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Bookbinding & Self Publishing

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Bookbinding Made Simple

 

Have you ever tried to make a book?  If you have it was probably with one of those dreadful comb-binding machines that tries to eat your pages and your fingers when you use it.

At last someone has invented a simple method for bookbinding that is fast, easy and looks professional.

Easy Bookbinding - Your Books, Your Way. 

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"Self-Published Author Shows How Anyone With A Computer And A Printer Can Create His/Her Own Trade Paperback Books At Home For Few Cents Each!"

Just Take The Pages, Apply The Easy Bookbinding Method And In Under A Minute...

You Have Your Own Book In Your Hands!*
(*Even if you don't know how to load paper in your printer!)

Easy Bookbinding - Click Here!

Useful Books 

Sell Your Book on Amazon: The Book Marketing COACH Reveals Top-Secret "How-to" Tips Guaranteed to Increase Sales for Print-on-Demand and Self-Publishing Writers

Avg. Customer Rating: Amazon Rating

Amazon Price: $13.45 (as of 09/06/2008)
List Price: $14.95

Usually ships in 24 hours

The Well-Fed Writer: Financial Self-Sufficiency As a Freelance Writer in Six Months or Less

Avg. Customer Rating: Amazon Rating

Amazon Price: $13.57 (as of 09/06/2008)
List Price: $19.95

Usually ships in 24 hours

The Self-Publishing Manual : How to Write, Print, and Sell Your Own Book, 15th Ed. (Self Publishing Manual)

Avg. Customer Rating: Amazon Rating

Amazon Price: (as of 09/06/2008)
List Price: $19.95

Aiming at Amazon: The NEW Business of Self Publishing, or How to Publish Books for Profit with Print on Demand by Lightning Source and Book Marketing on Amazon.com

Avg. Customer Rating: Amazon Rating

Amazon Price: $16.00 (as of 09/06/2008)
List Price: $12.50

In stock soon. Order now to get in line. First come, first served.

Plug Your Book! Online Book Marketing for Authors, Book Publicity through Social Networking

Avg. Customer Rating: Amazon Rating

Amazon Price: $17.05 (as of 09/06/2008)
List Price: $18.95

Usually ships in 24 hours

 

1001 Ways to Market Your Books, Sixth Edition (1001 Ways to Market Your Books: For Authors and Publishers)

Avg. Customer Rating: Amazon Rating

Amazon Price: (as of 09/06/2008)
List Price: $27.95

Complete Guide to Self Publishing: Everything You Need to Know to Write, Publish, Promote, and Sell Your Own Book (Self-Publishing 4th Edition)

Avg. Customer Rating: Amazon Rating

Amazon Price: $13.59 (as of 09/06/2008)
List Price: $19.99

Usually ships in 24 hours

Perfect Pages: Self Publishing with Microsoft Word, or How to Design Your Own Book for Desktop Publishing and Print on Demand (Word 97-2003 for Windows, Word 2004 for Mac)

Avg. Customer Rating: Amazon Rating

Amazon Price: $12.50 (as of 09/06/2008)
List Price: $12.50

Usually ships in 24 hours

The Well-Fed Self-Publisher: How to Turn One Book into a Full-Time Living

Avg. Customer Rating: Amazon Rating

Amazon Price: $13.57 (as of 09/06/2008)
List Price: $19.95

Usually ships in 24 hours

The Web-Savvy Writer: Book Promotion with a High-Tech Twist

Avg. Customer Rating: Amazon Rating

Amazon Price: (as of 09/06/2008)
List Price: $19.95

Book Design - Which Binding Should I Use? 

By Michael Dyer

Books are divided into two very general categories: hard cover and soft cover. Hard covers usually use a Smyth sewn binding and soft covers are typically perfect bound. There are two commonly used hard cover methods, casewrap and dust jacket. Novels usually have a dust jacket for an attractive colourful imprint on the bookstore shelf and the fabric covered cover underneath will usually use gilt lettering on the spine. Casewrap covers are full colour, glossy and don't usually come with jackets. This cover type is commonly used on text or coffee table books but lately is becoming more common on novels.

