if the family business will survive this coronavirus. If it doesn’t, I know he will continue it as a hobby.
This video brought back memories of helping in the bookbindery as I grew up. The pounding sounds and the smell of glues, machine oil, and leather is unforgettable. My main job was working with the ludlow machine and stamping. However, I had my hand before in every aspect of putting a book together. My interests diverged from bookbinding into healthcare (mainly from collating medical journals for years lol). I’m a registered nurse, now.
This is so intresting, sounds like wonderful childhood memories. Glad your husband learned the trait and continues the work. Would love to learn more and carry out this great tradition.
I hope your business survives the pandemic. The art of bookbinding has become so underappreciated.
please don't quit! the tradition is so precious!
If you are based in the US and your husband is looking for projects, I may have a few... Let me know - dttobias@gmail.com
I'm pretty sure, there are people willing to get their hands on handmade books. Perhaps a journal would be great to sell online.
21:15
He's working on Photius's famous "Bibliotheca" aka, "the Myriobiblon" or "the Ten-Thousand Books". Photius was basically the first book reviewer. In that book are reviews of something like 300 different books he read in his lifetime. Most of them have been lost and are totally unknown today. It's a really important book from the 9th century.
wow
That's amazing, thanks for the info.
commeting so i can come back later & search for the book
@@futjakot9075 Did you find it?
Twenty two minutes of sheer joy to watch. Craftsmen and craftswomen at their best.
There's something comforting about owning books, especially older ones.
Indeed, a Kindle doesn't quite cut it. It's hard to feel cozy or even nostalgic when reading something off of a lit screen. I like books, no batteries or electricity needed. I love to go into a book store and get hit in the nose by the smell of all that paper, ink and glue. LOL
@@SpiritBear12 I understand what you mean ✌️ I buy lots of books on Kindle, but the best ones, I buy "for real". I read good books several times. Just like I play good CDs more than once.
I guess we don't really own them, we just take care of them for a while.
@@a_pompom this is so profound!
I wonder why I buy so many without completing them ever
I never tire of watching true artisans at their crafts. Years of learning goes into so many skills, all worked in such an apparently relaxed manner.
Don't know how I got here but I couldn't stop watching... This was awesome!
Same here, three years later.
Hell Fgkn Yeah! 🤣👏🏻
I'm here because I was reading Jorge Borges' story The Aleph and got confused about what he meant by "uncut books".
CZcams has a fascinating collection of master craftsmen plying their trade. I would also recommend Baumgartner Restoration. He cleans and restores old paintings and it is amazing to watch him work and listen to what he is doing. Very "Bob Ross-eqsue". I would suggest The Conservation of The Assassination of Archimedes Narrated Version to start with.
As a book collector, I do appreciate the art and craftsmanship behind precious old books. Sadly every day it is more difficult to find qualified craftsmen who can do the necessary repairs of old books or the binding of new ones. A beautiful art that is rapidly disappearing. Great video, but with a sad and melancholic aftertaste. Cheers
I'm trying my best to learn how to do bookbinding. I've found that my friend's mom does it, and she taught me the flat back binding method. Regardless of the fact that supplies can be rare and expensive and I can't find a class to teach me how to properly prepare traditional books, I'm still looking. The art isn't dead, not yet.
Good luck @@lydiajackson6741. Great learnings and work. Cheers
Fret not, there are still some of us who practice the art. And there are quite a few university programs dedicated to papermaking and book binding. And more than a few private institutions.
Indeed such a beautiful art. I really wish it last . Sir can you make a video of your collection please, if you would like so of course
@@grnsouth1204 All of which require a degree for entry. :(
I am speechless! What a beautiful craft! This is real valuable work, and cultural ware. These books are certainly a national treasure of Ireland, but also a treasure for all Europe!
