556 lines
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556 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
[1]Jump to content
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[2] [4] Art /[5] Blog /[6] Projects /[7] About /[8] Stats /Search
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The Tiny Book of Great Joys
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10. February 2025
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Posted in [12]Random
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· 19 minutes read
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If you are interested in how I over-engineered the process of making a tiny
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book for my wife, using AI, a pen plotter, a 3D printer, and a lot of time, you
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are in the right place. The book is titled The Tiny Book of Great Joys (Mala
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Knjiga Velikih Radosti in Serbian) , and here is how it turned out:
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The Tiny Book of Great Joys sitting on the table slightly open with the title
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page showing
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[13] Photo 1 [14] Photo 1 [15] Photo 1
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My wife is delighted with it, so it was worth all the effort.
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This post will take you through the process. It will be a long one, but please
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stick around - I promise there will be a lot of pretty pictures.
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Here is the outline of the post:
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• [16]The idea
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• [17]Drawings
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• [18]Text
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• [19]Plotting
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• [20]Bookbinding
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• [21]The finished book
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• [22]Timeline
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• [23]Conclusion
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The idea[24] #
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I had this idea for a while after seeing something similar somewhere on the
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internet.. Since then, I always wanted to make one for my wife - a physically
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small book with a bunch of small drawings of our memories together, inside
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jokes, and little things she likes.
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I wanted the illustrations to be hand-drawn, and I had a plan to ask my friend
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to do them. But I knew he would refuse any kind of payment, so I felt bad
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adding more work to his plate. So I shelved the idea, but every now and then,
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it would pop up in my head.
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Fast forward a few years - we got a kid, and our routine completely changed. We
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are enjoying it a lot, but it can be very exhausting, and every day seems
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identical to the last. That's why I decided I needed to do something for her to
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break the routine. The book idea seemed perfect - personal and handcrafted - so
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I gave it a try.
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To be able to do everything myself, I went to create digital drawings and then
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draw them on paper using my trusty pen plotter.
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With the idea in place, I moved on to creating the drawings - which turned out
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to be a challenge of its own.
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Drawings[25] #
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For pen plotting, one needs vector files, so I started drawing in Figma.
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Unfortunately, I quickly realized that my drawing skills would not get me the
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result I had envisioned. Determined to do it this time, I decided to try using
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AI to generate images.
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Midjourney[26] #
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I got myself a Midjourney subscription and started playing with it. It took a
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lot of failed attempts to figure out how to get drawings that were simple and
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had a strong hand-drawn feel to them. Even then, I ended up editing every one
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of them, but more on that later.
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One of the first images I was satisfied with (it didn't end up in the book,
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though):
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Black and white drawing of a cute fox curled up sleeping.
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It took a lot of time, but it was fun. Failed attempts were often quirky and
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funny, and I was learning how to use the tool. And it made me feel like a
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secret agent, doing it next to my wife, who had no idea what I was up to.
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A bunch of attempts at drawing Link from Zelda
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Prompting[27] #
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I may be wrong, but I think Midjourney wasn't built for the kind of
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illustrations I had in mind. I was after simple, hand-drawn illustrations that
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felt personal. Luckily, I found a style reference (--sref 230156437) that
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worked well for my case. I used it to generate almost all of the drawings that
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ended up in the book. For those who haven't used Midjourney - you can use
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images as style references to influence the style of images you want to
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generate.
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Most of my images were generated using that sref code and a style weight (A
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number that tells Midjourney how much the reference should influence the final
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output) between 150 and 400 (it can go from 0 to 1000).
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As for the prompts, these are the key terms I combined with the description and
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the style reference:
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• black and white
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• vector line art
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• stylized simple drawing
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• solid white background
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• isolated on white background
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• low detail
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• clean edges
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• sketch
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• rough sketch
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• children's coloring book
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It took me a lot of tries - between 10 and 30 attempts for each image you see
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in the book.
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AI to Plotter[28] #
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Once I solved the image generation part, I had to figure out how to turn them
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into vector files for plotting. The first thing I tried was something similar
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to halftone. As you can see below, in this process, the images completely lost
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the hand-drawn feel.
