What binding is · and why the method matters
Binding is the process of assembling multiple printed pages into a single, held unit, a booklet, a catalogue, a book, a report. The binding method determines how long the unit holds together, how flat it opens, how well it survives handling, and how it looks on the spine.
The binding decision affects everything downstream: the page count and paper weight constraints, the spine width (and therefore the cover design), the life expectancy of the finished piece, and the cost. It is a decision that must be made before the job goes to press, the pagination, imposition, and cover design all depend on it. Making a binding decision after printing is frequently expensive.
The binding method determines the page count rules (saddle stitch: multiples of 4; perfect bind: any even number), the spine width (needed for cover design), and the paper weight limits. A designer who creates a cover without knowing the spine width, or imposes pages for saddle stitch when the job should be perfect bound, creates rework. The binding decision is the first finishing decision, not the last.
Saddle stitching · the standard for booklets and short catalogues
Saddle stitching binds the folded signatures of a booklet with wire staples driven through the spine fold and clinched on the inside. The booklet is placed open on a saddle-shaped support, hence the name, and the stitching head drives the staples from the outside spine. It is the fastest, most economical binding method for booklets up to approximately 64 pages.
How it works
- All pages are printed as nested signatures, groups of 4 pages each (a single sheet folded once)
- Signatures are collated and gathered in page order, nested together
- The assembled unit is placed over the saddle and stitched with 2 or 3 wire staples through the spine fold
- The assembled booklet is then trimmed on three sides to the finished size
Page count and paper weight rules
- Page count must be a multiple of 4, every sheet folded once contributes 4 pages
- Minimum 8 pages (2 sheets nested). Maximum approximately 64 pages on 130 GSM, fewer on heavier stocks
- Maximum practical page count reduces as paper weight increases, heavy paper does not nest cleanly and causes the spine to bulge outward
- Cover paper is typically heavier (200–250 GSM) than text pages (90–150 GSM)
| Text paper weight | Max recommended pages | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 80–90 GSM | Up to 80 pages | Thin stock nests well, can push to higher page counts |
| 100–115 GSM | Up to 64 pages | Standard for most booklets and corporate brochures |
| 130–150 GSM | Up to 48 pages | Heavier stock creates spine swell, trim becomes uneven beyond this |
| 170–200 GSM | Up to 32 pages | Very heavy stock, booklet will be thick and may not lie flat |
Shingling and creep · the saddle stitch pagination challenge
When multiple sheets are nested together for saddle stitching, the outer sheets must wrap around the inner sheets. This causes the inner pages to extend slightly beyond the outer pages before trimming, a phenomenon called creep or shingling. After trimming, the inner pages have a narrower live area than the outer pages. On a thick booklet, this can be as much as 3–4mm.
- Creep compensation must be applied at imposition stage, pre-press shifts the page content slightly inward on inner signatures so that all pages have the same effective live area after trimming
- For jobs above 32 pages at 130 GSM, specify creep compensation to the pre-press operator, most imposition software can calculate and apply this automatically
- For thin booklets (up to 16 pages on 115 GSM), creep is negligible and compensation is usually not necessary
When stitching through a laminated cover, the wire staple must penetrate both the lamination film and the board. If the lamination film is thick (above 25 µm) or the board is heavy (above 300 GSM), the staple may not clinch cleanly on the inside, it bends outward rather than folding flat. Test stitching on a sample of the actual cover stock before production. For very heavy laminated covers, consider PUR binding instead of saddle stitch.
Perfect binding · the standard for catalogues, annual reports, and books
Perfect binding assembles individual pages (or folded signatures) into a text block, roughens the spine edge, applies a hot-melt EVA (ethylene vinyl acetate) adhesive, and wraps a one-piece cover around the spine. The result is a flat, printable spine and a professional square-back book appearance. Standard for annual reports, product catalogues, training manuals, and trade books.
How it works
- Pages are collated in sequence and the spine edge is milled (roughened) to improve adhesive penetration
- Hot-melt EVA adhesive is applied to the roughened spine
- A one-piece cover (printed with front, spine, and back panels) is wrapped around the text block and pressed while the adhesive is still hot
- After cooling, the book is trimmed on three sides to finished size
- The spine is flat and can carry printed text, book title, author, and publisher are typically printed on the spine
Page count and spine requirements
- Minimum spine width: 4mm for the binding to function reliably, below 4mm the cover wraps but the spine text is not legible
- Minimum practical page count: approximately 48–80 pages on 90–130 GSM (to achieve a minimum 4mm spine width)
- No maximum page count, but above 400 pages EVA binding becomes less reliable and PUR should be considered
- Page count can be any even number, no multiple-of-4 constraint
EVA adhesive limitations
- EVA hot-melt adhesive has poor adhesion to heavily coated papers, the coating acts as a release layer, allowing pages to pull out
- EVA does not open flat, the book resists opening beyond approximately 150–160°, causing pages near the spine gutter to be obscured. This is acceptable for text-heavy publications but problematic for design-led work where full-bleed images cross the spread
- EVA has poor resistance to temperature extremes, bindings can soften in hot vehicles and warehouses (above 50°C) and become brittle in cold storage (below 5°C)
- For any of these conditions, PUR binding is the appropriate alternative
PUR binding · when EVA is not enough
PUR (polyurethane reactive) adhesive is a fundamentally different chemistry from EVA hot-melt. EVA melts and re-solidifies, it is thermoplastic, meaning heat can re-soften it. PUR undergoes a chemical reaction during curing, it crosslinks with moisture in the paper to form a permanent, thermoset bond that cannot be reversed by heat. The result is a significantly stronger, more flexible binding.
