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This information is reprinted from the For Beginners column
of Hand Papermaking Newsletter #43 (July, 1998).
To learn how to order Hand Papermaking bi-annual magazine
and quarterly newsletter, click
here.
Why People Make Paper by Hand
Why make paper by hand? It’s an odd question to pose in a
periodical devoted to the subject. When you think of it,
though, this is where we all began; this is the first
question we answered for ourselves. And we continue to
answer the same query from curious friends and relations. As
with many worthwhile questions, the answers are full of
irony and paradox.
On the whole, people give about as much attention to
paper as to air. But just as a fragrant breeze will arouse
the senses, a handsome, handmade sheet of paper will do the
same. There is something special about a handmade object. We
sense the person behind the product rather than the machine,
and we value that connection more and more with every
technological advance. Paper is exceedingly common, so an
unusual handmade sheet is that much more exceptional.
Papermaking is such a simple process. It is perfect for
children and inner-children. Most introductory books present
dozens of beautiful color photos showing gorgeous papers,
but text explaining the papermaking process is quite short.
One book outlines the entire procedure in one-half page.
Sooner or later a new papermaker, initially attracted to the
simplicity of the craft, will attend a workshop or
conference and learn from another papermaker who may have
spent decades perfecting their skills, and are still
learning.
Those of limited means appreciate how inexpensively handmade
paper is made. This is certainly true: a garage-sale
blender, an old laundry tub, scraps of window screen, and
voilá! How many papermakers who started this way now own or
contemplate owning a $5000 Hollander?
Papermakers are often environmentalists. Realizing that
paper production has harmed the earth through short-sighted
forestry mismanagement, stream-choking pollutants, and the
excessive landfill of paper gone un-recycled, responsible
hand papermakers use earth-friendly processes with
alternative and recycled fibers. We do not exploit Nature,
we collaborate with Nature. Many feel the value of hand
papermaking as a symbolic gesture is enormous, while
admitting that in light of the global commercial paper
market, the sum total of our hands-on pursuits may save few
trees.
Symbolism and paradox are right at home in the art world
and ultimately we all make paper as an artistic expression,
whether that paper is one-of-a-kind and destined for a
gallery wall or part of a consistent production run destined
for a fine press book. We do what is meaningful, and there
is “meaning” in paper. There is meaning imbued by the
paper’s maker and meaning construed by the paper’s audience.
Between the two, handmade paper offers the chance of
profound communication, not merely small-talk.
Does this answer the question?
Copyright 1998 Hand Papermaking, Inc.
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