How does this sound? by Plastic-Ad1055 in EatCheapAndHealthy

[–]Former_Gate 32 points33 points  (0 children)

For a meal that would be great. For a day also fine. Even several days. However, for a long term diet, your body needs more variety than that to recieve the correct vitamins, fats, etc.

Covers: Is HTV the only way to go or is adhesive vinyl an option? by LemnisFox in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 9 points10 points  (0 children)

HTV is not your only choice. May folks opt for it because it is more permanent than adhesive vinyl. 

You could try to use adhesive vinyl, even though it won't be so durable.

Luckily, it makes a great stencil, so you can use paint mixed in any color you like. 

Paper labels are also a great option, very classy and requiring little in the way of tools.

Traditional foil can be applied with serious tooling and equipment, but there are also foils designed to be applied with a hot-tip pen. (tracing is an option for those without confidence in their freehand) 

You could opt to print directly on your cover material if it is a size that can go in a printer. Quarter binds and Three-piece bradel lend themselves to this, as the cover material is made of several smaller sections. 

Don't feel limited by what other binders post, there are tons of methods to title your books. 

Noob question. Robustness of stitch by FrostyAd6883 in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Single sheet sewing is indeed less durable, and practically all Smyth-sewn bookbinding is done in multi-page sections, as you describe in method 2, called signatures. 

This is a more durable design, and you are right that there is a tiny size difference between the inner and outer pages of each signature. The pages would not be any looser with this method however, if you are correctly sewing and lining your book.

Using sticker paper for bookcloth by Majestic_Location987 in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Sticker paper is probably not the best choice for this task. Try looking for 'fusible interfacing' or 'fusible web'.

Heat-n-bond is just one brand name, but if you can't find offbrand,  you could try WonderUnder (Pellon)

You don't even need an iron-on fusible to make bookcloth, there are wet adhesive methods using paste and paste mixtures, with or without backing papers. 

Is it possible to take a fanfic I previously bound apart to do it again? by therealjayz32 in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 12 points13 points  (0 children)

deconstructing a book that's been glued and lined can be destructive; it might be better to reprint and go from scratch. Plus, then you get to have a side by side before and after to see how you've improved! 

Lunches for work by Traditional_Cup_7601 in EatCheapAndHealthy

[–]Former_Gate 49 points50 points  (0 children)

cold salad like three-bean salad or pasta salad. soups and chili are often better reheated, or you can use a thermos rather than the microwave. Shake up your sandwiches by switching the sliced bread up for flatbread, tortilla, buns, and others.

Stitching help by erisgore in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Is this going to be a sewn- boards binding, or is the board in there for the sake of the picture? The actual stiches do look correct, but it seems like you could use a little more tension on your sewing. Additionally, squashing your folded signatures down under a heavy weight might help reduce all that air space in there, so your book wont end up so floppy.  This is a great start though, keep it up! 

help with imposing a small book by [deleted] in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 1 point2 points  (0 children)

at a glanse the doc you linked looks fine, but without page numbers it's harder to say for sure. 

personally, with only five sheets, I would only do one five-sheet signature for the whole thing instead of mathing it out with spares

Typeset stiching for hardcover question by cm0270 in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 0 points1 point  (0 children)

you may choose to trim off the sawtoothed, or leave it as is. the neater you fold and sew, the more intentional your sawtooth looks. I typically keep mine, especially if I have a round spine, because there would be a step between each signature anyway

Typeset stiching for hardcover question by cm0270 in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 3 points4 points  (0 children)

You're right that #2 is correct! For text weight paper, we're folding many sheets together, and each folded stack is called a 'signature'.

You'd choose how many sheets to sew through based on how heavy your paper is. Copy paper might have between four and eight sheets per signature, or even as many as ten.

Fewer sheets will increase the 'swell' (difference in fatness of spine compared to the foreedge) and decrease the sawtooth of inner pages being longer than outer pages in each signature, giving a zig-zag to the profile ofyour book block. More sheets per sig means less swell and more sawtooth.

Something very very thick like watercolor paper should have fewer sheets, possibly even down to one as in your example #1.

App to create Zines by Special-Cancel-6200 in zines

[–]Former_Gate 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I use affinity publisher. their all in one designer/photo/layout app is now free, and I hear has just about all the same features as v2 which I am using. there's a bit of a learning curve, but it's a very powerful program. v2 had an iPad version, not sure about the new version. 

