CLASSES OF BOOKCOVERS
Bookcovers, in general, may be divided into two classes: the tooled bookcover and the printed bookcover.
The tooled bookcover is entirely hand work, the printed bookcover entirely machine work, the former being
the ancient and historical method, the latter the modern commercial method.
Tooled bookcovers are rarely used at the present day except for rare editions of historical works, or for
single books that are bound for individuals. Designs for the imitation of tooled covers to be executed by
a printing process are made in precisely the same manner as other printed designs hereinafter described, but
designs for actual tooling are usually made by the craftsman himself and executed by him on the finished leather
binding.
TOOLED BOOKCOVERS
Modern Tools and Tooling.
The tools used in modern bookbinding vary in form and design from those used
in historical binding, as shown by comparing the impressions in Fig. 19 with Figs. 1, 11, and 14, but are often
combined with the historical designs to fulfil some modern requirement.
Each tool consists of a brass form,
or stamp, in the end of a wooden handle, that is heated and pressed into the leather to form a detail of the
design. The flowing lines connecting separate details are executed
with curves similar to those shown at (d), varying in form so that the lines can be carefully followed and the design
worked out in detail.
The forwarded and finished book, complete in its leather cover, is turned over to the craftsman for tooling.
He sketches his design in pencil on thin paper, working up all the curves for the entire cover very accurately,
and when completed mounts it on the book by means of a little paste
at the corners. With his tools heated to a temperature somewhat over 200 degrees he then presses these pencil outlines
through the paper into the leather, using different tools in order to form the outlines and especially made devices,
if necessary, to carry out certain details of ornamentation.
In Fig. 20 is shown a modern tooled book back
executed with the tools shown at (b), (II), (i), and (j), in Fig. 19. It will be observed that comparatively few
tools were required to do this work. Long flowing lines can be made by a combination of gouges (d) or curved tools,
and the devices can be repeated frequently by several stamps containing such ornaments as are required.
After the design is executed, the paper is removed from the leather, and if the work is to be further ornamented with
gold leaf, further tooling will be necessary.
Where the plain design is pressed into the leather it is called blind tooling; where gilded, it is usually
referred to as tooled in gold. Where gold is to be applied to the cover, a size composed of albumen or other
fluid material is applied
over the entire design with a fine camel's hair brush, and when dry, small pieces of gold leaf are laid over
the depressions caused by the blind tooling, and with the tool reheated are forced into the depressions already
formed, to which they adhere, owing to the presence of the size. When the entire cover is gilded, the surplus gold
leaf is wiped from the surface with a piece ot oily cotton, and the leather cover tooled in gold is complete.
On the back of the book the title is impressed in a similar manner by means of brass letters set in forms with
wooden handles similar to those on the tools. Lines emphasizing the structural character of the bands along
the binding are impressed with straight-line tools. Small ornaments in the panels formed on the back by these
bands are stamped with single tools or occasionally with combinations of several tools, but the character of
a properly tooled book is entirely that of the craftsman that executes it.
In commercial work, an entire cover is occasionally stamped in gold as an imitation of tooling and the back
alone handtooled, and in some instances the entire cover, including the back, is stamped at one time,
in imitation of tooling. In such commercial work as this the cover is made and stamped before it is applied
to the book, whereas in the true handtooled work the book is bound first and the tooling executed afterwards.
While the designer for this class of work has to exercise his ingenuity to make his work entirely orig;inal and
in accordance with modern ideas, yet a thorough familiarity with historic styles of book tooling will be of the
greatest value.
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