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The same fox drawing, but but drawn with a lot of small dots, using technique
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similar to halftone
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Then I remembered [29]this plot of Marble Machine X I did a while ago, for
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which I used AutoTrace to convert the original image to a vector file. The
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great thing about AutoTrace is that it supports "centerline tracing". And this
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time, I learned that Inkscape has a great AutoTrace plugin, which made it even
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easier to convert.
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What makes centerline tracing different[30] #
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Most of the tools that convert raster to vector images do it by outlining
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shapes. This is not suitable for plotting, as each line in the original image
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becomes a sausage-like shape. Centerline tracing, on the other hand, tries to
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draw a single line following the middle path through shapes. Don't worry if it
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sounds confusing; the example below should make things clearer.
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Here is the image of Link from The Legend of Zelda generated by Midjourney:
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Black and white cartoony drawing of Link from The Legend of Zelda standing with
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a sword and shield.
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After applying a common vectorization technique, we get this. As you can see,
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each line in the original drawing is now outlined, creating this messy-looking
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image.
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Vectorized image of Link using common vectorization technique with each area
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outlined black
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But if we use centerline tracing, it suddenly looks a lot more like a drawing.
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It is not perfect, but don't worry - we are going to clean it up in the next
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step.
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Vectorized image of Link using centerline tracing, looking much more like a
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real drawing
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Cleaning up[31] #
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In the points where lines touch or cross, AutoTrace is not sure which line to
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follow and creates these funky-looking joints. Here is an exaggerated example
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to show you what I'm talking about. Input is the raster image at the top and
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the vectorized result is at the bottom:
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Lines that are crossing and touching before and after centerline tracing
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But I found out that if I roughly separate these lines, I get a much better
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result.
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Lines that are crossing and touching, but slightly separated before tracing,
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with the result being much better
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Let's now apply this technique to the image of Link we've seen above. After
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separating lines (and some cleaning up) this is the image I ended up with. It
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is rough, but it is only used as an input for the tracing process, so it
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doesn't really matter. This was manual and somewhat tedious process, but I
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enjoyed it overall. It was a sort of meditation for me.
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The image of Link, but this time with lines slightly separated and details
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removed
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And finally, when we trace this image, we get a really nice and clean vector
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file perfect for plotting. Very clean vectorized image of Link
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Here is another example. We start with the image I generated using Midjourney:
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Black and white drawing of a woman, man, little girl and a dog walking in a
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forest
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After editing, removing details and separating lines, we get this one:
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The same image of the family walking in the forest but with lines separated and
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some parts redrawn
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And the traced vector result:
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Vectorized image of of the family walking in the forest
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You'll notice that in both examples I did some redrawing (For example, in the
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second image, I redraw the dog completely to look like our dog Zappa.) . I did
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that for pretty much all of the images, to fix things I wasn't able to polish
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using prompts. I also removed a lot of details to make sure images are crisp
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and readable at the small size.
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Final image flow[32] #
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All of this took a lot of experimentation, but it gave me a pretty solid
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workflow which I used to generate all of the images. The complete flow looks
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like this:
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• Generate images using Midjourney.
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• Upscale them two times, because upscaled images were easier to edit and
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tracing was more precise.
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• Clean up, redraw and separate lines by hand using Gimp.
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• Use Inkscape plugin to run AutoTrace centerline tracing.
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It took me a while to generate all the images, and the fact that I was trying
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to keep it a secret from my wife didn't help. I think I did it over the span of
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two weeks, mostly in the evening after she would go to bed.
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Ganon (Name of the main villain Link fights against in The Legend of Zelda
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series) never stood a chance![33] #
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Before we continue I just want to show you two funky images of Link that really
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made me laugh:
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Funky looking Links generated by Midjourney
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Midjourney please staph!
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Text[34] #
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With the drawings ready, I turned to the next crucial part - the text. I first
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wanted to write everything by hand, photograph it and then vectorize it in the
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same way I did with the images. But it was a hassle - I had to do a lot of
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editing for text to look as my handwriting.
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Evil Mad Scientist, the maker of my pen plotter, has a fantastic tool called
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[35]Hershey Text. It contains a bunch of single-line fonts ideal for plotting.
