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Introducing our charity partner for 2010
D-Day Event
13-17th Sept 2010
Support the Children's Hospice by donating unwanted items
- rags or riches!
Click for full details.
Don't delay ...
Donate today!
Leave your items at GPS' reception.
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Binding
Choose from saddle stitching, perfect binding, thread sewing, wire-o binding or loop stitching. We have the capacity and capability to finish a vast range of shape and size variations. |
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Saddle Stitching
Most booklets, magazines, catalogues and many other printed documents are bound using saddle stitching.
Wire staples hold the pages together. A machine drives them through its backbone fold to the centrefold, where they clench. A saddle-stitched printed piece lies almost flat when opened, a convenience for readers.
However, saddle stitching involves certain mechanical requirements. A saddle-stitched document must be at least eight pages long and increase in length in four-page increments. Saddle stitching is a good choice for binding documents of up to 64-80 pages. Documents involving more pages or heavy material may demand some other type of binding.
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Perfect Binding
Perfect binding is well suited for use with books, thick magazines, annual reports, technical manuals, and catalogues. From a minimum thickness of approximately 3mm, it works well with a wide range of document thickness and trim sizes.
To produce a perfect-bound document, the folded signatures are gathered together in page sequence, clamped together, and placed in a machine that slices about 3mm off their left edges. Then roughers mill the newly sliced sheet edges to prepare them for gluing. Finally, the edges receive an adhesive application and adhere to a backing.
Although text pages printed on 170gsm material can be perfect bound, we do not recommend using material heavier than 150gsm as the document is liable to fall apart.
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Loop Stitching
A method of saddle stitching whereby the stitch is formed into a semi-circular loop that sticks out beyond the spine of the publication. These loops slip over the rings of a binder, serving as an alternative to hole punching.
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Wire-o Binding
Typically used to bind reference books, reports, proposals, and calendars. They are durable, but do not permit printing on the document spine or the insertion of new pages.
A Wire-O binding holds the covers and pages of a document firmly in place by a double-loop wire inserted through holes drilled in their left edges.
All of the document's pages lie flat when opened, can turn easily through 360 degrees.
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