Hand Bookbinding: A Manual of Instruction

Hand Bookbinding: A Manual of Instruction

by Aldren A. Watson
Hand Bookbinding: A Manual of Instruction

Hand Bookbinding: A Manual of Instruction

by Aldren A. Watson

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Overview

Before the advent of modern mass-production methods, books were bound by hand to remarkably high standards of quality. Beautiful and durable, they appealed to book lovers who appreciated not only a book's content but also the quality and craftsmanship of its binding. Unfortunately, the introduction of machine-binding methods, while making books widely available at reasonable prices, also largely curtailed the art and craft of making fine books by hand.
This expert guide offers a solution. In its pages, craftspeople can learn the traditional methods of bookbinding and produce high-quality hand-bound books themselves. Thorough, detailed instructions, with over 270 helpful illustrations by the author, cover materials, tools, and equipment (including making your own); fundamental procedures and technical methods; rebinding an old book; making a slipcase, and other essentials. Also included are well-illustrated, step-by-step directions for eight binding projects: dust jacket; blank book, single signature; folio; blank book, four signatures; manuscript binding; music binding; and two more.
Clearly written and easy to follow, this manual will be indispensable to those wishing to create high-quality handcrafted bindings themselves; it will also serve as a valuable reference for students and professionals in publishing and its allied trades.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780486132549
Publisher: Dover Publications
Publication date: 03/23/2012
Series: Dover Crafts: Book Binding & Printing
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 160
Sales rank: 628,423
File size: 54 MB
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Hand Bookbinding

A Manual of Instruction


By Aldren A. Watson

Dover Publications, Inc.

Copyright © 1986 Aldren A. Watson
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-486-13254-9



CHAPTER 1

Introduction


Paradoxically, the history of bookbinding begins many hundreds of years after the appearance of the first book, one of the earliest examples of which is an Egyptian papyrus roll composed of eighteen columns of hieratic writing, dating from the twenty-fifth century B.C. and stored in a tube "binding" (1). The roll form (from the Latin volumen, "roll of writing") continued well into the Christian era, when parchment gradually replaced papyrus as a writing material. The arrangement of the writing in parallel columns separated by vertical lines held the potential for the development of an entirely new form. Eventually the idea of cutting the roll into a number of flat panels, each holding three or four columns, inspired a binding that was more convenient to use and that would prove to be more durable.

The first bound book was made up of single sheets hinged along one edge by means of lacing or sewing. In the Latin codex or manuscript book, the columnar arrangement was continued, with typical examples from Roman times having three or four columns to the page. Down to the present day, two- and three-column pages have been in common use, particularly in reference books and textbooks in which short lines contribute to easier reading. Partly for the sake of legibility, modern trade books are predominantly single column and consequently of a smaller trim size than books of earlier times.

Early bindings exhibit all the basic construction elements that characterize modern bindings. They were made up of folded sheets collected into gatherings, or signatures, and sewn onto cords running across their backs. The pages of these books were large, probably much influenced by the size of the animal skins from which the parchment was made (2). Subsequently, wooden boards were placed on either side of the sewn signatures—but not attached to them—in positions corresponding to the front and back covers, to protect the book's pages. At some later time it was discovered that the cords to which the signatures were sewn could as easily be laced directly into the edges of the boards to form a more compact and durable unit (3). The fundamental evolution of bookbinding was completed when the whole volume was covered with a sheet of leather to conceal the cords and sewing, to reinforce the hinges, and to provide protection and permanence (4).

The development of bookbinding is both simple and complex. In the past eighteen hundred years the basic construction of the book has not changed, as an examination of a contemporary binding will show. It is still a series of signatures sewn one to the other at the folds and secured between two boards whose outer surfaces are covered. Just as the perfection of any technique cannot proceed in isolation from other factors, bookbinding has been influenced by many events having nothing directly to do with books or even literature.

