cartonnage

Preferred label
cartonnage
kartonažinis popierius
Note (en)
Note
A thick cover paper made by hand in a single sheet from pulp with very long fibres, and heavily sized with gelatine. It was often formed on sheets of textile that leave a clear impression of the woven textile on one or both surfaces. Case covers made from cartonnage were used in Italy from at least the 1480s through to the mid-nineteenth century. Sheets of cartonnage were also laminated with paste to create thicker and stiffer boards for books.
Note (lt)
Note
Storas rankų darbo vientisas popieriaus lakštas viršeliams, pagamintas iš labai ilgų plaušų popieriaus masės ir gausiai įklijintas želatinos tirpalu. Toks popieriaus lakštas dažnai formuotas ant audinio, kurio tekstūra ryškiai įsispausdavo vienoje ar abiejose lakšto pusėse. Uždėtiniai viršeliai iš šio popieriaus naudoti Italijoje nuo XV a. 9 dešimtmečio iki pat XIX a. vidurio. Kartonažinio popieriaus lakštai taip pat būdavo suklijuojami formuojant storesnius ir kietesnius knygų kietviršių pagrindus.
Scope note source reference

source-reference-329

Submitted by admin on
Source
Additional Reference

Entry for 'cartonnage', p. 589 (modified)

source-reference-410

Submitted by admin on
Source

Pickwoad, Onward and Downward... (1994)

Nicholas Pickwoad (1994), “Onward and Downward: How Binders Coped with the Printing Press before 1800”, in A Millennium of the Book: Production, Design and Illustration in Manuscript and Print 900-1900, edited by Michael Harris and Robin Myers, Publishing Pathways 8, Winchester, St. Paul’s Bibliographies, pp. 61–106.

Additional Reference

p. 88

Top concept
materials
Broader concept
Narrower concept