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I chose the EMS Elfin font as it looked playful and hand-drawn. I used it to
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write all of the text in the book and I think it turned out great.
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Here is how it looks:
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Title of the book in English and Aerbian in EMS Elfin font
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Plotting[36] #
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The tricky part with bookbinding is that pages are not printed in order, but in
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a way that when you fold the sheets in half, you get the right order. I used
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Figma to design the layout, with a great care to make sure pages are in order
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after double-sided plotting.
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Here is the layout laid out on A4 sized paper. Sorry for blurring the text, but
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a lot of it is very personal and I want to keep it for our eyes only.
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Layout of the book ready for plotting
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Plotting is the part that went the smoothest, but not without hiccups. I
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usually use Pigma Micron blackliner markers. They use archival quality ink and
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they are literally indestructible. But this time, even the thinnest one I had
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was too thick for the book this small.
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Here you can see the first two test plots (Sorry for the poor quality photos, I
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threw the plots away, so these are the only ones I have) using markers of 0.2mm
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and 0.1mm thickness respectively. Lines got a bit smudged and looked much
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thicker than I expected. This was also the moment I realized I need to remove a
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lot of details (A friend of mine said that in these plots, Link looks like he
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has measles) from the images to make them readable at this size.
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Test plot using 0.2mm marker Test plot using 0.1mm marker
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I needed to find a thinner pen.
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Technical pen to the rescue[37] #
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Blackliner markers were made as a more practical replacement for technical
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pens. But from what I've read, an old-school technical pen was the only thing
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capable of achieving super-fine lines I wanted. I went online and ordered
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Rotring Isograph 0.2mm. As soon as it arrived I sneaked out to my study and did
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another test plot using it. Oh boy, was I happy when I saw the result:
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Test plot using a technical pen
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Lines were thin and crisp and at this point I was convinced the project will be
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a success!
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Smudged drawings[38] #
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All of the first plots were done on 120gsm printer paper. It is somewhat thick
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paper and drawings looked fantastic. Unfortunately, when I bound the pages
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together, the drawings and letters would get transferred on the opposite pages.
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I could probably get away with it, considering the whole hand made feel of the
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book. But I wanted it to be perfect.
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A friend advised me to leave ink to dry for a few hours. I left each side to
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dry for 24 hours, but it smudged again. Next time I tried putting the plot
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(before cutting the pages) between two sheets of papers and pressing it with
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heavy books. I did that for more than 24 hours, but still after cutting and
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bounding the pages, they got smudged again. At this point I was becoming
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somewhat desperate. As the last resort I ordered different, 100gsm paper and to
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my relief it worked! Crisis averted!
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In the final version you can still see tiny traces on a few pages, but these
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are barely visible and don't really bother me.
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After plotting and cutting I was left with a stack of somewhat delicate pages.
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Now, it was finally time to turn them into a book.
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Bookbinding[39] #
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As you can imagine, I had zero bookbinding experience. There are a lot of
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resources online, but two of them were crucial for my project as they were on
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how to bind tiny books:
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• [40]Mini BookBinding Marathon video
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• [41]How to Make A Miniature Hardback Book article
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After reading and watching these and a few generic articles on bookbinding, I
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gathered enough info to try doing it myself. I thought I was super clever
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because I 3D printed sides and spine of the book. I designed sewing holes in
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the spine so I can connect the pages directly to it without using glue. It was
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a decent idea, but it left a gap between two signatures (In bookbinding, a
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section, gathering, or signature is a group of sheets folded in half.) . Still,
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I went with it for the first try.
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3D printed spine with two book signatures already sewn to it
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I laid everything down on the canvas that the book would be wrapped in and
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started assembling it. But I made a crucial mistake - I used super glue. It
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dries quickly, it is stiff, and doesn't glue 3D printed plastic well and it
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dissolved the paper I used. Long story short, I made a mess. But I didn't
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stress too much, I just proclaimed that version is a prototype and used it as a
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learning experience.
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I ordered proper bookbinding glue (PVA). While I was waiting for it, I focused
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on properly sewing the pages together.
