
For all their wonder and promise, one crucial component of the joy of reading still eludes the publishing platforms of the future: holding a beautifully bound, meticulously designed, thoughtfully crafted tome in your two hands. Hardly does that tactile delight get more intense than with a magnificent die-cut book. (Die-cutting is a process using a steel die to cut away sections of a page.) Here are five old-timey treasures that will make you swoon in rediscovered awe of the analog.
1. THINGS I HAVE LEARNED IN MY LIFE SO FAR
Every seven years, Stefan Sagmeister
takes a year-long sabbatical, during which he does absolutely no
commercial work. Instead, he retreats to Bali or another off-the-grid
corner of the world, where he immerses himself in creative exploration
and self-improvement. Things I have learned in my life so far, sitting atop my ranking of beautifully designed books by prominent graphic designers,
grew from a list in his diary compiled during his first such
sabbatical. The book, which consists of 15 unbound signatures in a
gorgeous die-cut slipcase producing 15 different covers, is a reflection
on life, being human, and the meaning of happiness, relayed through the
language Sagmeister is so masterfully fluent in -- elegant, eloquent
graphic design. Each spread presents a beautifully and thoughtfully
designed typographic sentiment, or fragment of a sentiment continued on
the following spread, about one of life's simple truths -- part Live Now, part Everything Is Going To Be OK, part The 3D Type Book, yet it both predates and outshines all three.
Jonathan Safran Foer's Tree of Codes topped the Brainpickings list of the best art, design and photography books of 2010 -- and for good reason. So ambitious was Foer's project that nearly all bookbinders he approached deemed it unmakeable.
When Belgian publishing house Die Keure finally figured out a way to
make it work, what came out was a brilliant piece of "analog interactive
storytelling" -- a book created by cutting out chunks of text from
Foer's favorite novel, The Street of Crocodiles
by Polish author Bruno Schulz, rearranging the text to form an entirely
different story. The die-cut narrative hangs in an aura of negative
space for a beautiful blend of sculpture and storytelling, adding a
layer of physicality to the reading experience in a way that completely
reshapes your relationship with text and the printed page.
I thought: What if you pushed it to the extreme, and created something not old-fashioned or nostalgic but just beautiful? It helps you remember that life can surprise you." ~ Jonathan Safran Foer
My full review here, including remarkable making-of footage.
3. HOLY CLUES
Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes is one of the most beloved and enduring literary characters of all time, to this day culturally relevant and alluring. In the 1999 unlikely gem Holy Clues : The Gospel According to Sherlock Holmes, author Stephen Kendrick
explores how Holmes's legendary methods of Zen-like awareness,
observation and deduction can be employed in our relationship with
spirituality. (Cue in Kirstin Butler's omnibus of seven essential meditations on the science of spirituality.)
The book's dust jacket features a single die-cut hole, through which
peeks Sherlock's iconic silhouette on a patterned pictorial cover.
For the past decade, the OFFF
festival of post-digital culture has been a beacon of contemporary art,
design, and media innovation, offering a provocative lens for
understanding modern culture. Every year, OFFF releases a lavish book
that's both a catalog of work from the festival and a scrumptious
keepsake tome of visual culture. This year, as the festival celebrates
its roots and its return to Barcelona, it produced what's easily the
most ambitious book yet: OFFF, Year Zero: Artwork and Designs from the OFFF Festival, published by my friends at Mark Batty and featuring astounding, visually gripping work around the "Year Zero" theme.
Each of the tome's 300 pages is die-cut, so the stunning artworks can be hung on the walls of homes, studios, classrooms, and creativity hubs alike.
5. CURIOUS BOYM
Since 1986, designer Constantin Boym and his partner Laurene Leon Boym, working as Boym Partners,
have been finding humor in the humdrum and magic in the mundane to
churn out relentlessly whimsical work across product design, furniture,
installations, and more. Curious Boym from Princeton Architectural Press and design duo Hjalti Karlsson + Jan Wilker
is an appropriately playful volume covering the many mediums of Boym's
creative curiosity. The tactile, interactive book features a die-cut
cover, pop-ups, pull-outs, and other analog surprises that play into
Boym's irreverent, exuberant, and fun approach to design.
The lovely Abe Books has even more die-cut gems for your gushing pleasure.
This post also appears on Brain Pickings.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2011/08/analog-graphic-design-to-die-for-5-fantastic-die-cut-books/244272/














