3.1.6: 1725 - 1830 - Bookbinding (including bookbinderies)


The bookbinding from 1725 and later did not differ from its predecessor. The techniques described for the earlier period remained in use up until 1800. The importance of the vellum binding with thongs laced through as a utilitarian binding gradually declined; it was replaced by the binding in calf tooled on the spine only. Halfway through the century, the cheap half binding appeared where the spine and the adjacent part of the boards, and sometimes also the corners, were covered with a better material (leather or vellum) and the rest with paper. The binding with a flat spine returned around 1770 where the bands were recessed into saw cuts.

The eighteenth century was the heyday of the luxury binding. The craft was practised in almost every town of any importance, especially in trading or administrative centres and in the university towns. The style of decoration differed per town but almost always followed the pattern in the frames, corners and centre, in many variations. Bindings from Amsterdam were often overly embellished; special materials were not avoided, nor were unusual combinations of techniques. Examples are painted vellum, paper onlay, a locally cut out cover making another one visible underneath and the twin binding consisting of two bindings attached to one another by a joint board. Especially prominent were the anonymous workshop called the `Double Drawer-Handle Bindery, Jacobus C. Schoots van Capelle and the (also anonymous) Van-Damme Bindery. The binding from The Hague was more refined in character and although special materials and techniques were hardly used, a number of The Hague binders or binderies such as the anonymous First Stadholder Bindery, Christiaan Micke and Thomas van Os, produced the very best pieces known from this period. Bindings from Middelburg share the characteristics of those from Amsterdam and The Hague. The most important binders were Suenonius Mandelgreen and Jan Dane. Hendrik de Haas worked in Dordrecht and his importance lies in the fact that he was the first to publish an account of his craft in Dutch.

Paper marbled in the trough, used in the seventeenth century only occasionally for end leaves, became more and more common and was eventually used even for the end leaves or board covering of cheap utilitarian bindings. For special pieces, brocade paperor block-printed paper was used where the latter gradually became more and more common.

The sharpest delineation in the history of bookbinding came around 1800 when everything changed. The technique of recessed bands replaced that of raised bands where the covering material was no longer glued directly on to the spine but to a piece of cardboard, allowing the hollow back to come loose when the book was opened. The spine remained flat or had false bands (often called fake raised bands). Around 1800, morocco was replaced by saffian, a type of leather (mostly sheep) with an artificial striped grain. From the end of the eighteenth century, tree-marbling appeared alongside the usual marbling of calf. The tendency towards refinement in details which characterises hand-made binding up to the present is an early nineteenth-century phenomenon. More than previously, decoration followed the French style. Major binders were Abraham van Rossum of Amsterdam and Willem Carbentus of The Hague, both court bookbinders and still working after 1830.

The prize binding gradually became more important and then faded from view again in the nineteenth century before disappearing altogether around 1850. In the eighteenth century thousands were made and distributed to the dozens of grammar schools in the Republic and the large production figures for extensively annotated editions of the classics were probably partly based on these sales. Initially, for the smaller formats, this binding was exclusively made of vellum with laced through thongs, but in the course of the eighteenth century a number of schools switched over to calf and more did so in the nineteenth century.

The publisher's binding remained an exception during this period, most books were given their first real binding by order of the owner. But in the eighteenth century, the printed cover, the direct predecessor of the industrially produced publisher's binding, appeared. This binding of simple paper was printed by the publisher with the title, possibly an advertisement and an ornamental frame in the same typeface as the book. The oldest known Dutch example dates from 1764.


author: Jan Storm van Leeuwen
 
 


Bookbinding (including bookbinderies)



marbled paper

Definition: decorated paper with a marbling effect produced by placing drops of colour on a liquid surface (the marbling size), using a marbling trough.



brocade paper

Definition: kind of decorated paper: hand-made paper, coloured with a brush on one side on which a (imitation) gold leaf decorative pattern or picture is printed.



laid paper

Definition: hand-made paper or (mostly) imitation hand-made paper with a fine screen of water lines.



glossy coated paper

Definition: highly-glossed paper.



