three-quarter binding
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A style of bookbinding where the material covering the spine extends onto the covers for approximately one-quarter to one-third of their width, with the remaining area of the covers made from a different material.
Usage
This term is used specifically in the context of bookbinding, publishing, and book collecting to describe a particular construction and aesthetic of a book's cover. - The rare first edition featured a distinctive three-quarter binding in leather and cloth. - For my thesis, I had several copies bound in three-quarter binding with a leather spine.
Advanced Usage
- Descriptive Use: The term is often used descriptively in auction catalogs, library records, and bibliographic descriptions to specify a book's physical format.
- The catalog entry noted the volume's three-quarter binding of morocco over marbled boards.
Variants and Related Words
- Half binding: A similar but distinct style where the spine material extends less onto the covers than in a three-quarter binding.
- Full binding: A style where the entire cover is made from the same material.
- Quarter binding: A style where the spine material extends only slightly onto the covers.
Synonyms
- Three-quarter leather (when the spine material is leather)
- Three-quarter morocco (when the spine material is morocco leather)
Related Terms
- Spine: The part of a book's cover that encloses the bound edge of the pages.
- Boards: The stiff front and back covers of a book.
- Bookbinding: The process of physically assembling a book from a stack of paper sheets.
Noun
- the spine and much of the sides are a different material from the rest of the cover