Subject: Library binding styles
>From: "Sara Williams" <WILLIAMS_S [at] CUBLDR__Colorado__EDU> >I have just taken over responsibility for commercial binding here, and >would like some input concerning binding with the so-called "flex hinge" >endpapers, wide joint, and flat back. I attended a presentation at the >last ALA Midwinter meeting, where the reps from ICI described this as a >great innovation. As far as I could tell, the problems this kind of >binding was designed to correct only occur with oversewn volumes -- and >one of the things I intend to do here is reduce oversewing to a minimum. Since I have not actually seen one of these bindings what I have to say is mere speculation with all its attendant pitfalls (including the fact that I may be way out in left field). I looked up the "Flex Hinge" endsheet in my handy Library Binding Service Catalog. This particular endsheet is for oversewn books and is designed more to solve a production problem for the binder rather than offer any particular advantage to the final product. In earlier versions of oversewn books after the endsheets are sewn on, the outer part of the endsheet is folded back over the sewing (which extends approximately 1/4" into the gutter margin) and glued down to hide the sewing. The endsheet is then folded forward again such that its hinge aligns with the spine of the book. Such a design allows the book's cover to open all the way to the edge of the spine as is the case with standard sewn-through-the-fold case bound books. Furthermore, this arrangement allows the cover's joint to be sized independent of the oversewing within. The advantage of this labor intensive method is primarily aesthetic - it produces a cover that looks (small joints) and works in a manner that people expect. Other than this it offers little advantage. The remainder of the book is still oversewn and still requires brute force to use. The "flex hinge" endsheet eliminates this process of twice folding the endsheet to hide the sewing. If I have figured this out correctly, the cover of a flex hinge book opens to the edge of the sewing (approximately 1/4" from the spine) rather than clear to the spine. This requires that the cover's joints be wider as the cover's boards must stop slightly short of the sewing. Should the boards cover the sewing in order to create the traditional narrow joint, the book will not open at all. Such a binding requires less labor to produce. The advantage to the user is that the book is probably slightly less likely to loosen at the hinges. Functionally, the book within should be no different to use (still a pain in the neck) than earlier oversewn books. Aesthetically, we have a book that looks a little odd because we're used to seeing different proportions in a bound book. The square back as opposed to the rounded back is another case where I believe tradition has outlived function. In a traditional sewn-through-the- fold book the rounding of the spine accommodates the extra thickness the sewing thread adds to the spine. Rounding of the spine was particularly necessary in earlier years when sewing threads tended to be thicker than those used in machine production today. I don't believe early binders concerned themselves with the issue of square vs. round spines as when they were finished sewing a book the spine had a tendency to round whether they liked it or not. Any attempt to eliminate this rounded spine to create a square back would have been the equivalent of forcing a square peg into a round hole. Further rounding of the spine merely conformed the book to its natural tendencies. In addition to rounding, the traditional book is also "backed" a process which turns the edges of the spine and creates the grooved joint between the spine and the boards on the book's cover. Certainly, with a traditionally sewn book the question of whether the spine should be round or square is similar to asking if two plus two should equal three. With newer techniques (oversewing and adhesive bindings) the round back is less a natural structural occurrence and more a forced style. When a book is traditionally encased with a "square" on the bottom edge which leaves the book hanging in its cover, the structural advantage of a rounded and backed spine with these newer leaf attachment techniques is dubious. Any possible advantage disappears completely when the book is bound without a square on the bottom edge such that the textblock rests securely on the shelf without hanging from its cover. Much of the argument for whether rounding and backing a modern book makes a better book relates to how the textblock nestles into the cover at the joint area. Once the joint area exceeds a certain width (which it probably does in the flex hinge bindings) the potential positive effects of this nestling are negated. In other words rounding and backing a oversewn, flex hinge binding (as I envision it) would be a waste of time. In summary, the "great innovation" in the flex hinge oversewn binding (once again as I see it in my mind's eye) would be labor savings and an increased profit margin to the binder who has eliminated several steps in preparation of the endsheets as well as the rounding and backing process. The resultant book will probably function just as well (or just as poorly) as its oversewn predecessors and may be slightly less inclined to pull from its covers. The major problem still remains that it is an oversewn book, a technique which I believe should be and can be severely limited or eliminated as a binding option. >Now my own commercial binder is trying to sell me this binding as a >great innovation and improvement for all bound volumes, regardless of >the kind of leaf attachment used. "Flex Hinge" is a registered trade mark for a type of endsheet designed for oversewn books and would have little utility on books with other types of leaf attachment. I am curious whether your binder specifies the "flex hinge" for non-oversewn books or if the great innovation is just the square backed, wide hinged style. Pete Jermann | St. Bonaventure University Preservation Officer | St. Bonaventure, NY 14778 Friedsam Memorial Library | (716) 375-2324 *** Conservation DistList Instance 5:55 Distributed: Friday, May 8, 1992 Message Id: cdl-5-55-003 ***Received on Monday, 4 May, 1992