Difference between revisions of "Cartonnage"

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[[Equivalent URI::http://w3id.org/lob/concept/1241]]
 
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\{\{Term\|language=en\|PrefLabel=cartonnage@en\|Definition=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.\|source\=Ligatus\}\}
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\{\{Term|language=en|PrefLabel=cartonnage@en|Definition=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.|source\=Ligatus\}\}
 
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Revision as of 12:07, 10 September 2020

http://w3id.org/lob/concept/1241 \{\{Term|language=en|PrefLabel=cartonnage@en|Definition=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.|source\=Ligatus\}\}