Here are the standard binding options (and there are additional variations).

Side stitched

The pages are trimmed on all sides and held together staples on the left side. This is a common binding for low circulation reports. It is inexpensive and often used by law firms and medium to large companies. This type of binding cannot be opened flat and doesn't work on books thicker than 1/2 inch. Sometimes the book will be drilled on the left side and held together with twine or other decorative stitching. This is the original method and is still used today for very small run decorative or art books.

Saddle stitched

For very small books (less than 64 pages) this is the binding of choice. For books of this size it is difficult to glue the pages together. The book is printed in a two-up format (4 pages on one sheet of paper -- 2 front and 2 back) and stitched or more commonly stapled in the centre.

Perfect bound

The most common type of binding used today. The pages are trimmed on all sides and then glued onto the cover, either hard or soft. This is an economical binding and all manner of books today use it, even some high quality coffee table books.

Notch bound

This is essentially a modified perfect binding. The paper is trimmed on only three sides. On the untrimmed inside margin several notches are cut. Sometimes twine is glued into the notches. When the cover is glued onto the pages it forms a very good bond eliminating the problem of the pages starting to fall out as can happen with regular perfect bindings.

 

Spiral Bound

If your book needs to lie flat like a recipe book, or be folded back to back to be useful then this is the binding for you. The pages are cut on all four sides with holes punched in the margin so a metal or plastic spiral holds the pages together. With this binding the thickness of the book is limited.

Comb bound

This is very similar to spiral binding except the book can not be folded back to back but can lie flat. Some of you will recognise this as a Cerlox binding. The advantage of the comb bound book is a cleaner look where the title can be printed on the spine and pages can be added at a later date (not as easy as it sounds as anyone who has tried to do this without the proper equipment can attest). This binding will also limit the thickness of the book.

Smyth sewn (rhymes with blithe)

This is the traditional binding. The book is divided into several smaller booklets which are saddle stitched together (always with thread not staples) and then glued to the cover. This method is generally reserved for hard cover books and is available in several grades. But don't confuse this type of binding with a hand sewn binding.

Hand sewn

You may be able to find someone in your area that hand binds books. Smyth sewn books are done by machine and the process is based on the system used to hand bind a book but there are distinct differences. The main difference is, of course, that hand binding is done by hand. The pages are folded in signatures the same as Smyth sewn but are hand sewn to heavy cords or ribbons. The cords and ribbons are used to attach the cover boards and using cords result in the ridges that you see on the book spine. Leather is the material of choice for the cover but there are many variations. The resulting book is costly but lovely and a pleasure to own, particularly if you are the author. You might want to have a couple of copies of your book hand bound so have your printer reserve several pre-bound book copies that you can use for special binding.

I have listed the bindings in their order of cost. The Smyth sewn binding will be on the order of five times more costly than the least expensive bindings (a hand binding can be five times more costly again). Your choice of binding should all come down to use and price. The price that you will be marketing your book will probably limit you to two or three of the binding choices. The nature of your work, how long the information will be useful and who will buy it.

 

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Reader Feedback 

Gretchen_Lee_Bourquin

You have some great references here. How you use them all depends on your goals as a writer and in publishing. Perfectbound is good for novels, memoirs, etc. Spiral/Comb is good for cookbooks, and a lot of the "old-fashioned" ways can be nice for poetry

Posted August 19, 2008

EelKat

I started self publishing in the 1970's. My book were all hand made: I sewed the signatures, mixed the glue, marbled the endpapers, embroidered the cover fabric, and in some, even hand inked the words on the pages. No comb binding for me! I used 100% 1300's bookbinding techs.

Posted February 20, 2008

Janusz

another Great 1squid Lens! :)

Posted August 11, 2007

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