1.4.26

Reg Lissel, Papermaker



This month HM is issuing Reg Lissel, Papermaker presenting a variety of his handmade papers, along with brief commentaries by him. The papers used to assemble the 20 sets were purchased when he retired from papermaking in 2013, a somewhat forced retirement sparked by a renoviction from his longtime living space and workshop in Vancouver's Chinatown. I bought most of what he had on hand at the time, a mishmash of different sheets from over the years, and put it all in a box with the vague plan of issuing them as some kind of record of his work. 
 
© Andrea Taylor 2008 
 
The following profile of Reg was originally written for the FPBA’s journal Parenthesis (No. 13, 2007). A slightly revised version was the first chapter of HM’s Elements in Correlation (2009). The sketch of Reg above was a preperatory drawing by Andrea Taylor, for a linocut included with that chapter. The paper for that book was the largest order I’d committed to at the time, and it took Reg about a year to make the hundreds of sheets needed. The sections below in italic are quotes from Reg. The sample booklets shown are from HM’s collection and date from 2000 to around 2010.
 * * *
2007: I FIRST KNEW REG LISSEL as a bookseller, in the early 1990s, a few years before he quit the business. It was his second storefront in downtown Vancouver. His first, in an even dodgier part of town, had been in the same building as Cobblestone Press, the printing shop of the infamous Gerald Giampa. Reg did not quit bookselling to make paper, but he started making paper when he quit bookselling.

When I was starting, there just weren’t that many papermakers around so I was working in my isolated little universe. I built my own moulds and my first beater. There were some initial fumbling attempts, recycling newsprint and stuff. Finally I got a book, The Art of Papermaking by Bernard Toale. It’s got so much great information, all the basic stuff for Western and Japanese papermaking. It let me see other papers and figure out how they were made, and it gave me something to aim for.
 

By 2001 I had printed a few books, even damping the (mouldmade) papers on a couple. Having crossed paths with Reg frequently since his shop closed I knew what he was up to. When I started getting ambitious and wanted to work with handmade sheets, I chased him down.

My first attempt printing text on Reg’s paper was a disaster, all of my own making. Printing on a Washington press, I was using four different batches of cotton paper, none of which damped particularly well (or rather, they damped too well). And so I learned the importance of size, what it does and why it matters. And here is the beauty of HM’s relationship with Reg: I went back and told him what had happened, and he understood immediately what the problem was. He made up a new batch, ratcheting up the internal size. Better, but still a bit too absorbent. He cranked it up again, and by 2003 we had a decent sheet that damped well and consistently.

But the surface was still very rough, fine for books octavo or larger in size, preferably with type no smaller than 14 point. Below that the paper’s texture took on too much prominence. This, Reg explained, was the result of the beater he was using, a contraption of his own fabrication...

Reg couching a stack of paper

I built the tub for that beater out of scraps of wood. I bought a motor from a scrap yard, and some pulleys and pillow bearings and a steel shaft. The roll was built out of wood too, with steel bars set in. I worked with that beater for about eight years. It did the job but it wasn’t heavy and tough enough to really deal with stronger fibers. It could beat cotton, but it took a long time.
 
 

The next breakthrough in what we christened HM Text came with the arrival from northern B.C. of a professional lab beater. It could beat the fibers much more thoroughly, resulting in a smoother sheet. Then, shortly after the first batches from the new beater were turned out, yet another plateau: the most gorgeous, crisp, smooth white sheets imaginable, the result of a tweak to the recipe and a refined drying technique.

The first HM Text paper was just pure cotton with size in it, made with the old beater, & the paper’s a bit soft. The new beater beats the fiber much better, so it makes a crisper, denser paper. The latest batches of HM Text have some titanium oxide, kaolin clay and chalk added to the cotton pulp. It makes the paper more opaque and acts as a filler, so the paper is really smooth. I also added a step to the drying: I cold press and then let the sheets air dry for about two hours – just laid out, maybe two sheets together, turned after an hour. I let it dry in the air a bit but before it starts to shrink, I restack and give it a couple more heavy pressings. I’ve always been cold pressing and then just air drying, without the extra pressings. That extra stage of letting it dry and then pressing makes the sheet even smoother and denser.