hand-made paper

Definition: hand-made paper, laid or not, made with a mould, usually with watermark and deckle edges.



wood-pulp paper

Definition: paper containing ground wood-pulp with many small impurities, usually easily torn; cheap but not durable.



wood-free paper

Definition: paper that does not contain wood-pulp, but which is made from pure cellulose and/or cotton or linen rags. It has a beautiful colour and is durable.



paper boys

Definition: person who daily delivers a paper in the letterbox of readers with a subscription.



lignin-rich paper

Definition: kind of ligneous paper: lignin is an element of wood. It causes a rapid ageing of paper whose fibrous composition consists partly of lignin.



Lombardy paper

Definition: name for imported paper of Italian origin, common until the end of the 17th century.



rag paper

Definition: kinds of paper that have been made entirely of rags. As soon as rags are only partly used in a kind of paper, then this is rag-content paper.



machine-made paper

Definition: paper made using a paper machine



marbled paper

Definition: kind of paper used inter alia for bindings: paper on which - by a special process - a decorative pattern, which sometimes resembles marble, is created by applying a thin layer of paint of two or more colours, or paper printed with an imitation resemblingit.



bulky paper

Definition: paper which combines great thickness with a relatively light weight (used by publishers to make small books look more voluminous).



acid-free paper

Definition: paper with a neutral pH value (about pH 7), mainly used in conservation and restoration.



paper

Definition: general term for a material produced in the form of reels or sheets, formed by draining a suspension of vegetable fibres (rags, straw, wood, etc.) on a sieve and usually used, after sizing, for writing, drawing or printing; the name 'paper' is used for aweight of up to about 165 g/m2, 'cardboard' or 'board' for a higher weight.



permanent paper

Definition: alkaline paper which satisfies international standards as regards composition and physical properties, so that a durability of at least 150 years is guaranteed.



Troy paper

Definition: name for imported paper of French origin, used until the end of the 17th century.



paper finishers

Definition: workmen in a printing office who hang the damp paper up to dry on a line after it has been printed.



paper conservation

Definition: the restoring, stopping or preventing paper decay caused by acidification and wear and tear.



paper mills

Definition: industrial concern in which paper is produced on a large scale.



paper manufacturers

Definition: 1. owner, employer of a papermill. 2. producer of hand-made paper.



paper formats

Definition: dimensions of a sheet of paper.



paper wholesale businesses

Definition: company that resells large quantities of paper, supplied by producers, to printing offices and other businesses.



paper trade

Definition: economic activity of trading paper, i.e. the buying and selling of paper, as intermediary between production and consumption.



paper traders

Definition: someone whose profession is trading paper.



paper industry

Definition: collective name for all branches of industry concerned with the production of paper.



paper machines

Definition: machine with which paper is formed, pressed, dried and smoothed, from cellulose fibres and other paper ingredients. The result is turned into rolls or cut into sheets.



paper mills

Definition: water mills or windmills where the production of handmade rag paper took place. The drive mechanism of the mill was used to move the beaters loosening the rag fibres.



paper research

Definition: 1. testing paper to judge its appropriateness for a certain use. 2. analysis of paper to determine age or origin.



paper production

Definition: 1. the total of paper produced. 2. paper making.



kinds of paper

Definition: collective name for variants in paper, originating in the use of different raw materials, sizes and production methods.



paper splitting

Definition: in book restoration: the splitting of paper into two layers which are pasted together again after a support layer has been placed in between.



paper treaters

Definition: labourers in a printing office who wet the paper before printing, so that the ink is absorbed better.



decorated paper

Definition: collective name for all sorts of decorated paper whose decoration has come into being either during the manufacturing process or by graphic or other final processing of the sheet of paper.



woodblock paper

Definition: kind of decorated paper printed by means of wooden blocks, which are frequentlyderived from cotton print-works, with a decorative pattern in one or more colours; used especially in the 18th and 19th centuries for covers, endpapers and as pasting materialfor the boards of books.



wove paper

Definition: non-laid hand-made paper, sometimes with a watermark in the bottom edge of the paper