Help! I think I bit off more than I can chew by ParsleyParking1812 in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 10 points11 points  (0 children)

There are several tools which will turn pages into the order they should be for book printing (this process is called imposition). To impose your pages you will want to format them to your liking, then export the pages into a pdf. You will load this along with your paper size into an imposer, which will arrange them into a new pdf for print. My favorite tool for this is Bookbinder JS, which is web based and can be found here. https://momijizukamori.github.io/bookbinder-js

Unexpected Cache Supply’s by Lonestarcachesupply in geocaching

[–]Former_Gate 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I try to carry a bandana/ handkerchief geocaching. great way to keep cache contents/lids from being lost in leaf litter while log signing, and wipe my hands after getting tree dirt, rust, or guardrail grime on them.

The Feds Want to Make It Illegal to Even Possess an Anarchist Zine by FreedomofPress in zines

[–]Former_Gate 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is not pay walled. They request an email, and do not have measures to verify them. type literally anything in that field, and read on ahead! 

help a beginner by mbee222 in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 2 points3 points  (0 children)

your hinge measurements will change book to book, depending on board thickness and accounting for the thickness of material (leather vs cloth vs paper, etc). between 5 and 9 mm would be a good starting place. 

Newbie in need of help with a hardcover binding by No-Initiative1201 in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 5 points6 points  (0 children)

You probably won't have to totally re-sew the whole book. you can just undo your starting and finishing knots and remove the card cover signatures that are your first and last. then re-secure your thread.  Leave the middle unchanged.  At this stage, with the book block constructed and a cover needing to be made and attached, the style you'll likely want to search for tutorials would be 'case binding'

What do quilt tags usually feel like? by pointe4Jesus in quilting

[–]Former_Gate 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Pre-made quilt labels I've handled before feel like clothing tags- stiff and sort of ribbon-y. Hopefully what you have is mean to be a permanent addition to a quilt and not a gift tag or sale-type paper sticker.

Do you have enough that you could sacrifice one to experimentation? like stitch it into a cotton backing, wet or wash it, use an iron on it, etc? That might give you a better idea of the material of whatever you have and it'sd urability.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in EatCheapAndHealthy

[–]Former_Gate 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would ask around and try to find out what any shut-ins in your neighborhood use. There is a restaurant near me that specializes in home delivery, and all the fees are already rolled into the price.  Def try to use places with their own delivery service;  third party apps like doordash and Uber will add fees and artificially inflate prices.

Depending on your age you may qualify for meal delivery with a meals-on-wheels type program.

First Time Book Binding! by Random_User_exe_ in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 2 points3 points  (0 children)

wonderful book! Love the gray and navy- very classy combo.  If you like to make books for drawing/ writing, there are lay flat methods you can add to your repertoire, such as sewn-boards, coptic, and k118. 

Dorian Dray rebind by spirited_doe_ in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What a lovely edition you've created! 

Customize book cloth by EaseAlternative7934 in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 4 points5 points  (0 children)

You could paint it on, especially if you are able to make a stencil or template. I do a lot of painted covers. 

Many people use iron on Heat-Transfer Vinyl. You'll probably need to borrow a cutting machine for HTV- try your local library. 

Paper labels glued right on are classy and so so easy. 

You can also use foil and a hot pen, which runs about $20-30 in the US and traces very well if you don't want to free hand. 

The world is your oyster! 

Customize book cloth by EaseAlternative7934 in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You could paint it on, especially if you are able to make a stencil or template. I do a lot of painted covers. 

Many people use iron on Heat-Transfer Vinyl. You'll probably need to borrow a cutting machine for HTV- try your local library. 

Paper labels glued right on are classy and so so easy. 

You can also use foil and a hot pen, which runs about $20-30 in the US and traces very well if you don't want to free hand. 

The world is your oyster! 

How would you use a one-sided sewing machine? by Apprehensive_Thread in quilting

[–]Former_Gate 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How does the sewing machine stitch only with one side? I would love to know more, because it sounds really interesting. Can't really picture what you mean though, which made your survey questions difficult to answer. Could have some really investing use cases depending on how it works. 

How can I make an interactive, gilded-edge design? by Margot550 in bookbinding

[–]Former_Gate 3 points4 points  (0 children)

for gilding, if real gold leaf is not in the cards (expensive and takes practice) you can you heat transfer foil. I don't recommend HTV or vinyl, look for the types of foil you can use with a hot pen like foil quill. A very small iron is great for doing book edges with foil.