Paul N. Hasluck — Bookbinding, 1903

Page 1

Bookbinding With numerous engravings and diagrams by Paul N. Hasluck 1903

BOOKBINDING is a term that is popularly applied to any process for making a book by fastening together printed or unprinted sheets of paper, and providing them in this compact form with a suitable covering. The term, used in this sense, covers such widely different productions as a cheap cloth or paper-covered novel and a costly volume bound in leather. These two books are representative products of the two great divisions of the bookbinding industry as carried on at the present day. Each division may, indeed, almost be called a distinct industry; for, though the means employed and the results obtained in both cases bear on the surface a certain resemblance to each other, the manner in which the work is carried out, and the result aimed at, are in both cases fundamentally different. A bound book is, technically, a book bound in leather. It is more solid in appearance, is better sewn, the leaves lie more compactly together, and the book opens more readily than a clothboarded book. Even a person without any technical knowledge is struck with the difference between a leather-bound volume and a cloth-boarded book. While the former will last for years and resist hard usage, the latter serves a temporary purpose only, and rough usage soon reduces it to a collection of loose leaves, scarcely held together by a few tangled threads. Belonging also to the division of bound books are half-bound books, of which the back may be of leather, or of cloth or other material used in place of leather, and the sides of cloth or paper. Other minor but not unimportant differences that distinguish bound books from cloth-boarded books will be explained in due course. The tools used in bookbinding first will be described. A cloth-boarded book can be produced with the same tools (though less in number) that are employed for a leather-bound volume, but the latter cannot be produced with the appliances used for the former.

Before beginning the study of this subject, the amateur is advised to obtain two old leather-bound books. Take one of these books to pieces carefully, bit by bit; and whilst doing so note every contrivance used for holding the book together, and frequently compare the partially dissected book with the other volume, which should be kept intact. The value of this object lesson will be realized when making the first attempt at binding a book.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Paul N. Hasluck — Bookbinding, 1903 by iBookBinding - Issuu