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Apr 15, 2013

Heart-Shaped Book-Marker



My father always says that a good book has to be thick enough to stand on its own. My father is a wise man, and before I became his best arguer, as a kid I was always eager to agree with him. However, I couldn't on this point. I had read plenty of wonderful books that perhaps had the inner strength to stand straight, but no physical robustness to match it. And I loved these books too much to agree with my dad.

When I read a good book, my whole self is committed to it. I become a slow reader. I long to absorb each descriptive word and the beauty of the phrases that fill my soul with their meaning. I stop often to travel away in my imagination and create or adjust the places and characters before I can continue unraveling their stories. I read the same page over and over, until my imagination catches up to my standards. I carry this whole world with me everywhere, for as long as these magical pages will last.

When I am done, a profound sense of nostalgia takes over me and I miss it to the point of loneliness. With the turn of a page, these characters and places are no longer there. Sometimes they visit me in my dreams in continued adventures, or sometimes they emerge in random moments to remind me that they have become part of who I am and have taught me much along the way. Books stretch the barriers of time and space, allowing us to live from three thousand years of history, through the present and far into the future; to see from the corner of our eyes to the farthest corners of the world. It gives us super powers. How else could we actively participate in so many stories and be in so many places?

A good book should be thick enough to stand on its own, or else we miss it too much too soon. A good book, we don't want it to ever end.

So, for all these books I've given my heart to, here is this week’s project:

Heart-Shaped Book-Marker

For this little treat, I used nothing more than stiffened fabric (see this post on how to stiffen fabric), embroidery thread, needle, pen and scissors.  

With a pen, draw a heart. The sides should be mostly straight and the tip should form a 90o angle (same as the corner of a page). 


Cut two perfectly symmetrical hearts and sew them together with embroidery thread. A few running stitches along the straight sides of the hearts are enough. Plan your stitching so as to leave the knot inside, between both hearts.





 

Now, go read! And next time you need to pause, leave your heart there, holding that page.


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