Registration is closed for this event

September 11th, 2016 11:00 AM

  • Instructor: Pam DeLuco
  • Workshop Type: Arts
  • Workshop Status: Wait-list
  • Workshop Start: September 11th, 2016 11:00 AM
  • Workshop End: September 11th, 2016 3:00 PM
  • Sessions: 1

If you have ever been curious about making paper by hand, this workshop will give you a hands-on overview of all the steps involved. Students will work together with the instructor to turn a pile of cotton t-shirts into handmade paper. Examples of handmade paper and various papermaking fibers will be shown and uses for handmade paper and its history will be discussed. Using a Hollander beater, the t-shirts will be pulped and the students will then take turns pulling sheets. Water will be pressed out with a hydraulic press and two different drying techniques will be demonstrated. Participants may either take their wet paper with them to dry at home at the end of class or can leave their sheets to be mill dried and pick them up from SFCB the following week. Each participant can expect to make about 4-6 sheets. 


Materials to Bring: Students should wear closed-toe waterproof shoes. Waterproof aprons will be provided.

Workshop + Materials Fee: $65.00

Date & Time: Sunday, September 11, 2016 :: 11am-3pm

Location: Shotwell Paper Mill, 305 Shotwell St, San Francisco, CA 94110

Note: Please read over the SFCB Registration Policies before signing up for a class

REGISTRATION WILL CLOSE 3 DAYS PRIOR TO THE START DATE OF THIS WORKSHOP.


About the Instructor | Pam DeLuco

Pam DeLuco is the proprietor of Shotwell Paper Mill, a production paper mill in the Mission, and the founder/creative director of BANDmade Books: a collaborative book project with musicians and bands.  Her work can be found in many special collections across the country including the Metropolitan Museum, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and the Library of Congress. 


Past Student Reviews:

“It was a great opportunity to make paper in a working hand papermill in the city. Pam's studio is well equipped, pleasant, and easy to work in. It is nicely set up for small-scale production of handmade paper, with a large "wet" area, perfect for getting hands-on in the paper vat. The basic overview of Western papermaking was concise and well-presented, with examples, discussion of fibers, and reference materials.”

“The instructor was nice and knowledgeable and we got to make some paper.”

 

305 SHOTWELL ST
SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94110-1324
United States