Volume 11, Number 2
Mar 1987
Queries
- There must by this time be a large number of binders in this
country (and abroad) who produce what Hellmut Lehmann-Haupt in 1967
called "midway-binding," or binding that was midway between
collectors' bindings and library binding (Ch. III, "Suggesting a
Remedy," in his essay, "On the Rebinding of Old Books," in
Bookbinding in America: Three Essays. New York and
London: Bowker, 1967). Lehmann-Haupt wanted an inexpensive binding,
not a facsimile or period binding, not covered with gold, using
modern materials and methods in ways appropriate to the era and
structure of the old hook: in short, he said, not imitation but
conservation. This would be the type of binding most appropriate for
what we now call "materials of long-term research value" or the less
valuable materials in a special collections department. Who does
this kind of work nowadays? A reader has inquired. The Editor will
pass on all names and addresses submitted
- The Queensland State Archives would like to know if anyone has
information regarding conditioning and specifications for time
capsules, or consolidation of charred documents. Contact Tamara
Lavrencic, Queensland State Archives, 162 Annerley Rd., Dutton Park,
Queensland 4102, Australia.