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Sewing the pages[42] #
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The first time I sewed the pages together, I poked the holes by hand and they
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were somewhat uneven. Again, it was nothing major, but I didn't like it. So I
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designed and 3D printed a simple tool to help me drill the holes evenly.
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The tool has two parts, and the pages fit snugly between them. Both top and
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bottom parts have holes, so I was able to put the needle through and poke
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perfectly even holes in the pages. I'm very proud of this silly contraption.
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3D printed tool, closed, with needle poking through it
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3D printed tool, opened, with the sheet with sewing holes visible still in it
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Here you can see all of the eight sheets with sewing holes.
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All eight sheets with illustrations ready for sewing
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Fun fact, I designed all 3D parts using JavaScript and [43]Replicad library.
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Here is [44]a link if you want to play with the model in your browser.
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[45]Application showing code and the 3D model
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But I ditched the 3D printed spine and used the technique called pamphlet
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stitch, which works great when you have only two signatures. It made signatures
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way more tight than when I connected them separately to the 3D printed spine.
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Two book signatures sewn together using pamphlet stich
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Two book signatures opened at the exact point where they meet
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Glue arrived[46] #
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When the glue arrived, I plotted everything again and took it from the top. I
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swapped 3D printed sides for cardboard. Using proper glue was a game changer. I
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had enough time to apply it before it hardened, and when it dried it stayed
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flexible. And when it got onto my fingers, it was easy to remove. Everything
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was much cleaner, and I finally managed to put it all together.
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Unfortunately, I was rushing to finish the book, so I didn't take any photos of
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the process. But here are a few I do have:
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Cardboard sides laid out in the bookbinding canvas
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If you are an experienced bookbinder and reading this, I'm sorry for the
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bookbinding crimes I probably committed. I promise I won't use super glue
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again.
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The finished book[47] #
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It looked great! It was not perfect (more on that below), but I was super happy
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with how it turned out. It had a distinct handcrafted feel to it, the images
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turned out fantastic, and I think I really managed to bring out a personal
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touch with it.
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On the day I finished the book and gave it to my wife, we were both exhausted
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(our kid was teething, and we had a very rough night), so I thought she would
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appreciate a little pick-me-up.
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Book opened on the table showing the illustration of the family walking in the
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forrest
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When I gave it to her, the first thing she asked was, "Will I cry?". She was
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brave, but it definitely got her all mushy and made her day. After reading, she
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carefully put it on the shelf, out of the reach of the little one.
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Then I asked her if she ever suspected I was preparing a surprise for her, and
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she said that she had no idea. But she also said that she thought it was weird
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that I would often plot something and not brag about it to her afterwards. It
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was true, I love showing her my work, but luckily she didn't give it too much
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thought, and I was able to finish my secret project.
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Book opened on the table showing the illustration of Link from The Legend of
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Zelda
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One thing I would like to fix[48] #
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Like I mentioned, the book isn't perfect. The sides are a bit too large, so the
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pages seem too deep inside when the book is closed. For the same reason, the
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end pages turned out to be a bit short, which gives it a weird, uneven look. It
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is purely aesthetic, but I think it is the only thing keeping it from being
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perfect.
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Lesson learned if I ever end up doing something similar.
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Timeline[49] #
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It took way longer than it should have—it took me a month and a half to finish
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it. It took so long because I did it in secrecy, which meant working late in
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the evenings when my wife and kid were asleep. A bunch of little failures...
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ehm, I mean learning opportunities also prolonged the project. And finally, I
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had to order multiple things, so I was blocked a few times while I was waiting
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for four different deliveries.
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But the final assembly took me around two and a half hours from start to finish
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- plotting, cutting, sewing, and bookbinding. Mostly because I had already
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practiced all of them and defined the exact process.
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Conclusion[50] #
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It was so much fun. I love projects that span across multiple disciplines. This
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one touched AI, drawing, plotting, modeling, 3D printing, sewing, and
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bookbinding. I encountered a lot of little hiccups, but I also learned about
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all of them. Some of the errors I made could have been avoided if I had been
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more patient. But I hope you'll cut me some slack - I was super excited and
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eager to see how it would turn out, and I had limited time windows when I could
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do it in secrecy. Still, I need to take it as a lesson - being patient will
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help me save time when doing projects like this one.
