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Friday, November 23, 2018

Discussions on Production

Here is a link to the IMS Virtual Studio post on the subject of Parade Activities and other subjects

Thursday, November 15, 2018

Special Limited World Premeire Edition

The first release to the public will be a Hand-stitched version of the books.

Because the books must have the ISBN and pricing fixed, and those items need to be based on higher production methods, there will be little or no profit in those hand-stitched books. So they will be limited in number and used only to open the market. If I can discover production methods that allow for a reasonable profit, I may continue to offer the hand-stitched version. If there is enough demand and I can raise the price somewhat, I may assign that version a new ISBN. We'll see what happens.

There is also a Limited Edition of Signed & Numbered Books in both the Gnome-sized and Big People's Books. That series is priced significantly higher and is intended to fund additional artwork for the next book.

It is unlikely that the boxed-set will be hand-stitched, because the stitching interferes with the books fitting smoothly in the box, but we'll experiment with that and see what works best. I do think the special nature of the hand-stitching would make the boxed set extra special. Maybe I need to rethink the box to accommodate that.

More later, AG

Publishing Update

After nearly 10 months of work making corrections and adjustments to both the Gnome-sized and Big People's Books, I finally printed the next proof of the Gnome-sized. I'm very pleased with the results so far.

Along the way, a few months back, I printed what I thought was the finished product. Well, of course there were errors. On that version the spine was not correct, so I altered the gutter on the pages to accommodate the incorrect spine width. It was ok for a prototype. So I glued the cover on, as I had done on the last batch of books. Only this time the cover came off, after a time. Why? Right now the only answer seems to be that the paper on this cover has a different coating, which didn't allow the glue to soak into the fibers. Well, that's an issue to look at when it goes into production.

As I proceeded to correct the spine, I decided to increase the size of the Gnome-sized book. Now, I like the smaller book, but frankly, the bigger one is easier to read. I made other corrections and adjustments, which arose as a result of changing the size.

Now, with the new size conformed to a single book print file, I printed a batch of sample books. Of course, as usual, I have modification to make. Only this time the adjustments are not to the book, rather they are to the format. I'm satisfied that I have the files I need to print small quantity runs without any real issues, at least from a printing standpoint. Now I need to address issues pertaining to production.

There are a number of options, in terms of the layout. Firstly, there is my need to have files I can work with to put the material into multiple applications, without having the layout components shift around on me. That has been a big ongoing problem with the layout. I chalk that up, in large part, to computer anomolies. Secondly, I need a layout that conforms to what the printer wants to work with. That is yet to do, not that my main files don't conform, but that with all the adjustments that have been made, and all the revisions, I need to cross reference the material and craft new printing files that can be used to create the material required for high quantity printing. Those materials are conformed differently than small production runs (ie: if it goes to web).

So, now that I have what I need for small quantity printing, I have set-up a binding table in-house. I can bind using a number of methods, although my intention is only to do small quantities and after some experimentation and time studies, I'm leaning toward hand-stitching for some editions of the books. (I'll address those editions in another post)

I have found that the hand-stitched books immediately attract the most attention. Every single person I have show those hand-stitched versions to, loves it. I'd say that a pretty strong cue that I need to make that available. It has a very Gnomish feel to it. So, for the sake of grabbing a niche, the first books will be released with hand-stitched bindings. Doing this, not only, adds to the aesthetics of the book, but also eliminates the fear of the cover becoming unglued.

I'll continue this line of thought in the next post. AG