homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Nobuo Okano and the forgotten art of restoring old books

  While many people today aren’t even considering reading paper books, Japanese craftsman Okano Nobuo has been repairing old, tattered books and making them look brand new. Using simple tools like a wooden press, chisel, water and glue, Okano can make even incredibly, centuries old books look like they just came out of the press. He and […]

Mihai Andrei
April 29, 2015 @ 1:47 am

share Share

Before and after.

 

While many people today aren’t even considering reading paper books, Japanese craftsman Okano Nobuo has been repairing old, tattered books and making them look brand new. Using simple tools like a wooden press, chisel, water and glue, Okano can make even incredibly, centuries old books look like they just came out of the press.

He and his craft recently gained a lot of attention when a client brought a 1,000-page English-Japanese dictionary, and the restoration process was detailed on a Japanese show called Fascinating Craftsman (Shuri, Bakaseru). The painstaking process included individually unfolding every page’s corners with a tweezers and ironing them so that they stay straight.

But Okano’s skill is not just about restoring things – he makes some things disappear too, like the initials of an old girlfriend, for example. When some pages are just beyond repair, they are glued on new sheets of paper. Last but not least, he puts the cover in an entirely new spotlight.

The initials of an old girlfriend were removed from the book.

For someone who developed such a remarkable craft towards protecting books, Okano’s attitude is very humble:

“It’s not their shape or form but what’s inside them that attracts us to books,” he says.

His work is a testament to the value that physical books still carry – and hopefully, will always carry.

Before and after.

 

 

share Share

7 classic books to read for a haunting Halloween

If you want to indulge in some Halloween reading, we've got the perfect list for you.

Why Game of Thrones' Dragonglass is so deadly

In Westeros, there are only two substances capable of killing White Walkers: Valyrian steel and Dragonglass.

Why Shakespeare's 'Much Ado About Nothing' is a brilliant sneaky innuendo

This just goes to show how amazing Shakespeare was at his craft -- and also that he probably had a dirty mind.

The Book of Civilized Man: The good manners book from the 14th century

"Don't mount your horse in the hall" and "Do not attack your enemy while he is squatting to defecate." Good tips right here.

Four things Jules Verne got right and four he didn't

He wasn't always right -- but he was pretty close.

First SciFi novel ever: A 2nd century AD book about traveling to outer space, meeting aliens and Homer

Some argue that the first genuine science fiction novel is Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, where technology bordering necromancy is used to reanimate the dead. But labeling what falls under science fiction can be troublesome. Christopher McKitterick says that in the strict etymological sense, it's literature about scientific discovery or technological change, but then argues that this definition misses the mark; instead Mckiterrick believes "SF is about how we have changed, how external change affects us, how things we do change the world around us, and how we will continue to change over time." What about works of fiction written in a time when science wasn't even considered a distinct field, separate from natural philosophy, or study of religious truth, etc? Depending on how you class what makes science fiction, Lucian of Samosata's "True Stories" might be the first science fiction novel. The characters venture to distant realms including the moon, the sun, and strange planets and islands. The star protagonist is Lucian himself who happens to stumble upon aliens on the moon and finds himself in the midst of a war between the lunar and sun empires.

The weirdest book in the world: Codex Seraphinianus

In 1981 Italian artist, architect and industrial designer Luigi Serafini published what has since remained in popular view as the weirdest book in history: Codex Seraphinianus.

Crystallizing books - the spectacular art of Alexis Arnold

We see this too often – loads and loads of discarded books in storage rooms, on the sidewalk, even in our homes. Abandoned books are a much too common sight, and at least to me, a depressing sight. This inspired San Francisco-based artist Alexis Arnold to embark on a fascinating quest to make something beautiful – crystallized […]

7 scientific reasons to read books

I know, I know — reading is fun, it’s hip, and it’s good for you. There’s plenty of reasons why you should read, but here, I’ll focus only on the ones backed by science. 1. Reading makes you a better person. Seriously, it’s not a figure of speech. Not one, but two (parallel) studies found that […]

Crania Americana: the most influential book on scientific racism

For men of simple means and upbringing, it’s easy to credit racism: the other fellow is different from me – his skin is of another color, his hair is weird, his language sounds stupid. Racism has had a wicked role to play in society since antiquity, fueling the murders and enslaving of millions of people […]