Traditional Chinese bookbinding

Traditional Chinese bookbinding, also called stitched binding (Chinese: 線裝; pinyin: xiàn zhuāng), is the method of bookbinding that the Chinese, Koreans, Japanese, and Vietnamese used before adopting the modern codex form. == History == === Bound scroll === Up until the 9th century during the mid-Tang dynasty, most Chinese books were bound scrolls made of materials such as bamboo, wood, silk, or paper.

Source: Wikipedia — Traditional Chinese bookbinding (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Traditional Chinese bookbinding

Traditional Chinese bookbinding, also called stitched binding (Chinese: 線裝; pinyin: xiàn zhuāng), is the method of bookbinding that the Chinese, Koreans, Japanese, and Vietnamese used before adopting the modern codex form. == History == === Bound scroll === Up until the 9th century during the mid-Tang dynasty, most Chinese books were bound scrolls made of materials such as bamboo, wood, silk, or paper.

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Source: Wikipedia "Traditional Chinese bookbinding" · CC BY-SA 4.0

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