Wire sewing

From Multilingual Bookbinding Dictionary
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English

"The method was simple. The sections of the book were wire stapled one after another on to a piece of coarse mull lining, or calico. For a cheap edition the product was good enough, but in course of time the staples rusted and became brittle. Anyone who has the job of rebinding one of these wired books, will agree that the less said about the machine the politer. This machine is said to have been first introduced about 1875, from America. ...by the end of the eighties binders were scrapping their wire machines as fast as they could manage to replace them. The wire sewing interlude had been short, and very noisy." <ref name="Leighton">Leighton, Douglas. Modern Bookbinding: A Survey and a Prospect : (the Fifth Dent Memorial Lecture). London: Dent, 1935. Print.</ref>

Synonyms

wire binding, wire stapling

Related terms

Translations

  • Danish: (translation needed)
  • Dutch: (translation needed)
  • French: (translation needed)
  • German: (translation needed)
  • Italian: (translation needed)
  • Latin: (translation needed)
  • Spanish: (translation needed)
  • Swedish: (translation needed)

References

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References

  1. a b c d e  Nielsen, Torben. Vocabularium bibliothecarii nordicum. København, Bibliotekscentralen, 1968.
  2. ^  Roberts, Don., et al. Bookbinding and the Conservation of Books : a Dictionary of Descriptive Terminology. Library of Congress : For Sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. G.P.O., 1982.