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  2. A Step-By-Step Guide to Buying Your First Home - AOL

    www.aol.com/step-step-guide-buying-first...

    But breaking home buying down into tasks to check off makes it much more manageable. Keep scrolling for our step-by-step, expert-backed guide to buying a home. 1.

  3. Library binding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Library_binding

    The original category is as it says: the book was originally bound with the idea that it would be used in a library setting where the book would receive harder use than those usual trade editions sold to the public. The aftermarket library binding is the method of binding serials, and re-binding paperback or hardcover books, for use within ...

  4. Bookbinding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bookbinding

    The back page can then be turned back to its correct position, thus hiding the spine of the book. Comb binding uses a 9/16" pitch rectangular hole pattern punched near the bound edge. A curled plastic "comb" is fed through the slits to hold the sheets together. Comb binding allows a book to be disassembled and reassembled by hand without damage.

  5. Rachel Cruze’s 9-Step Guide To Buying a House in 2025 - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/rachel-cruze-9-step-guide...

    The process of buying a home does carry some stress, and it’s important to have someone levelheaded and experienced to serve as your guide and voice. ... Step 8: Pay For a Home Inspection. If ...

  6. Secret Belgian binding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secret_Belgian_binding

    This binding was invented in the mid-1980s by Anne Goy, a Belgian bookbinder. She was looking for a Western version of the traditional Japanese stab binding techniques. She wanted a book that would open flat but with the appearance of the stab sewing. Anne Goy calls this binding the "crisscross binding". [1]

  7. Inlays and onlays (bookbinding) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inlays_and_onlays...

    Leather inlays, which are similar in form to inlays in woodworking, are shaped pieces of leather the same thickness as the covering leather on a book.A piece of leather the same shape, size, and thickness as the inlay is removed from the covering leather, and the inlay is placed into the resulting space.

  8. Book cover - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_cover

    For hundreds of years, book bindings had functioned as a protective device for the expensively printed or hand-made pages, and as a decorative tribute to their cultural authority. In the 1820s great changes began to occur in how a book might be covered, with the gradual introduction of techniques for mechanical book-binding.

  9. Oversewn binding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oversewn_binding

    The book's spine may be rounded and backed to keep it from caving in, but if the text block is too thick, the spine is sometimes left flat. [2] A strip of cloth called a super is then often affixed to the spine of the text block and then to the boards of the case. Oversewing can be done by hand but is usually done with a machine in a bindery.