The early monastic orders were the guardians of nearly all knowledge in the Middle Ages, with respect to both writing and scholarship. Thus it is not surprising that the same persons to whom these skills were entrusted also assumed the role of bookbinders. Their craftsmanship reflected a thoroughness of education available to only a privileged minority. Hence the beginnings of bookbinding are associated with the church, with ecclesiastical history and literature, and with manuscript reference books.

The large size of early manuscript writing (5) was governed by the writing tool itself and demanded a generous page size, while the considerable thickness of the handmade paper was mostly what contributed to the bulk of the bound book. Letter by letter, each word, line, and page was patiently handwritten and usually enhanced with flourished initials illuminated in brilliant colors. The bindings were of leather, their large boards inviting decoration. There are countless examples with richly tooled designs combined with settings of gems, rare stones, and heavy gold leaf (6). As a further embellishment, engraved gold clasps or latches were attached to the boards to hold them closed. Working with good materials and virtually unlimited time, the monastery binders produced work of uncompromising quality and durability. These ceremonial reference books were quite literally—then as now—original works of art, intended for the use of only a select few people. Quite apart from their content and visual beauty, perhaps their greatest value lay in the impossibility of replacing them, for many of these limited editions would have been copied from equally unique volumes borrowed with difficulty from another library at a great distance. Needing to be carefully guarded, in the monastery library these rare books were hitched by chains to the shelves or reading tables.

Bookbinding was also affected by the art of papermaking, which was introduced to Europe from China in the tenth century. Sheets of this new handmade material approximated the weight of parchment, but they could be folded, pierced, and sewn with greater ease. As the knowledge of papermaking spread, it was found that the large sheets of this new material need not always be used as a single fold, or folio size (7). Paper was pliable enough to withstand being folded several times without damage. Two folds produced the 9 x 12-inch quarto page, and three made a 6 x 9-inch octavo comprising eight leaves, or sixteen pages—a size corresponding closely to the average trim size of a modern book. This readily available material, coupled with an awakened interest in more books on a broadening range of subjects, set the stage for a new phase in the development of bookbinding—the advent of the block book, in which both the text and the illustrations for each page were cut in relief on blocks of wood, one block for each page. Scores of identical impressions could be printed from the blocks, and the blocks could be safely stored and reprinted as required. Although infinitely faster than making duplicate copies one at a time with a reed pen, the task of cutting thousands of individual letters in wood was still enormously tedious.

A development amounting to a revolution came in the fifteenth century with the perfection by Johann Gutenberg of printing from movable type. By this process of composing words from individual type letters, an entire page could be set and hundreds of impressions printed in a relatively short time. Moreover, once the edition of a page had been printed, the type could be sorted, or distributed, and used again to set another page.

Yet this astonishing invention did not immediately bring about a reduction in the trim size of books, for the early movable type letters were almost exact copies of the handwritten characters of the manuscript and block books. Printing from movable type did, however, dramatically multiply the numbers of books in circulation as well as increase the demand for bookbinders, and it transformed bookbinding from a strictly cottage trade to one of mass production. In the course of time bookbinding moved away from the monasteries into the printers' shops, and ultimately to quite separate binding establishments.

Leather persisted as the covering material, while the recently imported art of blind and gold tooling long practiced in the East gave bookbinding a fresh impetus. The cords on which the signatures were sewn, and which were covered with leather, made pleasing raised bands and set off panels on the backbone of the book. This was to become an important design feature, as the panels were filled with hand-tooled decoration built up with impressions from various small tools (8).

European royal families and others of the aristocracy inadvertently sponsored the further development of distinctive binding styles through their patronage of many skilled binders. Coats of arms, crests, and heraldic devices were made the central motifs of bindings that they commissioned for their private libraries. Curiously, these binding styles are known not by the names of the binders but by those who ordered the work. The Grolier bindings, for example, were named for Jean Grolier, Vicomte d'Aguisy, treasurer of France in 1545.

