Maker: Lynn Klopfer from Brown Bag Books

We moved to the apple orchard when I was 6. My parents traded the neighborhood, and the paved streets for rolling hills, dust, and a long dirt driveway. The house we moved into was big, but older. With the older house came a few perks, like taller than normal ceilings, giant windows looking out on the valley behind us, and bigger bedrooms. It also came with a few downsides like one electric outlet per room, and no insulation in the walls. Being a child, I didnโ€™t really notice a huge difference, because when the colder weather hit, I usually found one of the wall heater vents and plopped my reading pillow next to it, snuggled up with a book, and read while the furnace in the basement pushed hot air onto me. My parents usually found me under a side table in the living room when it was cold, and if I wasnโ€™t there, I was curled up on my bed reading. I loved reading. I could spend hours reading. And I usually did. I read in the car, before bed, when I woke up, on the bus to school, and pretty much any other time I could. For some reason, I didnโ€™t like to keep books though. I never read them twice, and couldnโ€™t handle having them sit around when they werenโ€™t going to be used again. The library was my happy place, and we went weekly. As Iโ€™ve grown up, I have allowed myself to buy a few books. I have a wire basket next to our bed, and it holds a handful of books. The ones from the library that are next in line to be read, or books that have made a huge impact on my life, or books that I pick up at a garage sale that I know are ones I will be reading soon in my book club. Iโ€™ve recently gotten into audio books on the iPhone. I love the fact that I can do the dishes, or fold laundry and still be sucked into a book, but nothing will replace the feeling of curling up with a book under a blanket for me. It is, and will always be my favorite pastime, which is why Lynn and her love of all things books is our featured maker this week.

{Angie}

Please introduce yourself.

My name is Lynn Klopfer and I am a bookseller and creator of โ€˜Book Art.โ€™ Growing up in the great, desert metropolis of the Inland Empire in Southern California, I tried filling any cultural voids by immersing myself in books. Now I make stuff with them. I currently live in a small mountain community high above the city lights, which provides me with just enough peace and quiet to focus on what I need to accomplish in a day.

What do you make or do?

Along with being a traditional bookseller, I create โ€˜rescued book journalsโ€™ using covers from discarded hardbacks. Vintage graphics and catchy book titles, taken out of context, inspire me to create new composing tools for someone to create their own โ€˜next project,โ€™ be it in writing, art, or business ideas. We also use book illustrations to create one-of-a-kind cards and wall hangings. Weโ€™re like Native Americans; we use all the parts of a buffalo, except with books.

Where can we find your creations?

Brown Bag Books started out as mobile booksellers ten years ago, and weโ€™re still out there, roaming the flea markets and pop ups around Southern California and beyond, like Patchwork Show, Artists and Fleas in Downtown Los Angeles.ย  In October weโ€™re traveling to the (Las) Vegas Valley Book Fair, and I cannot wait! Weโ€™re gonna knock Nevadaโ€™s socks off. We do currently have a permanent showroom, which feels very grown up. Every weekend you can find our shop at Crafted at the Port of Los Angeles, a cool World War II era warehouse full of like- minded artists. Our journals and cards are there, along with a large selection of curated books. We are also on Instagram at #brownbagbooks, where I love getting and posting โ€˜book artโ€™ related posts. You can get in touch through www.brownbagbooks.bizย ย  You can also follow my blog atย  (www.travellikeateacher)ย travel like a teacherย which also highlights my book buying/art making adventures.

How long have you been creating and is it your full-time job?

There was never a question that I would start a business involving books. Since I was a kid Iโ€™ve been, quite frankly, obsessed with books. Both for their physical presence in bookstores and libraries, as well as for the stories they hold. I am also a teacher, which allows me to be in and around books on a daily basis. But things are changing rapidly. As weโ€™ve shifted towards digital (or tried to), I feel like there needs to be places where we can still feel the wonder of books in their original form. We can have both, printed word and digital. I just want to help insure that we donโ€™t lose the older version completely. Nothing beats the filled bookshelves of a well stocked library, or the vintage graphics of a 1930โ€™s Spelling Primer. And the beauty of books is that there can never be too many. At least thatโ€™s what I think.

What obstacles have you had to overcome to lead a creative life?

There are always obstacles in leading any creative endeavor. What I keep going back to is the adage of โ€œdo what you love and the money will follow,โ€ even though sometimes the money doesnโ€™t follow the way you want it to. Iโ€™ve noticed that the successful people I see at these great handcrafted events we attend all have something in common โ€“ they have a real passion for what they do. To succeed you need a passion. Period. I hope that my customers and those who visit us can immediately tell that we have that passion for books. Iโ€™ve conducted BBB almost like a scientific experiment, to see what people will do in the presence of all these books and their by-products, how people will react, as if as a society weโ€™ve forgotten how to shop in a bookstore. You see excitement when they find a graphic that reminds them of their childhood, or a gift someone gave them, or a beloved childrenโ€™s classic. Itโ€™s been fun to watch.ย  As a teacher I spend the school year with 7th and 8th graders who know me as โ€œthe teacher who love books,โ€ and by being my โ€œartist selfโ€ in their presence, I hope to spread an appreciation for the older style of books to a new generation. Because itโ€™s true, they donโ€™t make them like they used to, books that is.

Whatโ€™s on the horizon for you and what you do?

For the future, I would like to see the business be able to take care of all of my financial needs, but while Iโ€™m teaching I would like to inspire as many future writers, readers, and artists as I can. They are our future customers! When I do have that rare day off from teaching and BBB, my perfect day off would be to wake up late and stay in bed for a while, reading a good book of course. I would spend an hour taking care of business, because when I do that, then I can relax. I would try to ride my bike, at least for a bit, then I would head out to my favorite antique and thrift stores where I troll for lost literary treasure. Lunch would be al fresco, sushi perhaps, and then a sit by the pool, with a book of course. Really, the perfect day off would be one where I could read as much as possible, because thatโ€™s what makes me happy.

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