4.1.4: 1830 - 1910 - Formats/design of the text


Format indications which, until the 1830s, were usually based on the way in which sheets of paper were folded, slowly but surely lost their original meaning during this period. As the mechanisation of the printing process and the production of machine-made paper in all sorts of formats increased, the names for the formats came to be based on the size of a book. Quarto and folio were used less and less while octavo became the most popular format in various sizes related to the nature of the work: royal octavo and imperial octavo for de luxe editions and illustrated editions, large and small median-octavo or post-octavo for academic publications, novels, collections of poetry, biographies, travelogues and for secondary school textbooks, small octavo for primary schoolbooks, travel guides and popular editions. Diversification in the types of books was aimed at the purchasing power of various groups: from simple editions intended for the less prosperous to lavish editions for the more critical and wealthier public.

A noticeable change in the form was the fact that letter/number marking of the gathering was replaced by numbering and limited to the recto side of the first leaf. Many books were printed in didonic, the most popular book type of the nineteenth century. The Gothic black letter remained in use until well into the century in the church books of the orthodox Protestants and also in chapbooks. Title pages with their sometimes lengthy titles, generally made lavish use of different types. It was the printer, perhaps in conjunction with the publisher, who decided the design of the book (the size of the type area, compressed or spaced print, type family and body size) to match the format, target group and the use of the book. One of the few known printers for their fine typographical print work was the book printer C.A. Spin & Co., who was the best, but also the most expensive, in Amsterdam. All the major nineteenth-century publishers had work printed by this firm.

The second half of the nineteenth century was characterised by an aesthetic change in design which in fact covered the whole field of arts and crafts. The production of type and paper by machines ensured an ever more uniform presentation, although new illustrative techniques ensured that more and more illustrated periodicals appeared on the market. The design of books was limited to imitation and there was no hint of a real, creative artistic élan. An inspiring example of innovation in the art of printing was the Englishman William Morris (1834-1896) who, with the products of the Kelmscott Press, which was established in 1890, brought about a revival of the lost aesthetics in the appearance of books. People such as A.J. Derkinderen, A. Diepenbrock, H.P. Berlage and B. Zweers joined forces in Vondel's Gijsbreght (1894-1901), a monument of collective struggle for changes in the art of printing books. The 1894 translation of Walter Crane's The claims of decorative art (1892) by Jan Veth (title: Kunst en samenleving) also had an enormous influence on the 'Nieuwe Kunst' (Dutch Art Nouveau) movement. A number of figures (among others G.W. Dijsselhof, C.A. Lion Cachet, Theo Nieuwenhuis) came from the world of the visual arts. They sought innovation particularly in the 'decoration' of books and bindings where floral designs and stylisation were especially predominant. In addition to these embellishers, there was a group of typographers (among whom Berend Modderman, Sjoerd Hendrik de Roos, J.W. Enschedé) who had their roots the printing trade. They focused on new types and modern make-up for printed materials. The two movements existed alongside one another, although in the early decades of the twentieth century, the decorative movement had to give way to rationalists or typographers.


author: B.P.M. Dongelmans
 
 


Formats/design of the text



materials for covering bindings

Definition: flexible material which completely or partly covers the spine and boards of a book.



cotton bindings

Definition: binding covered with cotton.



cloth bindings

Definition: binding covered with linen.



leather bindings

Definition: binding covered with leather.



vellum bindings

Definition: binding covered with vellum.



bindings

Definition: cover of a text block, consisting of two stiff, semi-stiff or flexible boards and a spine, which protects the gatherings or separate sheets of the text block.



general purpose bindings

Definition: hand-made binding executed in simple but strong material with few or no decorations, meant for frequent usage.



hand-made bindings

Definition: binding made by hand.



edition bindings

Definition: bindings which are, contrary to hand-made bindings, machine-made in a number equivalent to the print run of a new publication.



de luxe bindings

Definition: binding executed in valuable material and with special decorations.



prize bindings

Definition: book which (for instance for end-of-year promotion) donated by a grammar school to an excellent pupil; in the Netherlands it was usually bound in vellum and with the coat of arms of the relevant town in gold on the covers.



bindings sewn on thongs which are laced through the covers

Definition: vellum binding of which a part, the laced thong, of each vellum slip is woven through the joints of the binding.



tooled bindings

Definition: binding with a decoration, mainly applied by means of tools.



twin bindings

Definition: two bindings belonging together which share the same lower board; the front of the one binding borders on the spine of the other.



publisher's bindings

Definition: hand-made binding or binding produced by machines, which has not been made to order for the buyer, but which has been affixed to the book by the publisher.