The Industrial Revolution also left its mark on the bookbinding trade. In the early 1900s, concurrent with the machine invasion of every conceivable manufacturing field, binding methods suffered severe and often degrading innovations. Where formerly the tooling of leather had been strictly a hand operation, whole panels of tooling were now machine stamped in a single, swift motion. While this might have been meant to put fine binding within the reach of everyone of modest means, the new stampings lacked the taste and artistry of handwork. Rather than evolving a new decorative style stemming from the machine's possibilities or limitations, this new technique aimed at low cost gave only the superficial impression of handwork while failing to achieve its quality. This revision of standards for the sake of economics was also reflected in the use of cheaper paper, machine-woven cloth, and shortcut binding methods. When cloth tape replaced cords in the sewing operation, an attempt was made to retain the elegant look of hand binding by attaching false bands to the backbone, in imitation of the true, full leather binding (9).

The hollow back signaled another new departure—the invention of the case binding, in which the cover boards and backbone were glued flat to a sheet of cloth or paper quite independent of the sewn signatures. All titling and decoration was stamped on the flat case, the finished case and signatures then being united and glued to one another by means of a strip of cloth mull and the endsheets (10).

By the late 1800s the book had become a permanent democratic property. Machine methods were firmly entrenched and were producing books in almost unlimited quantities at popular prices. It was now that a group of designers and printers, under the leadership of William Morris in England, and an impressive list of craftsmen, typified by T. J. Cobden-Sanderson, were engaged in a revival of sound practices through work done in the many private presses. Concerned with traditional quality bookmaking, these presses used well-designed typefaces, hand typesetting, handmade paper, hand presses, and good binding methods to produce fine books.

This movement seemed to point out that whereas all bookbinding had once been of remarkably high quality, fine binding had now become a specialized craft, isolated from the book manufacturing industry as a whole and with a very small market consisting of collectors, special libraries, and a limited number of people who appreciated not only a book's content but also the workmanship of its printing and binding.

This book is intended as a manual of instruction in the traditional methods of hand binding and as a reference for students and professionals in publishing and its allied trades.

For further study of bookbinding in general and traditional leather binding in particular, there are numerous excellent books to consult, among them Douglas Cockerell, Bookbinding and the Care of Books, London, 1953; Bernard C. Middleton, The Restoration of Leather Bindings, Chicago, 1972; and Jeff Clements, Bookbinding, London, 1963.


Aldren A. Watson North Hartland, Vermont

CHAPTER 2

Materials, Tools, and Equipment


Materials

The raw materials of bookbinding include paper, woven tape, thread, boards, paste, and fabric, all of which are available in varying grades and qualities. Since the greatest investment in good binding is time, only the best materials should be used. Many of them are rather expensive, yet the additional cost is negligible considering how little goes into any one binding. Sources for materials, tools, and equipment are listed at the end of this chapter.


Paper

Rag content paper is more flexible, more durable, and less likely to yellow than is wood pulp paper. A good quality 16- or 20-pound white wove bond, ledger, or typewriter paper is excellent for making a blank book. There are also available many domestic and imported papers in white, ivory, cream, gray, and other shades that are attractive in themselves or that can be fairly closely matched as endsheets for a book that is to be rebound or repaired. Many of these same rag papers are suitable for covering and lining cover boards, slipcases, and boxes. Covering paper should be strong but of medium weight for ease in pasting and folding. It should also be flexible, to withstand opening and closing of the cover joints, and should have good wearing qualities. When selecting papers, it is wise to make trial folds and turnovers, using scraps, as some papers crackle and break when they are sharply creased.


Tape

Woven twill tape is manufactured of cotton, linen, and polyester. Cotton is more pliable than linen and somewhat easier to paste and manipulate. Polyester has too little body and is therefore not recommended. Of the three types, linen is the heaviest, strongest, and most durable, but because it is filled with a sizing, it usually has to be pasted twice to make it pliable enough to stick down well. Three widths are adequate for almost any work—¼ inch, 3/8 inch, and ½ inch.


Thread

Sewing thread should be strong, soft, and not too fine. Hard finished thread cuts and tears the signature paper when it is drawn up tight and weakens the binding. Linen binder's thread is ideal although it is not always easy to find. A good substitute is a No. 16 or No. 25 mercerized cotton or a No. 18 button and carpet thread. The higher the number, the finer the thread. The common No. 50 used for sewing clothing is too fine for most binding work. Thread should always be waxed before sewing. The wax prevents kinking, holds a knot better, and extends the life of the thread.