The arrival of the beater in 2004, and a visit that same summer from Claire Van Vliet, resulted in another breakthrough sheet, what I call Reg’s vellum paper. It is a sheet that feels and acts like vellum. He can adjust the translucence and tone, from white to dirty old mottled parchment, in the pulp. The stuff is incredibly tough and makes beautiful limp vellum-style bindings.

Claire was inspiring. I really enjoyed the lecture she gave when she was in Vancouver. She was giving a workshop so I stopped by one day, and she was very generous with her time. She showed me the abaca vellum she’d been making and it inspired me. I knew how it was done, so I just had to try it. That was around the same time I got the new beater, so I had the equipment it required to beat the fiber stuff for three hours. It’s the long beating time that results in the paper’s translucence. I just wanted to make it. That’s the real appeal for me, the beauty of the paper. Sometimes it’s an experiment to see what a certain fiber will result in. But mostly going for a certain paper is just to see the beauty of it. I enjoy the process, the movement, the rhythm, the physical work. Making the same sheet consistently.

2026: EPILOGUE

Vancouver’s Chinatown is on the eastern edge of the downtown core, and is one of the oldest in North America. It also abuts the Downtown Eastside, which has the dubious claim to being the most destitute urban neighborhood in Canada. While Chinatown enjoyed a vibrant community and culture for most of the 20th century, by the 1990s it was becoming run-down and somewhat grim. Its proximity to the downtown core, however, makes it appealing to commercial and residential developers, and tension has grown between the established Chinese community, advocates for the Downtown Eastside, and proponents for civic revitalization.

Many of the buildings in Chinatown are owned by non-profit benevolent associations, and for many years Reg lived in one of these. It was pretty run down, but that meant it was affordable. In 2013 he was notified the building would be renovated. While his apartment was being done, he moved to a space on the opposite side of the building. That lasted for about six months. When his place was ready, he couldn’t afford the increased rent. Not only did that mean needing a new home, it meant the likely end to his papermaking adventures.

By that time the physical demands had worn on him, and in some ways he was ready to hang up his moulds. With a few months’ notice, he sold all the paper he’d stockpiled (as much as I could afford to me!), some early pulp paintings, and most of his equipment.

Wood engraving by Shinsuke Minegishi on gampi made by 
Reg Lissel, from Good & Evil in the Garden (HM, 2003)

The next year was not easy for Reg, as he looked for a place to live in one of Canada’s most expensive cities. Papermaking was not on the agenda. During all this HM had moved as well, to Strathcona, a neighborhood just east of Chinatown. It’s one of the city’s oldest neighborhoods, and enjoys a more eclectic range of residential architecture and people than is typical for Vancouver. Across the street from our new home is a Ukrainian community hall adjoining a three-storey apartment building for people of a certain age. By luck, chance and the lobbying efforts of friends, Reg got an apartment there, and since 2015 we’ve lived across the street from each other. I often see him walking to or from the community garden, where he has several plots that occupy most of his free time. He’s always liked to cook, and obviously has a fondness for plants, so it comes naturally.

Reg giving a papermaking demo at a community event (2016)
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Reg Lissel, Papermaker (HM, 2026) is issued in an edition of 20 sets (18 for sale). Each set includes 23 different sample sheets (13 x 18 inches). Most of the sheets are presented as folios (i.e. folded); a few sheets in short supply are presented as single leaves. Reg contributed brief commentaries about the stages of papermaking, from choosing fibers through beating, forming and drying. HM wrote a brief introduction and note about the ongoing collaboration with Reg to perfect a white sheet for printing damp.

The text was set in Optima with Huxley Vertical for display. Most of the sheets where dampened for printing. The colophons were press-numbered and signed by Reg. The sheets are presented loose, in a clamshell box, to allow for each to be held and closely examined. The boxes were made at HM, using four different colors of Japanese cloth, with painted paper for the trays.

