Bindings
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Coptic
binding refers to an ancient binding from Egypt
which traditionally was done with wooden boards for covers. These days
it is modified to have covers of board with fabrics on top. The pages
are sewn linked together and then attached to the board. Its advantage
is a flexible hinge that allows pages to open completely.
Japanese
binding refers to another ancient method. Traditionally the pages
were attached to the covers by a decorative stitch at the spine, by drilling
a hole through the stack and running a stitch up and down and on the outside
edge at every opportunity. It can be modified to be bound by a simple
sweep of ribbon that is decorative as well.
Kettle
stitch refers to a binding which has a partially open spine. The pages
are sewn in a kettle link to the top and bottom of the spine pieces. Very
attractive and decorative. This is a non-adhesive binding and again, the
pages lay flat for ease of use.
Hard
spine refers to a method of binding where the pages are sewn to each
other and to the spine piece. The cover is attached afterwards. The most
traditional of these choices.
Long
stitch refers to a non-adhesive binding where the sewing runs up and
down the spine, weaving its way through the cover itself. It can be a
nice decorative element depending on the color of the cord.
Papers
Arches cover
is a hand made paper from France, where it's
been produced since 1492. A lovely archival, 100% cotton rag paper used
for album pages. Colors: buff (off-white) and black.
Lineco paper
used in Japanese bindings, because it has a flexible hinge to accommodate
the flat laying pages. Acid-free and ligning-free. Colors: white and black.
Hammermill paper
used for journals. The paper is machine made and at 75 gms it is a pleasant
weight to write and sketch on. Most journals have cream pages, unless
otherwise requested.
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