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[PADG:1035] Re: Paperback Preferred Question
Hi Barbara & colleagues,
I agree with Shannon about the quality differences between paperbacks and
hardcovers. The UW Libraries went to paperback-preferred in 2000-01 (if I'm remembering correctly) but for one year we received some duplicate copies in both paper and hardcovers. We did a very unscientific survey comparing paper vs. hardcovers and these were the results.
Of the 123 surveyed:
Paper pH (Abbey Pen test) and the paper quality statement on the reverse of
the title page appear to be largely the same regardless of cover.
Leaf attachment:
56 (46%) both hardcover and paperback edition were adhesive binds
57 (46%) hardcover was sew-through-fold but paperback was adhesive
10 (8%) both hardcover and paperback edition were sew-through-fold
At that time, several university presses produced similar products in paper/hardcover. Oxford, Cambridge, Cornell, Indiana, NYU --
both paper/hard are adhesive binds. Duke, Ohio State, Penn State, Penn,
SUNY, UNC -- hardcovers are sewn, paper covers are adhesive. Routledge &
St. Martin's sometimes do both hard/paper in adhesive, sometimes both sewn.
Margins:
79 (64%) had margin differences between the paper and hardcover
For nearly all of these the paper edition has less margin.
Flyleaves (we tracked this with wear/tear especially to last page with date due slips in mind):
Hardcovers always have flyleaves of course.
Of the paperback editions:
58 (47%) flyleaf at back only
52 (42%) no flyleaves
3 (2%) flyleaf at front & back
10 (8%) no data at this time
If we went back and did this comparison more rigorously and included looking at damage/repair would this be of interest?
Hope this helps,
Stephanie
__________________________________
Stephanie Lamson
Asst. Preservation Librarian
University of Washington Libraries
Box 352900
Seattle, WA 98195-2900
salamson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
206.543.4890