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The magazine was published in 8 x 11 format saddle stitched 48 pages over most of its life.
It was Elvis Presley time, you know, with the saddle stitch and all of that.
The company's signature saddle stitching, developed in the 1800s, is another distinctive feature.
Premiere, on the other hand, is reducing its size its saddle stitch binding has proven too weak to hold more pages.
Additional operations may be in line with a gravure press, such as saddle stitching facilities for magazine or brochure work.
The official story is that each Birkin takes 18 hours to saddle stitch together, and that only 250 craftsmen know how to make the bags.
The zine was printed on newsprint and most issues were 116 pages long, with a colour cover, and saddle stitch binding.
Unlike a typical paper book that is bound with saddle stitching (staples) or perfect binding, a board book's pages are specially folded and bound together.
Most high-end photocopiers and digital production printers on the market have optional attached saddle stitch units that fold and staple booklets automatically.
Era finished her first bag - a soft, cordovan-colored sack finished with a thick saddle stitch that is somehow both exacting and free - and then two more.
Booklet brochures are made of multiple sheets most often saddle stitched (stapled on the creased edge) or "perfect bound" like a paperback book, and result in eight panels or more.
Chapbook is also a term currently used to denote publications of up to about 40 pages, usually poetry bound with some form of saddle stitch, though many are perfect bound, folded, or wrapped.
Saddle stitch staplers or simply saddle staplers are bookbinding tools designed to insert staples into the spine (saddle) of folded printed matter such as booklets, catalogues, brochures, and manuals.
Saddle stitch staplers, also known as "booklet staplers," feature a longer reach from the pivot point than general-purpose staplers and are used to bind pages into a booklet or "signature".
The LIME Magazine itself is a 64 page saddle stitched magazine published bi-monthly featuring stories submitted by parents and carers of children with special needs themselves and also by specialists in their field.
At a dance the Bullets throw, Dufner is "really dressed to cha-cha-cha: lime-green pegged pants with saddle stitching; a one-button, single breasted, pale blue cardigan jacket; a bright yellow shirt . . . a pair of blue suede shoes."