
За македонски јазик кликнете тука.
There is a hidden place in the narrow cobbled streets that is waiting as a portal to take you on a trip through time.
Welcome to the National Workshop for Hand-made Paper.
On this trip you will be warmly welcomed by Ljupco Panevski or his son Nino and, occasionally, other members of the family.
The road of the hand-made paper starts from China where this procedure was invented in the II century. The first paper was made from bamboo, but due to the exhaustion of the bamboo quantities, a revolutionary discovery came to light, the production of paper from wood.
In the XII century the paper began its journey to Europe in Spain, Barcelona, then in Venice, next Dubrovnik, and finally in Ohrid, Macedonia.
In the monastery St. Naum paper was produced in the XVI century. The workshop of the family Panevski will take us back in that period of time, which are the only active practitioners of this old trade in this part of the world. Really for admiration.
Hand-made paper is completely different than the factory paper. First because of its base, which is completely natural: made of heartwood, sometimes combined with cotton and various additives for decoration, such as flowers, tobacco, herbs, spices, etc. It does not contain any chemicals, no glue, nor does it pollute the environment with wastewater. It is also different because of the way of production, love and attention that is given to every sheet of paper and the spirit and authenticity of another time.
The procedure is consisted of several steps:
- depending on the type of the wood the heart is cut in different angles into fine particles (the color depends of the type of the wood)
- the particles stay in water for 23-31 day , the particles tying themselves together
- a wooden screen mesh is used to exhaust a certain amount of the solution
- the water is dried and the paper to be is transferred to a flat surface (it can be a different material)
- it is put under pressure to dry off the large quantities of water
- it is being dried outdoors for 2 days
- then pressed again to become flat
The workshop contains a copy of the Gutenberg press on which the first printed book was the Bible. The original can be found in Mainz, Germany. The press, which is still in use in the workshop, is over 150 years old.
Lead types were being used for printing on paper at first. The letters were placed from right to left, one by one and, imagine, this took 1.5 hour for one page to be set. Stereotypes were made later and the procedure was accelerated.
If you visit the workshop you will get explanation about the whole procedure in more details and you can even make your own piece of paper yourself.
Many tourists are visiting the workshop and they are surprised and in same time amazed by what they can find here.
Visit their website for more information, click here. Or the best you can do when visiting Ohrid is to embark on this journey trough time by visiting the workshop. It’s located next to the archaeological museum – House of Robevci.
Working hours: Monday-Saturday from 08:30 – 21:00; Sunday and winter working hours 09:00 – 16:00.
Entrance is free.
The products from paper can be bought as unique souvenirs.
If you find this post interesting just imagine how much more interesting it can be to be there and see how the paper is created in front of you.
Daily post: Inheritance
I love that you’re a tour guide because your work makes me feel as if I’m actually discovering all of this in Macedonia! If I keep reading, I may have to take a trip! 🙂
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Thanks, you are welcomed any time here, and who knows maybe will see you in Macedonia some day 😃
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What an informative post.
Thanks for sharing 🙂
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You are welcomed, thank you for your visit
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Wow … stuff like this just enchants me to my fingertips! Thank you for letting me lean over the balcony of your blog today!
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You are welcomed, thank you for the kind words 😘
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Great post 👍 I would love to visit a workshop like this, especially since it’s hands-on
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It’s really interesting
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I glad you added photos, they show the history and help to bring your words to life. Really interesting post, thanks.
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Thank you so much, I like to add especially photos made by me, it makes the post complete for me
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Hey there, I appreciate the visits, I hope you have managed to download the free kindle booklet-with details on the blog on how to pray, available for few more hours today. I would appreciate if you could you review it after you have had a read on amazon, can pass it on to friends as well. Keep up the great work!
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Thank you for sharing
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This is very interesting.
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Thank you
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We made paper with my mother when we were kids. She was an artist and pretty much would use any medium except acrylics. Paper mache, crayons, and she had an etching press, so we learned to make the zinc plate etchings….
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That’s nice, sounds like you had interesting childhood
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I definitely enjoyed the information provided here. I feel the need to go on a trip now 😊
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I’m glad you do 😊 thank you for your comment
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Your post makes me want to hop on a plane and visit. Just lovely!
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Just do it 😁 there is even more to see
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Such a cool process. This reminds me of growing up and making paper with my mom, but it was on a much smaller scale and not using wood. Very interesting. Thanks for sharing!
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I agree, and the product that you get at the end is cool as well 😉
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Cool. You reminded me how i did it at school times too. Interesting experience! I kept that paper for many years after and was using it as a decoration
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Yes it is something to remember. Thank you for stopping by.
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Went to Ohrid last year but unfortunately didn’t have time to visit this place, looks very intriguing, thanks for sharing!
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Some other time ☺ I hope you liked Ohrid
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I loved Macedonia, wrote some articles about the country: https://www.findworldsbeauty.com/category/locations/europe/macedonia/
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Macedonia, a great legacy! Cool process, like, we are always using paper and I love writing so this is just something I’m thankful for! It would be awesome to see first-hand and make my own paper!
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It really is. Thank you for stopping by
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This kind of places are very rare nowadays. I have to visit it when I’m there, thank you for sharing
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so true and yes you should 😀
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