PUR vs EVA · the key differences
| Property | EVA (standard perfect bind) | PUR (polyurethane reactive) |
|---|---|---|
| Bond strength | Moderate, adequate for uncoated and lightly coated stocks | High, superior on coated, UV-coated, and laminated stocks |
| Page pull-out force | 10–15 N/cm typical | 20–35 N/cm typical |
| Opening angle | ~150–160° | ~170–180°, opens nearly flat |
| Temperature resistance | Softens above 50°C | Stable to 120°C+ |
| Cold flexibility | Brittle below 5°C | Flexible to −30°C |
| Coated paper adhesion | Poor, pages can pull out | Excellent, chemical bond to coating |
| Cure time | Immediate (cooling) | 12–24 hours (moisture crosslinking) |
| Cost | Lower | 15–30% higher than EVA |
When to specify PUR instead of EVA
- Text block is printed on coated art paper (115 GSM and above), EVA adhesion to coated surfaces is unreliable
- Book will experience temperature extremes, hot vehicles, cold storage, outdoor exhibition materials
- Design requires spreads that open fully flat, photography books, coffee table books, design annuals
- Covers are UV-coated or laminated, PUR bonds reliably to these surfaces; EVA often does not
- Book will receive heavy repeated use, training manuals, reference books, menus
- Page count above 300 pages on coated stock
PUR adhesive cures by reacting with atmospheric moisture, not by cooling. Full bond strength is reached in 12–24 hours depending on ambient humidity. A PUR-bound book trimmed and packed immediately after binding has not yet reached full bond strength. Pages pulled from a freshly bound PUR book may tear paper fibres (indicating the bond is forming) but can still be pulled out with force. Always allow 12 hours minimum before packing PUR-bound books, 24 hours in air-conditioned, low-humidity environments. Never stack heavy loads on freshly PUR-bound books before the adhesive has fully cured.
Case binding · hardcover books and premium documents
Case binding produces a hardcover book, the text block is sewn, the case (hard cover) is made separately, and the two are joined with endpapers and PVA adhesive. It is the most durable binding available, with a life expectancy of decades when properly made. Used for annual reports with archival requirements, premium corporate books, reference publications, and prestige gift books.
The case binding process
- Text pages are printed and folded into 8, 16, or 32-page signatures
- Signatures are sewn together through the fold using thread, this is the structural backbone of a case-bound book. No adhesive holds the text block together, the thread does.
- The sewn text block is rounded (spine curved outward), backed (flanges formed on either side of the spine), and lined with super (a gauze fabric) and paper to reinforce the spine
- The case, two boards and a spine strip covered with cloth, leather, or printed paper, is made separately on a case-making machine
- Endpapers connect the text block to the inside of the case, and the book is cased-in under pressure
- After pressing and drying, the book can be jacketed with a printed dust jacket
| Specification | Standard range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum page count | 64 pages | Below 64pp the book is too thin to case-bind well |
| Maximum page count | No practical limit | Very thick books (above 600pp) may need split-volume treatment |
| Text paper range | 80–150 GSM | Above 150 GSM the book becomes very stiff at the hinge |
| Board material | 2mm–3mm greyboard or whiteboard | Thicker board for larger/heavier books |
| Cover material | Cloth, leatherette, printed paper | Printed paper requires lamination to protect the board covering |
| Endpaper weight | 120–140 GSM | Must be strong enough to hold the text block to the case |
| Sewing thread | Linen or cotton thread, colour to match or contrast | Thread sewn through signatures is visible at the spine fold inside, plan for this aesthetically |
Mechanical binding · spiral, Wire-O, comb, and ring binders
Mechanical binding methods use a physical mechanism, a coil, wire, comb, or ring, to hold punched pages together. All mechanical binding methods allow the book to open completely flat at 360°, which no adhesive binding can match. This makes them the preferred choice for manuals, workbooks, notebooks, calendars, and any publication where the user needs the book to lie flat while working.