I was an apprentice at a bookbinding shop in the 80's but I couldn't find any steady job with it. But I have some books that I have made myself. And I'm of course not even close to these people :)
My grandmother and 3 great aunts were all bok binders, and used to rebind my mother's school books and copies for her every year. My grandmother met my grandfather, a printer, in the gap between the printing room and the binding room of their press in Dublin city centre- the name escapes me, and both of them have died, so unable to ask- but he went on to work with the National Print Museum, which I wish would have more about the binding side of the press!
So nice to visit a time when people cared about things like this
This video, a stiff double malt, and hot bath just saved me from a heartattack.
Possibly just anxiety
Wow. I love this. I am so impressed with this degree of beauty and excellence! And the lady who’s been there since age 14! Thank you for this showing these wonderful people to us. I am so grateful! Love and best wishes from Mississippi. ❤️
I can watch this for hours! Thank you for posting! My mother and my niece went to Ireland for my mother's 70th birthday! She loved it! They spent a night in a castle, too! She died a few years ago at 91.
I purchased the whole set of Hands documentaries. They are wonderfully made and reminiscent of a time gone by. I highly recommend the set.
"...And so the continuity of the craft is insured." I'm glad if this is the case.
assured
unfortunately this documentary series is probably 35-40 years old so alot of these crafts have progressed 40 years closer to death.
HEAD GROUNDSMAN ensured
@@kbgexplores I looked this particular shop up. It's still there and seemingly doing well.
@@iikwoodii5565 The bindery shown in the video? It doesn't exist any more. :(
I have always dismissed the gold filigree and rich leather spines on the few eighteenth and early nineteenth century books I possess, valuing only the contribution of the text to my historical research. This documentary has made me examine the bookbinding for the first time, and begun to appreciate the craftsmanship that went into them, even if they don't match that of the Dublin and Paris traditions. Thank you for posting this and adding a value to my enjoyment of these books I never knew I needed.
The skill, artistry, and knowledge these craftsmen, and craftswomen possess are almost irreplaceable and should be considered national treasuries. This is an art form that is almost gone from existence. The Victorian Era had the most detailed and beautiful forms in architecture, clothing, art, furniture, books, and music. Oh, how I wish we could recapture those qualities again.
I love watching people who work in "detail". I can't believe the amount of different tools that are used. This was fascinating.
I worked in a shop like this for many years. It's a beautiful craft.
Tanya Cavner it would be my dream job
Amazing how beautiful the books look after restoration.
I am so impressed that there are still people hand crafting like this.
May you all live to be honored!
This brings back wonderful memories of my childhood as my father was a bookbinder. I can remember watching him sometimes as he worked. I still have a small container gold leaf that was his that he'd saved when not all the leaf was used in a project.
I am a junk journal maker and paper crafter. Never did I have a clue of this process. I cannot believe how interesting this was for me, and how much I now appreciate and admire the entire process. Simply unbelievable craftsmanship. Thank you so much for sharing this with the world.
I came here by accident, but now I’m hooked. I never knew bookbinding was such an amazing craft!
I appreciate how lovingly these books are handled.
SOOOO MUCH BEAUTY!!! And all done by hand absolutely no computers. It is just magical that kind of skill! Just magical!!!
I raise my glass to the art shown here and the artisans at work . This is an art now passed from the general world, but for the few who carry its torch you have my un-dieing respect, as do all those that maintain the crafts of our past to carry such art forward to the times when mankind will once again need its function and form.
I found this so relaxing to watch - I wish craftspeople were as respected, and as numerous, today as they were then
The minutes, hours and working day must seem to fly by with the concentration and dedication displayed by these craftsmen and women.
Excellent video. Hopefully this will allow the retention of great book binding.
What a fascinating watch, and beautifully filmed!
Master Crafts people and artists in their own right. The young lady has such beautiful strong hands. There is nothing like a hand crafted book IMHO.
i love watching a skilled hand, very nice. these skills are a thing of the past and that is a big loss. it is just simply amazing work
Blimey! That brought back some memories of when I did my apprenticeship for print finishing and bookbinding, these guys are next level though 👌👍
Fascinating. Thanks for uploading.
It's amazing how these extremely intricate skills can be made to look easy to the point of appearing slightly slapdash in the hands of experts: and yet the end result is always a masterpiece.
