C19 Bookbinding Session

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From the UW binding collection

4.27.17

  • c18 paper wrappers - 1734 French Recuil de Pouesies Prouvencalos (Berte, 1734)
    • glued to spine
    • cover is short - too small for text block
    • quires sown so as to be easily removed - utilitarian
    • these especially common in France
  • Appel au Tribunal de l'Opinion Publique, Mounier (1790, Geneva)
    • trimmed deckle edges: decided to be "final" binding
    • des bib useful for understanding how it came off the press
    • color of paper from rag content - not dyed (bluish grey, lighter grey)
  • Marbling
    • marbling tray
    • allum makes color stick
    • version of watercolor, which is floated on size: you have 2-3 min to be able to manipulate color
    • size: caraginan moss infused water - sticky
    • lay paper on size without air bubbles
    • wash off: allum makes color stick
    • editions difficult
    • Richard Wolf - marbling
  • Paste paper: Herodian, Herodians lebens-leshchreibung de romischen kaiser (1784)
    • waste paper pressed and dried
    • colored with whatever you have around
    • decorative paper any bookbinder could do
    • Mostly German
  • Transitions: spine labeling on paper bindings
    • Blank -> handwritten (all unique) -> printed: a way to date binding
  • Recuil historique sur des Etats Gener - Paste paper with leather spine (1787)
    • handle lettering: one off usually (vs. edition)
    • very hard to do gilt tooling well: have to do in blind first
    • Paul Bonet - bookbinder - whoever did his gilt tooling was the best
  • 1820s British printed paper bindings
    • glue starting to come in as a way of holding gatherings together
      • gutta-percha
  • Watman - wove paper (to "improve" on chainlines)
  • printed label on paper-on-board binding
  • printed cloth on press board
    • Harper's Family Library - good for collecting (inexpensive)
    • spotting on paper = foxing
    • leather spines are a clue that it's in its final, intended binding
  • Next: bookcloth

5.3.17

  • Period vs. rebound
    • American C18: calf, medium-brown, cracked at spine is the identification key (Freneau's Poems)
    • Example of acid in leather leeching out into pastedowns, title page, endsheets
      • if there's a mismatch in acid on paper, can tell if the binding is not original (1802 The Coquette)
    • Poor paper quality in C18 paper
    • Tree-calf - painted or acid-etched
  • Rebound
    • grained: calf trying to look like goat-skin (little pebbles)
      • rolled through a machine to give it the textured look, like a pasta-maker
      • goatskin doesn't flake off, you can tell when the calf starts flaking away at the spine the way calf breaks down
    • fad for making binders look fancy - calf looks nice but is more brittle
    • stuck on headbands (early) - printed cloth
  • Goat-grained bookcloth (after 1820-30) (Yale Commencement Poem, Joel Barlow)
    • When the nubbins wear off on top of the grain it looks different than leather
  • Printed paper (turn of C19)
  • Dutch gilt (guild?) paper binding
    • used in children's books frequently
  • 1820s calf with tooled in gilt pasted-down decorative spine - Selections of a Father for the Use of his Children
    • earliest children's book by a Jewish person
    • marbling: if the paper is shiny it's from the 1880s-90s ("calendaring"), this one is more likely to be 1820s
  • Paper bound tract (Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge) (1823)
  • trimming textblock - the more you take off, the more you can sell back to the papermaker