AIGA Design Archives

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Design Category
Book design, 2002
Design firm
Cheng Design (Seattle, Washington)
Collection
(2003) 50 Books/50 Covers of 2002

Description

Sento at Sixth and Main: Preserving Landmarks of Japanese American Heritage is the product of more than five years of intensive collaboration between myself and historian Gail Dubrow. This book documents 10 places significant in Japanese-American heritage. Its purpose is to develop a clearer understanding of the meanings these sites hold in the collective memory of Nikkei communities in the American West, and to help build a new constituency for preserving these overlooked cultural resources.

The most challenging part of this project was balancing the desire for a richly illustrated publication within the restrictions of a nonprofit budget. The book was originally planned as a modest 32-page, text-based publication. However, through grant writing and donor support, we were able to expand the publication to 232 pages.

Credits
Creative director: Karen Cheng
Designer: Karen Cheng
Photographers: Mark Edward Harris, Jack Laxar, Todd Maggio, Richard Ross, John Stamets
Production director: Karen Cheng
Trim size: 8 x 5 1/2 inches
Pages: 232
Quantity printed: 2,500
Typeface: Trade Gothic
Printer: Olympus Press
Paper: Fraser Pegasus Text Brilliant White and Midnight Black
Binder: Lincoln & Allen Bindery
Binding method: Hardcover, sewn
Jacket designer: Karen Cheng
Jacket printer: Olympus Press
Authors: Gail Dubrow, Donna Graves, Coll-Peter Thrush, Eugenia Woo
Publishers: Seattle Arts Commission, University of Washington Press