 

1.1.26

What Was, What Is & What Might Be (’25/26)


 
Looking back at ’25, the project with Scott Morgan hadn’t even been conceived at the start of the year. It was fun working with him and I’m better-than-usual pleased with our effort. (Thanx to everyone for not mentioning the typo...) The covers for the book rekindled my interest in airbrushing.* I’d like to do some more intaglio work with his photos, we’ll see. 

* Speaking of airbrushing, Barbara & Claudia will be working on a book about stencils (maybe 2027?), with lots of Barbara’s original designs airbrushed in. Here’s one:
 

The Wisso Weiss pamphlet was fun though I still think the blue text paper was maybe just a little too transparent. 


I don’t buy many books these days – I’m more focused on shedding possessions (anyone interested in a large Ostrander-Seymour handpress, please get in touch...) – but I did get a couple over the year, all of them previously unknown to me. One was an Elston Press collection (1902) of three talks by William Morris on early (gothic) woodcuts and woodcut books. I think the text is much the same as the Kelmscott’s German Woodcuts (1898), but with fewer facsimiles. It’s my first book from Elston, which was hugely influenced by Morris but it seems in good ways – a focus on fundamentals like materials and execution, but not on horrible vines and gothic letters everywhere. 


I could afford this copy because it appears to have been found under a leaky basement sink. The boards (shown above) were ruined and the spine decayed but the textblock was fine. I managed to separate it from the boards and spine 
 and preserve the original owner's signature and bookplate!  and resew it. I decided to put it in a limp vellum binding rather than attempt a facsimile. This required much less intrusion to the textblock: I simply used wheat paste on the spine and outer edges of the pastedown sheets, so it can all be easily undone one day. 


The most recent acquisition probably will form the basis for a project in 2026. It’s a portfolio issued in Lausanne in 1944 by Jacques Chevalley, launching his new enterprise as a paper dealer. He commissioned a short text from Charles Ramuz, and four large wood engravings by Henry Bischoff
 

The edition of 50 copies was issued loose in a portfolio. The text paper is from the Guarro mill, the same mill that produced the paper used for many HM books over the past 15 years. I’d never heard of the thing until I happened across one of the engravings in a catalogue. 
 

It’s not rare, there are a couple of copies out there, but they’re pricey (mine was very much not) and none are in good condition. I’m thinking of printing a translation of the text (which as far as I know has not appeared in English) with facsimiles of the engravings. I want to find out a bit more about Chevalley: it seems his father had been a stationer, but Jacques didn’t stick with it long, as most of his life was spent working as a museum curator. Even in Switzerland, 1944 seems an odd time to be launching a business selling specialty papers. 

Here’s what 2026 is looking like for HM...


The text sheets for Sci-Fi Violence were printed last spring. I hope I remember where I put them. The colophons have been travelling to Vermont and Boston, for the artist and poet to sign. I hope they don’t get lost. Briony’s show last year took more of her time and energy than she’d anticipated, which is why we pushed publication of Sci-Fi back. There’s a lot of printmaking involved: five double-page internal prints (approx 10 x 16 inches) plus one being added to the title page, and the sheets to cover the boards. She’s been at it for some time now, and posted some excellent videos on Instagram detailing aspects of her process. The current schedule is for the prints to land in Vancouver at the beginning of March, and the binding to be completed by May. Even though I haven’t solicited orders yet, I can see demand for the edition of 26 copies will exceed supply.  


While Briony’s finishing the prints, I will be printing sheets for a sampler of Reg Lissel’s handmade papers. When he quit/retired c.2014, I bought most of what he had left, and ended up with a lot of diverse sheets. We have enough to assemble 20 sets (18 for sale), each with about 20 samples. Most will be full 13 x 18 inch sheets folded once (i.e. a folio), a few will be half sheets (i.e. leaves). They’ll be issued unbound, probably in a clamshell box, to allow for close examination. The text includes some technical commentary on materials and methods by Reg, and an introduction & short history of the white printing paper he developed for HM by me. Making the boxes (if they happen) will take ages and not happen until after Sci-Fi Violence is issued, so publication fall of 2026? Then maybe there will be time to print, bind & publish the Moulins à papier translation before the end of the year, we’ll see. 

Thanx to all the old friends still interested in what HM gets up to, & thanx to all the new ones who’ve connected over the past year.