Characteristics of C19 Rebindings

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Session with Sandra, 7/20/17

Characteristics of later rebindings of EM texts:

  • date on spine bottom - later than first EM binding (could be date of original publication)
  • Marbled paper on cover - C19 at least
  • Look for match/mismatch between endpapers and textblock paper (even mismatch between acid burn of leather and endpapers)
  • library buckram - post-1900 (often in composite with earlier materials for conservation)
  • cardboard-type material beneath leather: pressboard (waste paper) would have been used until the 19th cent
  • Handle tools would be earlier (in blind)
  • Stuck-on headbands: stuck with glue, not actually woven into binding structure
    • if you can see little knots, it’s probably a good headband
  • Spine: individual handle letters on title vs a palette (all in one) - take a ruler to look at unnevenness (palette would be later and individual handle letters might still have been used to give the appearance of age)
  • Label title on spine: dating by this is tricky, but often rebindings have leather labels that don’t match the binding leather
    • date on label is not necessarily indicative of a rebind (like tooled date on spine)
  • stained leather (with acid: blotchy or wavy Rorschach-y pattern): again, later
  • Pebble-grain leather: later, machined to look like goatskin (it’s calf - you can tell because it breaks down like calf)
  • watch for raised bands on spine not matching the sewing impression (or look to see if you can see under the endsheets)
  • handwritten labels on spine: 1810s (transition between book issued in sheets and early publishers’ bindings)
  • handmade endpapers and handmade textblock paper = contemporary to each other
  • look for issues with collation at the beginning and end: they might be out of order
  • if marbling patterns inconsistent between cover and endsheets, or on the edges of the textblock, it’s been rebound
  • redrot: late C19 calfskin
    • binders complained about this: they couldn’t get any better materials
  • rubbing pattern:
    • calf is smooth and shiny, structurally like a cracker, brittle - it scars easily. If calf isn’t scarred, the book hasn’t really been used.
    • goat is structurally like an orange rind, wants to stay together
  • You can tell if decoration is tooled or stamped: if it’s exactly the same on all sides of the binding, or between books in the same edition, by measuring, it’s been stamped rather than tooled

Good examples

  • The Life of Lt. Gen. Sir John Moore (London: John Murray, 1834)
    • Example of a good-quality 1830s binding (not a publisher’s binding)
    • Goatskin: you can still see it’s patterned under the decoration (calf would just look flat)
    • probably stamped decoration because of uniformity on both sides
  • Faerie Queen/Shepherd’s Calendar (printed 1611, rebound probably 18th century)
    • Good headbands
    • Calfskin wearing pattern at spine
    • Spine characteristics described above
    • Match between endpapers and acid burn from leather
    • Acid-stained leather

Session

  • panel binding - 17th-18th cent
  • rebacking
  • deciding whether it's been resown is impt - end bands (sewn on or stuck on), endpapers, raised spine matching cords, on top and bottom it's a consistent color and not wavy (meaning it's been resown)
  • someday compile a dictionary of styles of bindings and decorations -- get some representative examples for each time period
  • mull - linen fabric - under spine of a reback
  • hollow back - 19th century, can see all the way through when opened (like a modern one)