For reasons unknown to me, I've adopted book restoration and bookbinding as a hobby a few years ago. It's gotten to the point that I ran out of my own books to restore, I ran out of my GF's books to restore, so I've been offering my services to anyone at the office, usually in exchange for a bottle of wine or a box of chocolates.
Extremely relaxing, can get in the zone and work for hours, every book is a different puzzle, and the results are very satisfying.
Loved the restorations. Next time I am in your city I would like to come say hello. I have a cherished textbook from my undergraduate days that is coming apart. Perhaps I could bribe you with a suitable offering :-)
Do you have any resources for getting started? A friend gave me a great engineering book from the 30s, but I haven't found someone locally who would repair the spine/binding. My next choice is to do it myself.
The apology wasn't necessary and frankly seems disingenuous. Be straightforward.
Regardless, it seems that there is a significant difference of materials and techniques for repairing a 90 year old book versus creating a brand new book. Therefore, I found that a GP comment regarding restoring books might be a good place to inquire about resources. I did actually skim through the OP link before posting my question, and I didn't find anything that specified rebinding an old book.
i had a book in german about book binding that went through the whole process from start to finish, explaining the process, the material and the tools needed. based on that i bought materials and tools and took a stack of new exercise books, with the intention to bind them into a nice leather bound book. don't remember if i completed the work, as it was decades ago. but the steps weren't to hard.
by now i expect there to be some tutorials online.
the additional challenge you have with repair is that you want to preserve as much as you can from the original. if this is a precious book i would practice on a few throwaway books first.
The piece of software I miss the most since moving from MacOS to Windows is Cheap Impostor: http://cheapimpostor.com. It lets you turn any PDF into a correctly imposed 2-up/magazine/n-signature PDF ready for printing and assembling. It does it all with total control over margins, gutters, zoom lever, with an instant preview.
It was so nice to have it during university. I would use it for printing out papers as A5 "magazines" that I would bind myself. Very satisfying.
Ages ago, I created an n-up imposition engine for bookwork. Also adjusted pages for creep and shift. And very basic printer marks.
It was just a simple UI form, not a graphical app (Illustrator, QuarkXpress, Preps). It'd output both a Preps template (for imposition) and a JDF with the fold and binding specs. Though the plan was to impose PDFs natively.
Alas, we were bought (by Creo), and my work was abandoned, then lost. Billion dollar company had no interest in a $50 utility (or InDesign plugin).
FWIW, Rohan Holt recreated the bookwork engine for his Metrix product. So my algorithmic innovation wasn't lost completely. Metrix is a professional general purpose tool, whereas mine was just for bookwork.
With the shift from litho to digital printing, on top of the decline of print work industry, I've assumed there's no commercial market.
But maybe with nostalgia, there's now makers and tinkerers who'd use a simple tool.
I once bound a book as a gift and it was such a fun experience that makes you think how incredibly boring mass produced books are. I bound mine in patterned velvet that was intended for furniture and it turned out to be a great choice as the texture and visuals fit a book - something you hold in your hands in direct light - much better than a sofa or a chair.
I have found this experience across all kinds of crafts. From making bread, yoghurt, leather work, art in the home etc. The crappy [0] stuff I’ve built with my own hands is so precious to me.
Hey, thanks for commenting here! Much like the top comment on that thread I completely ignored that post yesterday because I thought that it was “going to be yet another javascript frontend framework with yet another less than descriptive name”
So I’m glad you mentioned it :). I’ll check it out for sure as I’ve also spent some time making Sourdoughs. I generally prefer instant yeasts for their agility. You can really experiment with them since the opportunity cost is so low. I.e. if you mess up a sourdough you’ve lost like 12-24 hours of work, vs 2.5 hours.
If anyone is interested, there is a great write up on the Hobby Drama subreddit about a ruckus in the binding community, which somehow crosses over into the fanfic community. Nice guilt free drama, on a no-stakes issue.