I enjoyed this better than the last 10 movies I've seen - no joke. Such wonderful art, such mastery!
I agree completely.
The craftsmanship is out of this world!!
I’ve always secretly wanted to be a printer or bookbinder. There’s something about the smell of ink, gold leaf, paper, wood, glue, and the textures of these things, the feel in one’s hands of a freshly bound book…! The few times I mentioned it to the vocational counselor at school, my comment was ignored entirely or dismissed with a light laugh. Even in the early 1970’s, there was no place in the modern world for a bookbinder. Besides, it was not only outmoded, but a manual trade, clearly beneath someone with a university education!
Oh what I have given for the opportunity of being a bookbinder or a jeweler, but alas my mother saw such endeavours beneath her son, so I was swiftly send to a university to later become a chemist.
After decades of hating my work and years after my mother's passing I dare buying everything I needed to do bookbinding in my home, i have never sold anything I do, nor i intend to, but it gives me happiness,to finally do what I have always wanted to
It’s amazing to see this artful work. The old ways are fascinating to me. Even though I’m 2 generations removed from my ancestral homeland in Ireland, I’m very thankful to reconnect to the old ways….thank you from the Rocky Mountains of Colorado.
Sadly,the company no longer exists.I looked it up after watching this.Though one can hope that this fine art is continuing in a different establishment.I hate to see these old and beautiful craft traditions dying out.
my thoughts exactly
I have the same thoughts, I decided to take up book binding as a hobby on the side. But I hope to do it for my books to give my family special editions
I have learned to be an Offset-Printer from the year 1991- 1994 and a Book binder in the years from 1994 - 1996. I'm living near the City of Mainz in Germany. There is a Museum about Printing and the Inventor of the printing with moveable letters, Johannes Gutenberg. On some days there are Events for kids where they could see and learn about printing and book binding when old Masters show their works of art. Sadly in our digital time a lot of books are only in bits and bites to read. But also a lot of people love to have a physical book in their hands. And I also love to write my stories first on paper before I tip it into the PC. :)
Though I agree that the oldschool traditional way is dying out bookbinding itself won't so don't worry about it! I myself do it as a hobby and my goal is to create a real "Codex" grade book that even could rival this excellent Dublin book binding quality [I mainly do 2D art so I can fill it with that in a very good way] I already can do "standart" books in a bookshop quality. The only difference would be the cost and time to make it because as a layman I lack the awesome machinery and routine of those professionals which will be lost in time (or at least some machienes preserved in a museum).But if you look around for bookbinding tutorials you will see that there are many people out there still holding that awesome tradition up.
Many people on Etsy do traditional bookbinding as a hobby
Hands is a real great series of short films. I have been watching many recently and they are all wonderful and interesting. This one was particular fabulous. Tradition and skill within all trades should never best lost forever, and only hands do it better than anything else.
I have never been so entranced by a documentary series. Thanks for sharing this documentary series with us.
Such a rare thing to appreciate books the way that lady cherished those books.
That was absolutely FASCINATING!!!! They don't make documentaries like this anymore (or books either for that matter!) Thank you for the upload.
I never tire of viewing this old clip. Such a joy
This is absolutely magnificent! Such attention, detail, so much artistry!
Amazing i hope this craft never dies.
I was spellbound watching this! More please
There is a wonderful series of DVDs available from the filmmakers with old skills from boatbuilding to lacemaking and saddle making. Twenty hours in total. I'd heartily recommend them all ! They are produced by David and Sally Shaw-Smith and will be come one of your most treasured possessions if you can buy them
I'm so glad this bookbinders is still in business and John still there. So nice at the start they gave the exact address which is within the first page Google results.
