Project 007
- Posted by: GOOD
- on November 24, 2007 at 4:56 pm
If you want to appreciate a person, a profession, or a craft, look at the tools they use and admire their wear. Old hand tools in particular exhibit a special wabi-sabi, the beauty of the worn and torn that gives us a glimpse into a lost art. This wall of well-organized hand tools belongs to Patrick Reagh, a printer who worked in Southern California before moving the heavy equipment of his pre-digital print shop north to the Sebastopol, California, countryside. From the English-made Monotype Super Caster to a Heidelberg cylinder press, Reagh’s machines once required a team of eight to operate, but they are only rarely used today, even by Reagh himself; he does most of his book-design work on a computer. Can you find and photograph (or capture on video) a time capsule like Reagh’s print shop, making a lost art reappear before our eyes? Email your submission to projects(at)goodmagazine.com and we’ll display it here.
–Dale Dougherty
Watch Dale’s slide show on Patrick Reagh’s Print Shop.
THE ASSIGNMENT
Document a traditional craft.
THE REQUIREMENTS
Photos or video documentation.
THE DETAILS
Send video, photos, or links to projects(at)goodmagazine.com.











