Notes on Bookbinding for Libraries

The picture opposite the title-page is a reprint of a page from the volume of plates, made in 1771, to illustrate Diderot’s EncyclopÆdia. This page is one of six, each 8×12 ins. in the original, illustrating the article in the encyclopÆdia on binding.

The picture in the upper part of the plate represents a binder’s workshop. The person at A is beating a book. The woman at B is sewing. The man at C is cutting or trimming the edges of a book. The man at D is working a press.

Of the figures below: 1 is a piece of marble on which books are beaten; 2 is a piece of marble of different shape for the same purpose; 3 is a beating hammer; 4 is a sewing table or bench, on which books are sewn; 5 and 6 are balls of thread for sewing books; 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12 are parts of a sewing bench; 13 and 14 are large and small paper folders.



Notes on
Bookbinding for Libraries

By

John Cotton Dana

Librarian Free Public Library,
Newark, N. J.

 


Revised and Enlarged Edition


 

Library Bureau, Chicago

1910


COPYRIGHTED

1910

LIBRARY BUREAU


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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