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1.1.1: 1460 - 1585 - IntroductionBy the fifteenth century, when printing began, European books had been codices for over a thousand years. It is the form we still use. In codex format, texts could be consulted and compared faster and more efficiently than is possible with rolls which until then had been the most common text-bearing medium. A codex may have large or small dimensions, depending on the number of times the sheets of which it consists are folded. Also, the size of whole sheets is variable, for the animal from which a parchment sheet originates may be a calf, a lamb or a rabbit, while paper was manufactured in different standard sizes. A book's size is an indication of its intended use. A large codex was to be placed on an altar or lectern, a small book was made to be held in the hand, or to be carried among personal belongings. Books of hours, devotional works and schoolbooks were usually produced in pocket formats, whereas liturgical works and the great standard works of theology and law were published in massive folio editions. It is striking that many reformational bible translations were published in a small octavo format. The binding often betrays what lifespan was expected for a book. A blind-stamped leather binding on wooden boards was in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries a long-term investment in a valued book. A schoolbook or some other work for practical use of the moment might be given a limp vellum wrapper. In the course of the sixteenth century, wooden boards gave way to paste-boards made of layers of paper. The printing type indicates more than any other element for what kind of readership the book was intended. The style of printing type is closely linked to the language of the publication. For texts in Dutch, a light textura style was adapted, originally closely related to the script of the Brethren of the Common Life (Fraterschrift), but used well into the seventeenth century as a 'black letter'. When out of necessity such type founts were used for texts in Latin, the result did not satisfy the contemporary readers or printers. When setting up their first firm in the Flemish town of Alost, In the course of the sixteenth century this variety of styles and sizes of type began to be exploited for the 'articulation' of texts, to differentiate function and emphasis. A title page could have the appearance of a type specimen displaying the printer's stock of typographical materials. In the early years of printing, rubricators or illuminators applied the decoration of printed books by hand. They painted or drew initials of different size and colour, added paragraph marks in red and blue, underlinings, chapter titles in red; borders and miniatures could conform to traditional styles of that particular city or area. Decoration and illumination served to indicate the structure of the text and to guide the reader through the book. This part of the completion of the book was often (but not invariably) left to the buyer. By the year 1480, typographical materials such as printed initials, woodcut borders and illustrations of the text began to take the place of illumination and decoration, with the same function as the hand-painted decoration, but changing the visual aspect of the books. author: L. Hellinga |
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