I remember working in old street London, on the way there through Mount Pleasant there was a very old looking binders. I mean the place looked like it hasn't been cleaned since the1920s/30s. I went in and the guy looked just as old and we talked, I offered to help him clean and restore and do general diy in turn for learning to bind. I was set to to two days a week Sunday and Monday, 5 hours each day. Each day I would take an hour doing what he needed, mainly cleaning and installing electrical features and rewiring. So 8 hours a week which I was really excited to do, especially from someone with so much experience. He was over 70 and had learned his craft from childhood. I arrive on Sunday at 11am to no answer, I knock and knock and he answers really angry and smelling badly of booze. He'd forgotten our talk and thought I was running a scam, he was shouting something about calling the police. Really wish he wasn't so unstable because the few times I passed by I really wanted to ask again
Seems like it's not there anymore, damn shame.
It's probably a Nigerian wig shop now.
@Ronald Wilson Always with the racism.
Thank you so much. I have been looking for the Hands series for about the last 30 years!
Beautifully made documentary.
Awesome... I will never look at a book in the same way again. What a joy to go to work doing something like that 😀
As one who spent much of my pre-teens at my Community Library this ideo brought me great joy...
If my Mother could't find me the first place she called was the library. I actually got lost in the first grade trying to go to the library by myself. As soon as I realized I could read I was hooked on the library.
Ahh yes, 5 AM, the perfect time to watch a video about Dublin bookbinding.
Absolutely fascinating. I wonder if they’re still in business? I have an old Bible that needs repair.
The work done by these highly skilled artisans is a real treat to watch. 💗📖
Thank you for posting this.
This is satisfying in so many ways: historic preservation, art, expert craftsmanship, love of books and more.
The librarian at 14:35 seems to me to be much more than a librarian( no disrespect to librarians, their work goes unsung), I would also call her her a curator, and I thank her for that.
Also , the young woman at 0:52 , to have started this craft at fourteen and to stay with it is amazing. With young people like her I feel comfortable that after I am gone the world might just be ok.
Thanks very much for uploading this fascinating programme. I really enjoyed it. The makers of older TV shows could still assume that viewers had intelligent interests and grown-up attention spans!
My "pandemic project" was actually to learn some basic bookbinding skills. If nothing else, the experience taught me the real cost and value of handmade bindings. Our modern consumer culture expects things to be cheap and available instantly. If we're ever to attain a "sustainable" way of life, we'll have to get used to paying more and owning less-and therefore also choosing to own only those things that will really last.
I thought I would get bored halfway through but this was genuinely fascinating.
Great to see these craftsman at work repairing very delicate books.
Absolutely astounding to watch. Perfection, beauty, and talent at its best. Thank you so much for posting.
Can't see if anyone else noticed this but the timing of the end of the music and the guillotine blade around the 7 minute mark is genius editing. Whoever did this, if it were done on purpose, was ahead of their time!
Wonderful documentary! I have few old books, but only maybe 100 years old. I appreciate them very much. So I have to tell a story, a sad one. I looked forward to an auction. On arrival it was already raining hard and not everything fit under a tent. Including at least 50 boxes of old books that took up a side yard. They were covered in plastic, but it rained so hard the plastic filled. And people pulled it back to inspect the books, & water dumped into the boxes. There were many old old books and many bibles. The old kind that were huge with padded leather decorative covers, and family trees and inscriptions/documents preserved inside. I never forgot standing there in the rain watching all that history being ruined.
I have an equally sad story. My college library had tons of old books. Some were interesting to read. I was shocked how many were almost 90-100 years old but they were in pretty poor condition and falling apart. I think that as millenials slowly take over and ruin everything, there will never be any old books replaced. They'll just whine "scan it to the cloud." I hate e-books. The one thing that a book still beats out a Kindle on: it doesn't need batteries. Also, Kindles are unreliable. Mine failed after only 2 years. It's not worth taking it apart to fix the battery. I still buy paperback books but sadly, Barnes and Noble is closing so many stores that I can't find any in my city any more.
@@largol33t1 I hear what you're saying.
I tried a Kindle and lost patience with it. Guess I never really learned how to navigate, which wasn't exactly it's fault?
