Jump to content

frame covers (Q327): Difference between revisions

From ARXIVE
Changed an Item
Added qualifier: link attempt run id (P34): link-moj86457-ah8bx2i8
Property / has broader: Item Link Placeholder / qualifier
 
link attempt run id: link-moj86457-ah8bx2i8

Revision as of 22:59, 28 April 2026

No description defined
Language Label Description Also known as
English
frame covers
No description defined

    Statements

    0 references
    A cover in which the covering material is found on the spine and the board edges only, leaving an open space in the centre of each board, which was usually covered in a coloured or decorated paper, but which was, occasionally, left uncovered. Frame covers were used from early in the eighteenth century on oversize books, where a full cover might have been thought too expensive, and may be found on relatively cheap bindings on books of plans or maps. They were used on student bindings in Oxford in the eighteenth century, with parchment as the covering material, and a variety of coloured or decorated papers used on the sides. They became fashionable in England for a brief period at the end of the eighteenth and beginning of the nineteenth centuries, when they can be found with extensive gold-tooling and expensive decorated paper on the sides.
    0 references
    bind hvis overtrekksmateriale på rygg og permkanter til sammen utgjør en ramme på permen
    0 references