It's like a bookbinder accidentally dropping a chapter from one book into the middle of another one. |
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When the library was inventoried by the bookbinder and printer John Stretch after 1751, it comprised 2,345 volumes. |
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And endpapers are the four blank pages at the beginning and end of a book, included by the bookbinder to give the book additional strength. |
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In the royal ateliers, book illustration involved the art of the scribe, calligrapher, painter and bookbinder. |
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Faraday first apprenticed as a bookbinder, and through his hard work and the help of mentors, became one of England's foremost chemists. |
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She was the daughter of the richest man in town and he was a bookbinder, very poor bookbinder. |
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A course which in an interesting way completes and expands the bookbinding techniques known to a bookbinder. |
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Yet there are aspects of today's typographic industries that would please the old bookbinder. |
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As he tramped the cobbled streets of early nineteenth-century London, clad in his elder brother's shabby overcoat, he decided to get work as a stationer and bookbinder. |
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Full-colour renderings of Canada's military badges have been inlaid by the bookbinder on the inside edges of the front and back covers. |
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Yet it is not at all clear that the obsessive, perfectionist bookbinder would have welcomed Walker's active involvement. |
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The tools for this work were all designed and hand-carved for the bookbinder especially for this Book. |
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The bookbinder profession is closely linked to libraries because libraries still require their skills and expertise. |
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He started his working life as a bookbinder, though he longed to be part of the world of science, which he learned about with all the vigour of an autodidact. |
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That is why an uncodified structure will not be restored in order to respect the techniques that the bookbinder used in his time. |
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From 1996 until 2005 she worked in Barcelona as a free-lance bookbinder running her own workshop. |
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This shows that the librarian or bookbinder was not familiar with music written in tablature. |
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Designer and creator of ex-libris and monograms, René Wiener built up an excellent reputation as a bookbinder. |
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In 1993 until 1996 she worked as a hand bookbinder with Rolf Bommer in Basel and at the Basel Paper Mill, Museum for paper, writing and printing. |
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The company was founded in 1866 as a bookbinder and entered the field of continuous printing of paper in the forties. |
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In the 19th century I might have been a bookbinder and would have gone mad from glue fumes. |
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His guardian apprenticed him to a bookbinder, but Strauss eventually followed his own bent and at 15 joined Michael Pamer's orchestra as a viola player. |
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On November 25, winners of the Governor General's Literary Awards received a specially-bound copy of their book, created by master bookbinder, Lise Dubois. |
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Yet what is one to make of the elegant 1990s memorial at Grantchester, near Cambridge, to Sydney Cockerell, a most distinguished bookbinder, and his wife? |
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Architect and designer Charles Robert Ashbee founded the Essex House Press in London, and bookbinder Thomas James Cobden-Sanderson joined printer Sir Emery Walker in establishing the Doves Press at Hammersmith. |
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First and foremost a bookbinder, he has been fulfilling the wishes of artists, bibliophiles and writers since 1983, creating beautiful presentations and boxes to preserve the works within. |
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He studied at the University of Toronto and inspired by the work of Agnes St. John, a Canadian bookbinder, he moved to Paris and pursued bookbinding with Noulhac and Domont. |
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Since 2005, the bookbindings have been created by Lise Dubois, a master bookbinder who has participated in numerous exhibitions throughout Canada and abroad. |
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In addition to the cash award, each winner will receive a specially-bound copy of the winning book, created by Montreal bookbinder Lise Dubois, at the Rideau Hall ceremony. |
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Also on hand will be craftspeople such as a potter, a bookbinder, a sheepshearer, a pit Lawyer, a spoon founder, a boot-maker, a basket maker, as well as a great number of inhabitants and strolling musicians. |
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A more recent example is the 19th century British scientist Michael Faraday, who was apprenticed to a bookbinder, read a book about science and decided that would be his career. |
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Schaubek spring back binders, produced by a bookbinder, have been very comfortable to handle for many decades. Special steel springs in the spine keep the pages securely in place. |
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At the age of 14 he became an apprentice to George Riebau, a local bookbinder and bookseller in Blandford Street. |
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Philadelphia Pepper Pot, a tripe stew, was originally a British dish but today is a classic of home cooking in Pennsylvania alongside bookbinder soup, a type of turtle soup. |
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Every fall thousands of migrating chimney swifts funnel into the chimneys at the Bookbinder and Mill Center in Hampden at dusk. |
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The Pilsner is great in the summer and if you're still thirsty, how about an Emerson's Bookbinder or Limburg's Hopsmacker? |
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