Showing posts with label Pappband. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pappband. Show all posts
Sunday, August 16, 2015
Book #228
Another variant of the German Paper Binding today. This one has a leather spine, which was attached separately from the boards. It also has hooked endsheets and a hollow spine (no tube!) Attaching the spine and boards separately like this gives the book quite a different appearance, compared to my previous variants. Using leather also gives it a more refined look that I like. Thank you to Peter Verheyen for all the information he has shared about these bindings.
Saturday, August 15, 2015
Book #227
Another German Paper Binding variant today, and this time the difference is something I can show in the photo. Today's book was made with a hollow spine - which you can see in the top photograph. (I used a tube to make the hollow -- but upon further investigation, the tube is not typical on this kind of binding.) Otherwise, most of the structural elements are the same as previous versions. I like this refinement; this might be my favorite.
Friday, August 14, 2015
Book #226
Yes, I realize that my books have been a tad redundant this week; but, each one differs in construction to some extent. Today's version of the German Paper Binding is made with unsupported link stitch sewing and tipped in endsheets. Still the same cloth spine, paper-covered boards (using my own marbling), and trimmed flush at head and tail.
Thursday, August 13, 2015
Book #225
I made another of these German Paper Bindings, with some variations. This one is sewn on tapes with an abbreviated stitching pattern, otherwise the construction is nearly the same as the two previous books. And this one has some of my paste paper, rather than marbled paper.
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
Book #224
Today's German Paper Binding is very similar to the one I made yesterday, but the sewing is done differently. Today's book is sewn with an unsupported link stitch. Everything else is the same.
Tuesday, August 11, 2015
Book #223
The book I made for today is another German Paper Binding, made with a simple unsupported sewing which Peter Verheyen calls geholländert. A single-folio endsheet is hooked around the first and last signatures, cloth spine, and paper-covered boards (using some more of my own marbled paper), head and tail are flush.
Monday, August 10, 2015
Book #222
Today's book is another German Paper Binding. This one is an adhesive bound structure with a cloth spine and paper-covered boards, trimmed flush at the head and tail. I was reading about this on Peter Verheyen's blog and he wrote that it works well as a binding method for documents printed on stacks of loose sheets, so that is what I did here. And he is right, it did work very well.
Sunday, August 09, 2015
Book #221
For today, I made an example of a German paper binding, of which there are several variants. This particular example is the German Stiffened Paper Binding, sewn on tapes, with covers made of thin board covered in a paper wrapper, then trimmed at the head and tail (although I do not have access to a guillotine, so they were shorn by hand as well as I could manage). The cover wrapper is some of my own marbled paper.
The photo below is the book that I originally made for today's post. I was not entirely happy with it, though, especially after I made all the other variations of the Pappband. So I made a new one (the green book, above) using all the same techniques and I think it turned out much better.
The photo below is the book that I originally made for today's post. I was not entirely happy with it, though, especially after I made all the other variations of the Pappband. So I made a new one (the green book, above) using all the same techniques and I think it turned out much better.
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