Plastic coil (spiral) binding
- A continuous plastic coil is threaded through a row of round holes punched along the spine edge
- Available in many colours, the coil is a visible design element
- Opens fully flat, suitable for cooking books, exercise books, reference manuals
- Pages cannot be removed or added after binding
- Hole pitch: 4:1 (4 holes per inch) for most commercial work, 3:1 for heavier paper
- Coil diameter range: 6mm (up to 25 pages 80 GSM) to 50mm (up to 450 pages 80 GSM)
Wire-O (twin wire) binding
- A series of double wire loops threaded through a row of rectangular slots punched along the spine edge
- More refined appearance than plastic coil, used for premium presentations, notebooks, and diaries
- Available in silver, black, and limited colours
- Opens fully flat
- Pages cannot be removed after binding
- Hole pitch: 3:1 standard. Wire loop diameter: 5.6mm to 38mm
Comb binding (plastic comb)
- A rectangular comb with curved tines opened, threaded through rectangular punched holes, then closed to hold pages
- Pages can be added or removed after binding, the comb can be re-opened
- Less premium appearance than Wire-O, used for in-house documents, training materials, proposals
- Not suitable for client-facing premium publications
Ring binders
- Pages are punched with standard 2-hole or 4-hole patterns and placed in a binder with metal rings
- Pages can be added, removed, and reordered freely
- Cover is a manufactured binder, printed insert pocket or direct printed cover
- Used for: training binders, policy documents, price lists, any publication that requires regular updating
Calculating spine width · the formula and worked examples
Spine width is the thickness of the bound book, the measurement that determines how wide the spine panel on the cover must be. It must be calculated before the cover is designed and before it goes to press. Designing a cover with the wrong spine width means the spine text will appear on the front or back cover after binding.
The spine width formula for perfect binding and PUR binding
Where: paper caliper = actual measured thickness of one sheet in millimetres
If caliper is not available: use GSM ÷ 1000 × 0.92 as an estimate for standard coated art paper
(e.g. 130 GSM ÷ 1000 × 0.92 = 0.12mm per sheet, this is an approximation only)
Paper: 130 GSM gloss art
Caliper: 0.12mm per sheet
100 × 0.12mm =
Paper: 150 GSM gloss art
Caliper: 0.138mm per sheet
48 × 0.138mm =
Paper: 90 GSM uncoated
Caliper: 0.10mm per sheet
80 × 0.10mm =
The caliper formula above is an approximation. Different paper suppliers, different coating weights, and different batch variations mean the actual caliper can vary by 10–15% from the calculation. For any job where the spine text is critical, book titles, product names, brand identity, always measure a dummy made from the actual paper to be used. Take 10 sheets, measure the stack with a caliper or micrometer, divide by 10 to get the per-sheet caliper, then calculate using the formula. This takes three minutes and prevents a costly reprint.
Spine width for saddle-stitched booklets
Saddle-stitched booklets do not have a spine panel, the spine is a fold line with no width. However, the booklet's spine thickness determines whether the pages lie flat after trimming. Very thick saddle-stitched booklets (above 6–8mm total thickness) will have the inner pages extend beyond the trim slightly, this is corrected by the creep compensation described in the saddle stitch chapter above.
Spine width for case-bound books
For case-bound books, the spine calculation includes both the text block thickness and the cover boards: Spine = text block thickness + (2 × board thickness) + 2mm for the hinge gaps. The two hinge gaps (one on each side of the spine) allow the cover to open freely. A typical case-bound book with 2mm boards has approximately 4–5mm added to the text block thickness for the case width.
How to choose the right binding method
| Job type and requirement | Recommended binding | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Brochure or booklet, 8 to 48 pages, economical | Saddle stitch | Fastest, lowest cost, opens flat, no minimum spine width |
| Catalogue, annual report, 80 to 300 pages, uncoated paper | Perfect bind (EVA) | Professional appearance, printable spine, adequate for uncoated stocks |
| Catalogue or book, coated paper, photography, design work | PUR binding | Superior adhesion to coated stocks, opens flatter, essential for premium work |
| Coffee table book, photography book, design annual | PUR binding or case binding | PUR for perfect-bind format with flat opening. Case binding for hardcover with maximum life. |
| Premium corporate book, archival annual report | Case binding | Hardcover, sewn text block, indefinite life expectancy, premium appearance |
| Manual or workbook, must lie flat when open | Wire-O or plastic coil | Opens 360° flat, no adhesive binding achieves this |
| Training binder, pages added and removed regularly | Ring binder | Only binding method that allows free addition and removal of pages |
| Calendar, pages turned and torn monthly | Wire-O or plastic coil at top or side | Mechanical binding allows pages to turn and be removed without damaging remaining pages |
| Thick book on coated stock, above 300 pages | PUR binding or sewn case binding | EVA adhesion on coated stocks above 300 pages is not reliable for long-term use |