Bart, Harriet. Garment Register. Minneapolis: Hermetic Press, 2001. E f#1206
Includes prose from women writers, fabric samples and, mounted on reproductions of ledger pages, photographs of women.
Gaulke, Cheri. Im-’ped-ə-mənt. Rosendale, NY: Women's Studio Workshop, 1991. E Pam #6826
Im-’ped-ə-mənt explores and condemns the sexual fetishism associated with women's feet, from the ancient practice of foot binding to the modern-day popularity of high heels. The book's centerpiece of two images—one of a foot in a stiletto heel, the other an X-ray of a bound foot—is silkscreened onto handmade paper containing hair and toenail clippings.
Grossman, C. J. Papaya Lesson. California: C. J. Grossman, s.d.
Stuffed bikini underwear house a little box that contains 3 books, two with visual euphemisms people use to describe female and male anatomy and one that signifies condoms.
Image by Bob Hsiang, photographer.
Leeb, Susan. Shame. North Carolina, 2005.
Each page is a cutout of an eighteenth-century woman's gown with a naked female torso on the reverse. Folded, these pages slip inside a cloth bag with a sewing pattern design just as a dress pattern would slip into its envelope.
Melhorn-Boe, Lise. A Sad Little Girl. North Bay, Ontario: Transformer Press, 1995.
A floral fabric-covered box opens to reveal a cast pink paper doll and five pink paper dresses hanging on small pink hangers. The dresses bear the story of a young girl who doesn't quite fit traditional notions of girlhood—she has been labeled a "bad girl."
Poehlmann, JoAnna. Glad Rags: A Compilation of Quotations. Milwaukee: JoAnna Poehlmann, c1999. E 12mo #6325
" ... a compilation of quotes, poetry and proverbs hand lettered on bristol board imprinted with a metric centimeter grid to mimic a seamstresse’s [sic] pattern cutting board. [In the shape of a dress, the] book is collaged with color copies of dress labels.”

Stone, Tamar. The Untitled Pink Corset Book. New York: Tamar Stone, 2000. In process.
Stone's book juxtaposes effusive copy from turn of the 20th century corset advertisements with the recollections of women forced to wear the uncomfortable devices. Consisting of five nested pink corsets, reading the text becomes a symbolic act of undressing and freeing the female body.
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Cash, Barbara, ed. Fragments. Sweden, ME: Ives Street Press, 1995. E q#2051
"Seven women from rural Maine speak of memories associated with quilting." A quilt square, made ca. 1900, is incorporated in the binding of cloth over boards; in clam-shell box.
Cummins, Maureen. Crazy Quilt. Rosendale, NY: Women’s Studio Workshop, 1998. Library Service Center Text contains quotations from narratives written by fifteen women imprisoned for madness, including Kate Millett and Francis Farmer.
Kaufman, Margaret. Aunt Sallie’s Lament. West Burke, VT: Janus Press, c1988. E q#2102
According to the designer Claire Van Vliet, this accordion-bound book is “a poem that is the autobiography of a spinster quilter stitched with mutterings that accumulate as the cut pages are turned becoming a diamond quilt square.” We also hold a trade version of the original that was published by Chronicle Books in 1993.
McPherson, Sandra. Beauty in Use. Newark, VT: Janus Press, c1997. E #19138
Poems inspired by S. McPherson’s collection of African-American quilts, illustrated by Claire Van Vliet with pages of interlocking papers to form two-sided quilt squares with sumptuous colors and kinetic geometry.
Wascher-James, Sande. How Long? Renton, WA: S. Wascher-James, 1993. E Pam #6800
Depicts women’s struggle for the vote through text, photographs, and quilt blocks. Text inspired by article on women’s suffrage by Minna Morse in The Smithsonian 1993.
Wascher-James, Sande. Every Man Needs a Woman. Newcastle, WA: S. Wascher-James, 1995. Miniature #31
25 squares in a quilt block ’snail’s trail’ pattern, using Liberty Lawn fabric, unfolding to 40 x 40 cm. Contains a text by an anonymous 19th-century male and reproductions of American stamps honoring women.
Gaylord, Susan Kapuscinski. Childbirth Journey. Newburyport, MA: Notan Press, c1992. E Pam #6932
“Artist's emotional journey through pregnancy, Caesarian birth, and new motherhood. Abstract charcoal drawings are combined with imagery created on the photocopier from natural objects and a calligraphic text based on her journal writings.”
Hamoy, Carol. Mothertalk: A Commentary on Non-Verbal Communication. ca. 2005. E 12mo #7291
An altered copy of Spoken Italian by Charles E. Kany and Charles Speroni (Boston : Little, Brown and Co., c1946) with illustrations of mothers and children glued in, wrapped and interleaved with waxed paper (glued on) with brief text about the nuances of mothers’ gestures and expressions.
Larson, Jill. My Mother’s Coming to Town. Atlanta: Nexus Press, c1994. E Pam 12mo #12443
A photographic collage that reflects the author’s mixed emotions about a visit from her mother, ending with an unexpected punch line.
Sligh, Clarissa T. What’s Happening with Momma? Rosendale, NY: Women’s Studio Workshop, c1988. E Pam f#1050
A bookwork, consisting of one cardboard sheet accordion folded to form various views of a house, with a poem printed on accordion folded cards which unfold to form a stairway in front of the picture on each page.
Washington, Bisa. Promise Not to Tell. Rosendale, NY: Women’s Studio Workshop, 2007.
Spare narrative and silkscreen prints tell a personal history of child abuse and trauma.
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Michaelis, Catherine. Stack the Deck: Twenty-two Artists Mark the Cards for Women’s Health and Healing. Vashon, WA: May Day Press, c1999. E #20628
Cummins, Maureen. Femmes Fatales. Brooklyn, NY: M. Cummins, 2001. Library Service Center.
Images of seductive women are juxtaposed with names of torture devices in a Victorian-style photograph album.
Gaulke, Cheryl and Sue Maberry. Marriage Matters, 2005.
Gaulke and Maberry invited 10 lesbian and gay couples to go to Sears and have their portraits taken. These families reflect on the question “when your relationship is not legally recognized, what does marriage matter?” The materials used evoke wedding invitations and with the alternating vertical and horizontal pages splayed open, the book’s shape resembles a two-tiered wedding cake.
Jacobs, Diane. Alphabet Tricks. Rosendale, NY: Scantron Press, 2000. E 12mo #6332.
An alphabet book of sexist language about women. Book consists of 15 printed cards which slide into transparent paper sleeves silkscreened with illustrations.
Kahn, Robin. Everybody Needs Milk ... Even Dada. Brooklyn, NY: Distributed by Permanent Press, 1993. Library Service Center
Lee, Su-Jung. Lovelines in the Nineties: A Book. Atlanta: Nexus Press, 2000. E Pam 16mo #93.
Meynell, Katherine. Emissions Book. E Pam #7267
Contains substances purported to be bodily fluids.
Rindl, Deb. Seeds of Desire. London: D. Rindle, 1998. Miniature #36
Contains seeds which can be reached only by cutting bellows-folded paper enclosure mounted within boards, on the lower of which is printed text concerning female genital mutilation.
Schaer, Miriam. How Do You Compare?: Excerpts from Selected Sex Surveys. Brooklyn, NY: M. Schaer, 1996. Library Service Center
Som, Indigo. He Likes You. Berkeley: Bitchy Buddha Press, c1996. E f#1171 no. 4
Work consists of three different sized folded paper "fortune tellers."