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The highlight for me was that I could do it without an illustrator. Love it or
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hate it, AI ended up being a fantastic tool that filled the gap in my skill
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set, which was crucial for making the book.
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I hope you enjoyed this write-up as much as I enjoyed making the book and
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writing the post. And I do hope I inspired you to try making something of your
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own. If I did, please reach out on GitHub, I would love to see it.
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Share on:
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[51] [52] [53] [54]
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© 2016-2025. All rights reserved.
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Written with ♡ by Stanko Tadić.
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GitHub
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References:
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[1] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#content
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[2] https://muffinman.io/
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[4] https://muffinman.io/art/
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[5] https://muffinman.io/blog/
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[6] https://muffinman.io/projects/
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[7] https://muffinman.io/about/
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[8] https://muffinman.io/stats/
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[12] https://muffinman.io/archive/#random
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[13] https://muffinman.io/img/tiny-book/the-book-02.jpg
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[14] https://muffinman.io/img/tiny-book/the-book-03.jpg
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[15] https://muffinman.io/img/tiny-book/the-book-04.jpg
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[16] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#the-idea
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[17] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#drawings
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[18] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#text
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[19] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#plotting
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[20] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#bookbinding
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[21] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#the-finished-book
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[22] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#timeline
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[23] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#conclusion
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[24] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#the-idea
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[25] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#drawings
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[26] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#midjourney
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[27] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#prompting
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[28] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#ai-to-plotter
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[29] https://www.instagram.com/p/CNJ_ZBOHZKj/
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[30] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#what-makes-centerline-tracing-different
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[31] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#cleaning-up
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[32] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#final-image-flow
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[33] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#never-stood-a-chance
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[34] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#text
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[35] https://wiki.evilmadscientist.com/Hershey_Text
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[36] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#plotting
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[37] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#technical-pen-to-the-rescue
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[38] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#smudged-drawings
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[39] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#bookbinding
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[40] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kA2bjvOAzGw
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[41] https://www.rokolee.com/diy-miniature-hardback-book
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[42] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#sewing-the-pages
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[43] https://replicad.xyz/
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[44] https://studio.replicad.xyz/workbench?from-url=https://muffinman.io/img/tiny-book/model.js
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[45] https://studio.replicad.xyz/workbench?from-url=https://muffinman.io/img/tiny-book/model.js
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[46] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#glue-arrived
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[47] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#the-finished-book
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[48] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#one-thing-i-would-like-to-fix
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[49] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#timeline
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[50] https://muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/#conclusion
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[51] http://news.ycombinator.com/submitlink?u=https%3A//muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/&t=The%20Tiny%20Book%20%20of%20Great%20Joys
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[52] http://twitter.com/share?text=The%20Tiny%20Book%20%20of%20Great%20Joys&url=https%3A//muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/
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[53] https://bsky.app/intent/compose?text=The%20Tiny%20Book%20%20of%20Great%20Joys%20https%3A//muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/
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[54] http://www.reddit.com/submit?url=https%3A//muffinman.io/blog/the-tiny-book-of-great-joys/&title=The%20Tiny%20Book%20%20of%20Great%20Joys
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[55] https://muffinman.io/blog/letters-from-sarajevo/
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[56] https://muffinman.io/blog/bunny-jumps-again/
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[57] https://muffinman.io/blog/custom-giraffe-caret/
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[58] https://muffinman.io/atom.xml
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[59] https://muffinman.io/
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[60] https://muffinman.io/
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[61] https://muffinman.io/art/
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[62] https://muffinman.io/blog/
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[63] https://muffinman.io/projects/
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[64] https://muffinman.io/about/
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[65] https://muffinman.io/stats/
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[67] https://muffinman.io/
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[70] https://muffinman.io/art/
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[71] https://muffinman.io/blog/
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[72] https://muffinman.io/projects/
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[73] https://muffinman.io/about/
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[74] https://muffinman.io/stats/
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[75] https://muffinman.io/atom.xml
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[76] https://github.com/stanko/
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