Interview Patrick Kasingsing
Photography Paul Marc Mitchell, Julian Love, Andrew Meredith, Jade Fenster and Alun Callender
Hello! Kindly introduce yourself.
Peter Bellerby, owner of Bellerby & Co Globemakers in London. We handcraft and hand-paint globes the traditional way. Each of our globes is one of a kind and made bespoke to order.
You started this business because you couldn’t find a globe you wanted to buy for your father’s 80th birthday.
If I had set out to make a business of globe-making from day one, it would have most likely never happened. I would have costed it up and made a business plan, then probably torn it all up and moved on to something else. It really started as a hobby, where I thought I would be making two at most (one for my dad and one for myself), but it got out of hand. I think I was stubborn enough to keep pushing myself. The inspiration came after a lifetime of buying my father standard gifts like books and socks and ties. When I went to buy a globe, all I found were poor quality imitations, plastic globes, or fragile and insanely expensive antiques. Everything
I saw that was close to modern was so badly made with cheap stands and incorrect cartography. It inspired me to create globes that could be up-to-date, personalized to suit any taste and preference, aesthetically beautiful, as well as functional. Our globes are made to be touched and spun.
How would you define your approach to globe-making? Are you creating it in a style unique to Bellerby, or prefer to let clients provide direction and learn new approaches in this manner?
I taught myself to make globes by trial and error, so the techniques have been developed by me. We do things totally original, and some may be how things used to be done more or less. (The old masters did not leave behind how-to manuals.) The map is of our design, as are the bases. We have many color suggestions but, once in a while, a customer requests something totally new.
What is dictated by our clientele is the personalization. Many want us to guide them, but some people come up with ideas we have never thought of. This is in the form of hand-drawn and hand-painted illustrations, or special markings on the map like travel routes. Occasionally we work with customers to design their own one-off base as well. We’ve had customers doodle with pen on paper and send us a snapshot, and we make it a reality.
What surprising insights or trivia have you uncovered when you embarked on the globemaking path?
When referencing maps that were supposed to be up-to-date, I discovered that most of the available date had the Aral Sea at its original size rather than split into several smaller seas which is the reality. I was lucky to have a pilot who flew that route take a photograph for me. He had to angle the plane in order to get the shot.
“We are proud of all our creations. They all go through a similar process, so favorites tend to be ones that posed extra challenges and came out better than expected.”
We live in a world heavily reliant on technology and demanding of speed, and yet there is a growing interest in the bespoke and handmade. What is your take on this?
I think many people are wanting to own fewer things that are of higher quality and that have a story behind them. It’s nice to own things that can be passed down to future generations.
What are the key tools and techniques that a globe-maker needs?
Hands, water, glue. Going back to the 1400s, the map was etched onto a copper plate and run through a printing press to produce the gores. Now we use modern printers. Etching in reverse onto copper plates would be taking it too far!
The techniques are all learned. You can’t come into the job with the techniques needed, so it just helps to be a creative and patient person who loves working with their hands. Even our engraver looks like something out of the 1400s in the way she works and the tools she uses. Our metal work comes from a local foundry.
Innovations? Better quality inks, better paper, better ways to seal the globe so it can be touched and spun without falling apart like many of the old ones.
How long does it take to make a globe?
Between a few weeks and a few months. That is not every minute of every day, of course. There is drying and resting time between phases. Each globe passes through at least five set of hands, meaning we work on multiple globes at once. Our largest globe, the 127-centimeter Churchill, takes at least six months to make, from the time we start cartography work to the time we can deliver.
What would you say is the most difficult stage in globe making?
Wetting a fragile piece of paper and then stretching it as much as you can without ripping, rippling or overlapping that paper incorrectly. If you try and manipulate the paper too much, it degrades and turns to mush.
What steps are taken by the studio to ensure cartographic accuracy in the creation of your globes?
We stay updated with world politics and [applicable] changes. At the scale of a globe, there are not as many changes as you’d think, and when there is something like a capital changing names, we hear about it before it even comes official. We have two, full-time cartographers working with us, and every map is bespoke anyway, so it’s very easy for us to update things.
Any memorable anecdotes from clients who’ve purchased a Bellerby? What’s the nicest thing a client has told you?
Jade (Fenster, social media manager) works with all of our customers one-on-one. She works with them over months and sometimes years (since we always have a wait list), so almost all of them say incredibly nice things once their globes arrive. They are involved from start to finish. We had a customer who bought a small globe instead of an engagement ring for his girlfriend (probably wife by now) and used it to propose.
“I think many people are wanting to own fewer things that are of higher quality and that have a story behind them. It’s nice to own things that
can be passed down to future generations.”
What would you say is the role globes play in this day and age of Google Earth, GPS and mapping apps?
I think globes are totally unrelated to Google Earth, GPS and maps. No one ever used a globe on the small scale to find their way from one neighborhood to the next. They are beautiful objects and, people, for hundreds of years, have admired them not only for their information but because they lovely to have in your home. Importantly, globes also show the world in the correct scale. A globe is an accurate portrayal of the
world and a great reminder of just how huge and fragile it is. Maps get you from A to B, but globes will inspire you to go in the first place!
What globe creation are you most proud of?
We are proud of all of them. They all go through a similar process, so favorites tend to be ones that posed extra challenges and came out better than expected. We have high expectations, so it’s exciting when something is beyond what we imagined it would be.
What globe type or material would you like to work with someday?
I recently took a trip with my senior artists to Venice, Italy, and we went to the last hand goldbeater in Europe. We watched his process, which was fascinating, and bought some gold leaf from him. We are currently experimenting with it to see how we can incorporate it into our work.
What’s next for Bellerby? Any new products or directions you’re willing to share?
We will always continue to add new base designs but also maybe branch off with a new (related) product. We are still a young company, so every day still brings surprises and challenges to keep me busy. With a team heading towards 25 people now, and me being the sole owner, I am still looking forward to catching my breath and having the headspace to think about what might be next!
More of Bellerby and Co.’s exquisite globes await at bellerbyandco.com. Follow them on Instagram @globemakers