Boards

Binding board should be dense and stable, to resist warping when the covering material is pasted down. As paste dries, the material shrinks, pulling one side of the board hollow. A similar contraction occurs when the endsheet is pasted to the other side of the board. Ideally, the pull of the endsheet equals that of the covering material, and the board returns to its original flat configuration.

The most satisfactory board is known as binder's board, a high-quality pulp board made without glue or laminations. In its manufacture, wet pulp webs or blankets are laid one on top of another and hydraulically pressed to remove water, mat the fibers more compactly, and reduce the thickness, or caliper, of the board by approximately one-half. This wet-process pressing provides the essential stability—resistance to distortion—and a density nearly twice that of a wooden board of the same caliper.

Chipboard, which is similar to the backing of drawing paper pads, is an acceptable substitute for small books, but it is not stiff enough for books with a trim size upward of 7 x 9 inches. A more reliable substitute is a good-quality rag content illustration board—not mounting board—that is made in single-ply, two-ply, and three-ply. These boards are much stiffer than even a fairly thick chipboard and have good resistance to warping. For the very large, heavy book, extremely tough cover boards can be made by pasting together the two layers of illustration board and pressing them overnight between blank boards and heavy weights.


Mull

The term mull describes a strip of cloth pasted over the tapes and the backs of the signatures after sewing, its function being to unite all the signatures while leaving the backbone of the book flexible. The mull should have a weave open enough to allow good paste penetration, yet enough body to stand up to repeated flexing. White linen fabric is the most durable, with white or unbleached muslin as a good second choice. Keep in mind, though, that unbleached muslin may show through as a shadow when the endsheets are pasted over it, especially if they are of very thin paper.


Paste

Hand bookbinders have long used a paste made of wheat flour and found it entirely satisfactory. It is inexpensive and probably safer than the modern adhesives whose chemical composition may create adverse reactions with the paper and other materials of bookbinding. Boiled wheat paste is simple to prepare and has been known to last for several generations.

To make a thick, smooth paste, measure 1 ½ cups of cold water into a saucepan. Measure 4 tablespoons of plain white wheat flour into a separate container. Add the flour to the cold water a little at a time, beating it in thoroughly with an eggbeater. Put the saucepan over medium heat and stir the mixture constantly while the water is brought to a boil. Stirring is essential to prevent the mixture burning to the bottom of the pan. When it reaches the boil, remove it from the heat and allow the mixture to cool.

This paste can be thinned to any desired consistency by adding water that has been boiled and cooled. While this paste will mold after several days at room temperature, refrigerating it in a screw-top jar will extend its life to about three weeks. When spots of mold appear, discard the paste and make a fresh batch.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Hand Bookbinding by Aldren A. Watson. Copyright © 1986 Aldren A. Watson. Excerpted by permission of Dover Publications, Inc..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Before the advent of modern mass-production methods, books were bound by hand to remarkably high standards of quality. Beautiful and durable, they appealed to book lovers who appreciated not only a book's content but also the quality and craftsmanship of its binding. Unfortunately, the introduction of machine-binding methods, while making books widely available at reasonable prices, also largely curtailed the art and craft of making fine books by hand.
This expert guide offers a solution. In its pages, craftspeople can learn the traditional methods of bookbinding and produce high-quality hand-bound books themselves. Thorough, detailed instructions, with over 270 helpful illustrations by the author, cover materials, tools, and equipment (including making your own); fundamental procedures and technical methods; rebinding an old book; making a slipcase, and other essentials. Also included are well-illustrated, step-by-step directions for eight binding projects: dust jacket; blank book, single signature; folio; blank book, four signatures; manuscript binding; music binding; and two more.
Clearly written and easy to follow, this manual will be indispensable to those wishing to create high-quality handcrafted bindings themselves; it will also serve as a valuable reference for students and professionals in publishing and its allied trades.

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