Subject: Bookbinding terminology
Sue Dunlap <sdunlap [at] acs__wooster__edu> writes >My acquisitions manager asked me what the term "otabind" means. Re: Alien Bindings The millennial bindings are appearing unnoticed, everywhere. A confusion of names adds to the surprise; "Otabind", "lay-flat", "RepKover", "sewn board", "transfer tape binding", "Lap-Back". Yet all these are "Millennial". They are distinct; neither cased binding or the uncased binding of conventional paperbacks with covers produced from the text lining stock. My impression is that the first person to use millennial binding, following the Gnostics, Nestorians and other north African desert sectarians, was Ellen McCrady. She used a paper tube wrapping around onto the page plane to attach card covers to off-prints and single sheet publications. Jeff Rigby applied the same tube to a Mexican imprint one day in the mid-seventies at the Newberry Library. I suggested a tubeless, sewn boards library binding at the LBS conference in 1987. BookLab completed the first limited edition run of the sewn boards binding for a Perishable Press publication of 1992. Mechanized millennial binding, Otabind, was developed in Finland in 1980 by Otava Publishing, but was only introduced to North America at the end of 1988. The two million dollar Otabind line is most efficient with runs over 4000. Werner Rebsamen developed a short run option with the RepKover, a pre-assembled cover with cambric tape reinforcement that converges with a cold emulsion binder and then bonds cover to the text using a normal hotmelt binder. There are now dozens of long run Otabind installations in the United States. Meanwhile Planax North America has produced a RepKover machine and cold glue perfect binder to extend the Otabind structure to the on-demand and copy shop markets. Gary Frost *** Conservation DistList Instance 10:35 Distributed: Saturday, October 5, 1996 Message Id: cdl-10-35-006 ***Received on Friday, 4 October, 1996