Ramuz saw writing as a craft. He enjoyed handling paper, Indian ink, pencils, scissors and glue to produce manuscripts that, as he grew more adept, became aesthetic objects and collectors’ items. Sheets of paper in a variety of colors, blue, black, turquoise or violet ink, red and blue pencil, paper cut out and glued back together—Ramuz was active, a doer. His liked to knead words like matter, and working with language went hand in hand with manual know-how. For him, becoming a writer meant taming this material until he had full mastery of it, in the same way as a winegrower masters his vineyard or a craftsman his handiwork.