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14 results from Collation on

Bookbindings

Bookbindings in the Folger collections
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Marks on Bindings
Collation

Marks on Bindings

Posted
Author
Caroline Duroselle-Melish

Thank you for your witty guesses to this month’s Crocodile, they are great! I also need to make a disclaimer: I am far from having collected enough evidence to answer this mystery, so like you, I only have guesses to…

Idols of the Reformation
Collation

Idols of the Reformation

Posted
Author
Rachel B. Dankert

Thank you to all who weighed in on this month’s Crocodile Mystery! Many people recognize October 31, 1517 as a major milestone in the beginning of the Protestant Reformation—the date that it is said Martin Luther nailed his 95 Theses…

Hooked on Book Furniture...
Collation

Hooked on Book Furniture...

Posted
Author
Dawn Hoffmann

… corners, clasps (and other interesting metal parts of a book)! A guest post by Dawn Hoffmann What makes these little (and some not so tiny) metal parts so intriguing? Why were they put on these books and who might…

Under Cover: Forged Bindings on Display at the Folger
Collation

Under Cover: Forged Bindings on Display at the Folger

Posted
Author
Elizabeth DeBold

Our latest exhibition, Form and Function: the Genius of the Book, provides visitors with a true visual feast. Offering a wide array of different types of bindings from the Folger collections, exhibition attendees will learn about the techniques and materials historically…

A New Acquisition: from the workshop of the Naval Binder?
Collation

A New Acquisition: from the workshop of the Naval Binder?

Posted
Author
Elizabeth DeBold

But upon the table—oh joy! the tailor gave a shout—there, where he had left plain cuttings of silk—there lay the most beautifullest coat and embroidered satin waistcoat that ever were worn by a Mayor of Gloucester. There were roses and pansies…

The Guild of Women-Binders and the "bindings of tomorrow"
Collation

The Guild of Women-Binders and the "bindings of tomorrow"

Posted
Author
Sarah Hovde

It’s not uncommon for me to encounter small presses, publishers, and binderies with which I’m unfamiliar in the course of my regular work at the Folger. However, few of them have as intriguing a story as the Guild of Women-Binders,…

An unfinished gold-tooled binding
Collation

An unfinished gold-tooled binding

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

July’s Crocodile mystery asked: why is this binding interesting? There are any number of answers, but the one I had in mind was: it’s unfinished. Last week’s picture shows the front cover of Folger call number STC 13051.3, the 1630 edition of A helpe…

Back-to-back reading
Collation

Back-to-back reading

Posted
Author
Sarah Werner

As commenters bruxer and Lydia Fletcher worked out,  January’s crocodile mystery showed a detail of the head of a dos-à-dos binding, with a covered board running down the middle separating two gauffred text blocks. The full picture makes it a bit…

Bridging past and present
Collation

Bridging past and present

Posted
Author
Sarah Werner

As I hope Collation readers know by now, the Folger is committed to openly accessible resources. Last week provided one example of the exciting results from such a scholarly pooling of knowledge. The story begins with a conference held at the…

embroidered bindings
Collation

embroidered bindings

Posted
Author
Sarah Werner

So last week’s crocodile mystery was nailed by Aaron Pratt within a half-hour of my posting: what you see below is, as he notes, an embroidered binding depicting David and Goliath and covering a Book of Psalms, in this instance,…

Folger Tooltips: Researching Bindings
Collation

Folger Tooltips: Researching Bindings

Posted
Author
Jim Kuhn

Man in the moon stamp, STC 20938 Last month Folger Librarian Stephen Enniss announced our public launch of the Folger Bindings Image Collection. Today we introduce Collation readers to the database and describe in a bit more detail some of…

Binding clasps
Collation

Binding clasps

Posted
Author
Sarah Werner

Some close observation and deductive reasoning led commenters in the right direction in solving the June crocodile mystery. Here’s image that I posted last week, with a bit more context: With that bit of the surrounding context, it’s much clearer…

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