I often leaf back through a book to find an old passage, to re-read a detail, to re-remember a character. Physical books are a treasure. However,
I have begun 'reading' audiobooks using an MP3 player, and I love them. I listen while I'm cleaning, driving, washing dishes, doing yard work, walking the dog. It's most addicting. And they're all free from my public library online using Overdrive.
Magnificent. What a joy to behold the work of such highly skilled conservators! Thank you to everyone who had a part in producing this superb video record.
ending with a shot of well worked, well trained and well experienced hands... love it
What a very interesting programme. Very well presented. Nice to take a break from modernism and relax watching an ancient craft unfold. Thank you
Ever since I was a child I have enjoyed the artistry of these type of lovely books. I have been known to purchase old books just because of their binding! Then I put them on display in my house so I can enjoy them. Thank you for this most informative and interesting video presentation. I am glad that the business continues to thrive in this day and age of computer technology.
Could watch this series every day for the rest of my life
I knew the library lady would be called Muriel! Amazing stuff, and amazing hair!
It’s funny, because Muriel is a very unusual name for an Irish woman
The workmanship that went into this is absolutely amazing and deserving of respect. However, I can't say I like the way the cover looks.
Loved it nothing can replace the beauty of a hand bound book...
Old skills performed brilliantly are a joy to watch. Thank you for sharing
Incredible, that such an old bookbinding workshop still exists in our time.
I never thought I would feel the power and emotion in old methods.
Maybe it's because I'm completely exhausted from industrialisation.
the older i get the more i love videos like this. im drunk as hell watching this getting pumped like its the super bowl
Awsome skills and techniques - thanks ever so for making the video available. Fascinating! :-) Love the section where Des and Muriel discuss the details of some special book restoration (14:53) Bless them and their patience and attention to detail. Where would we be without folks like these ?? History in the making.
I agree 100%
Absolutely wonderful.
Mesmerising craftsmanship.
I Loved the gold leafing part. Incredible. great video all the way!! Thanks
This documentary was first broadcast in 1981. I wonder if this shop and others like it are still open 37 years later? It's a beautiful craft, bookbinding, but I fear it is likely not as appreciated now as it was then.
What a treat. Thanks for sharing. Pure talent at its rawest form. Incredibly amazing to watch. Thank you again.
Now this is true craftsmanship and tradition! Such important and beautiful workmanship is priceless. I would love to visit Ireland and see this very shop. What a true honour this would. Warm regards from Canada. Just pure magic.
A friend bequeathed an important book to me. The book was a pile of ragged, stained paper, had a moth eaten leather cover, and was basically destroyed. I scanned the entire book into tiff file images, discoverd, and then added the missing text.
A book binder in the city where I live restored to book. It now appears to be very old, a book that has been well preserved.
Excellent documentary. Thank you for sharing it.
An amazing work of art. Very much appreciate you sharing this documentary. Thanks!
The attention to detail is astounding. A true art!
I have absolutely no idea how I arrived at this presentation but it was absolutely fascinating.
Thank you for uploading this... I visited John's business many times over the years. Was so sad to hear he passed away last year. He had some lovely old books in his home many rebound by himself. I'm so glad his business is still going.
Beautiful craft. I've tried my hand at bookbinding but this is at a level so far above anything I've ever accomplished, it leaves me humbled and amazed. Thanks for sharing.
This is more than craftsmanship, pure artistry imo!
Wow, that was fascinating. I never realized that books like the ones shown at about 14:45ish could be restored so well. It's too bad nothing like this documentary is made any more..
Modern television people are dumbed down a lot.
I first thought I wouldn't watch it because the quality of the video is sadly very low... but here am I, at the end and amazed by what I just watched...
What amazing craftsmanship and skill. Such a shame that this bindery seems to exist no longer, couldn't find it on Google anyway.
I thank you for sharing this fascinating video -- Loved watching this and seeing the absolute craftmanship!
wonderfulexhibit at trincoll library one year we
visited. LOVED.
Excellent. Stunning craftsmanship and very educational. Very well done, thank you.
Absolutely magnificent!! As admirable as a Bach Concerto. (Nice presentation too from Maurice Craig).