Anyone know where I can turn a PDF into a single hardcover or softcover book with lay-flat binding? Like RepKover or O'Reilly books back in the day. Obviously it's not going to be cheap but as far as I can find, there aren't any options.
There's several options depending on how simple to
If you want it as a reference that gets thrown around, you could do a simple saddle stitch. This is commonly used for zines. But this doesn't work well if there are over 30* or so pages as it gets too thick. https://youtu.be/PncuvEajyWI
If you want it looking a little bit better with a hard cover, check out this link. It is still the same basic saddle stitch, but then adds a cover and a lot of finishing work. https://youtu.be/BfW0OiAFLkU
If it's longer than 30 or so pages, you will probably need multiple signatures. A signature is basically 30 pages stitched together and then the signatures are stitched together. There are a ton of options at this point. You could even get into the non-stitched bindings that just use glue, like a drum leaf. I recommend the videos at https://www.youtube.com/@DASBookbinding for a lot of options.
If you want something beautiful and you don't want to make it yourself, I'd recommend finding a local book artist who can make it for you. Or one online. Call you local art centers and ask around.
* The actual number is dependent on the the paper, the method, the tools available, etc. But 30 isn't a bad average.
Interesting. I don't think DIY is an option for me then. I'll have to find a service to pay to do it. I'm talking about 300 pages. I'm looking to bind computer books and technical reference information so I can read and use the computer comfortably without accelerating damage to my eyes. I guess large e-readers are another option but they're not a quick, comfortable or satisfying to flip through. Thanks!
My daily notebook is just a collection of cotton A5 pages(half of a normal sheet of paper) and a binder clip. As a section of my notes become to big I either throw it out or file it away. My goal is to take my files away notes that are important and bind them some day. Especially the journaling section.
I ordered a physical copy of the classic "Alice" DB book some months back: http://webdam.inria.fr/Alice/ ; this is increasingly very hard to find in print, and copies are very expensive. I paid good money for it. It shipped all the way from Germany, took weeks. And when it got here the whole spine was broken and it was basically almost completely unbound.
I have thought about taking it somewhere to get it repaired, but also about just trying my hand at rebinding it myself (not that I need any more hobbies).
Sort of related, any advice of how to make a board book, like for babies, and what to make it out of to minimize chemicals that could be leeched out if put in the mouth?
I can’t think of how one would replicate a board book with resources typically available at home. Not just the binding, but also the printing would be difficult if not impossible without essentially building your own four color press. I imagine that there are printers out there that can print on thick cardboard, but most people don’t have one of those either.
If I were making DIY children’s books meant to be durable I’d probably print folio on Tyvek printer paper and use some suitably durable thread to sew a booklet binding.
Tyvek is a great idea (some commercial children's books use this), but if you want the "board book" feel, then printing on paper that is glossy only on one side, then gluing to cardboard will work. Just make sure to print the page image slightly larger than the cardboard so you get full-bleed after trimming.
I have actually used this to make for myself a physical copy of a couple of non-existing books. One was a manga I had translated into English (Super Aleste). The other is a book one of my friends wrote in Word. It is easy enough if you print in a standard paper size, like A5, and do glue-only binding. If you want to use booklets and sew them it gets quite more involved.
I'll have to check this out later. Some of my older paperbacks are falling apart. I've done some coptic stitch binding in the past (journals and Alice in wonderland) and enjoyed the process very much. I would need to re-find some imposition software for Linux though to pick it back up.
There used to be a market for small press bookbinding equipment; spiral binders and glue strip perfect binders both existed and should still be around to refurbish.
Spent many hours assembling books with those. Print runs of 500 to 2000.
Does anyone else get a white empty pop-over which doesn't load anything upon opening that site for the first time? The site owner might want to test it with an ad-blocker.
Extremely relaxing, can get in the zone and work for hours, every book is a different puzzle, and the results are very satisfying.
Here's some of my work: https://photos.app.goo.gl/1oNxCfKJp4k6yjoZ9