Hand Bookbinding: A Manual of Instruction

Aldren A. Watson

Pages

160

Year

1986

Difficulty

Moderate

Themes

traditional bookbinding, case binding, book repair, bookbinding tools, rebinding

Watson’s definitive manual on traditional Western bookbinding. This is the book to own if you want to understand how hardcover books are properly constructed, from preparing and sewing signatures to rounding the spine and attaching boards. Watson’s background as both a practicing bookbinder and an accomplished illustrator makes this manual uniquely effective.

Why Start Here

Watson wrote only one book on bookbinding, and he put everything he knew into it. The 270-plus illustrations are hand-drawn by Watson himself, and they communicate physical techniques with a clarity that is difficult to achieve with photographs. You can see exactly how the thread wraps around the tape, how the bone folder presses into the fold, and how the finished spine should look at each stage.

The manual covers the complete traditional binding process, including chapters on tools and materials, fundamental sewing techniques, case binding construction, and book repair. The repair chapter is particularly valuable: Watson walks you through evaluating a damaged book, disassembling it carefully, and rebuilding it with proper technique.

What to Expect

A 160-page manual available in an affordable Dover Publications paperback. You will need a more complete tool set than basic pamphlet binding requires, including a sewing frame and some kind of press. Watson includes instructions for building several tools yourself. The pace is deliberate and thorough, suitable for someone ready to move beyond introductory projects.

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