I don’t care. I think paperweights cool. They’re vintage and fun and they’re great for self-defense. My collection is vast and odd. I obtained most pieces for a paltry $1.50–$2.99, depending on whether their stickers bore half-off-colors that day at Goodwill or not. In other words: they were practically free. Because they have no function, though—other than being glorious glass or acrylic balls of wonder—I’ve taken to either spreading them across my desk at work or pairing them at home with books that they resemble, with the result that my paperweights have found a second functional life: they’re ART, dahling. There’s also a second bookish aspect at work here: did you know that (according to the all-knowing wiki) Colette, Oscar Wilde, and Truman Capote were also paperweight collectors? No? Well: they were. So: RELEVANT. Without any further rationalization!: welcome to opening night of the Paperweights and Books show at the Book Riot Gallery. We hope you brought your own wine and cheese, because the only feasts we’re serving are visual, y’all. There are links for the books if you’re interested, but nothing on the paperweight side is for sale and no, I do not want to share. Get your own. Then take pictures. We like bookish pictures.
The French Laundry Cookbook
Pale Blue Dot
Good Morning, Midnight
Gold Fame Citrus
Breathless
Votes for Women
Girl on Girl: Art and Photography in the Age of the Female Gaze
At Last
Go Set a Watchmen
Sex Object
The Lazy Weekend Cookbook
The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart
The Art of Fantasy, Sci-Fi and Steampunk
Clade
The Vanderbeekers and the Hidden Garden
Curiosities and Splendour
A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood
Wagashi: The Art of Japanese Confectionary
Season: A Year of Wine Country Food
Vincent’s Starry Night and Other Stories: A Children’s History of Art
Animalium
Djinn City
Race to the Bottom of the Sea
Cabañuelas Do you have any bookish habits or curiosities that fascinate you like this? Tell us about ’em!