US235466A - David m - Google Patents

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US235466A
US235466A US235466DA US235466A US 235466 A US235466 A US 235466A US 235466D A US235466D A US 235466DA US 235466 A US235466 A US 235466A
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thread
threads
strip
sheet
book
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    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B42BOOKBINDING; ALBUMS; FILES; SPECIAL PRINTED MATTER
    • B42BPERMANENTLY ATTACHING TOGETHER SHEETS, QUIRES OR SIGNATURES OR PERMANENTLY ATTACHING OBJECTS THERETO
    • B42B2/00Permanently attaching together sheets, quires or signatures by stitching with filamentary material, e.g. textile threads
    • B42B2/02Machines for stitching with thread

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  • the object of this invention is to introduce at the back of the book a strip of parchment, leather, tape, or similar material, and to secure the same by an interlaced thread applied in connection with the double threads that are v introduced into the sheets by book-sewing machinery, such as that shown in Letters Patent No. 220,312, granted to me October 7, 1879.
  • Figure l is a perspective viewillustrating the manner inwhich the sewing is performed
  • Fig. 2 is an enlarged view of the threads as laid together in the folds of the sheets and over the parchment or leather strip.
  • the sheets, a, of paper are grooved or channeled across the back at suitable distances apart, and wherever there are to be strips of parchment the distance between the channels corresponds to the width of the strip. There may be any desired number of these strips of parchment.
  • the curved needles b carry the threads down into the fold of the sheet by passing into the channels 0 c, and they emerge at the channels 01 d, and the loops of thread are caught and passed over a needle, as shown in said patent, and afterward threads or cords e are drawn by said needle into the grooves or channels d, and passed through such loops of thread.
  • Fig. 2 where the thread g is shown as laid between the thread It and the book. This is done by holding the thread 9 to the right while the needle descends and takes the stitch 1, and then holding the thread to the left while the stitch 2 is taken, so that the needle, as it descends and takes another stitch, passes elearot' said thread g, and so on, the thread 9 being thus passed between the paperQand the thread h, and under and over the respective stitches of the same.
  • the strip of parchment, leather, or other material I is laid across the back of the book, and the thread a is passed first to the right and then to the left, so that the said threads are'interlocked, as indicated in Fig. 2, the loop of thread a passing around the threads h as they are led from one sheet or signature to the second, and the thread it passes across the strip Z, firmly inclosing the same.

Description

(no uoaeux Y D. M.'SMY-TH. Book Sewing.
Patented Dec. 14,1880.
; UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE.
DAVID M. SMYTH, OF HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT, ASSIGNOR TO THE SMYTH MANUFACTURING COMPANY, OF SAME PLACE.
BOOK-SEWI NG.
SPECIFICATION formingpart of Letters Patent No. 235,466, dated December 14, 1880. Application filed March 15, 1880. (No model.)
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, DAVID M. SMYTH, of Hartford, in the count y of Hartford and State of Connecticut, have invented an Improvement in Book-Sewing, of which the following "is a specification.
The object of this invention is to introduce at the back of the book a strip of parchment, leather, tape, or similar material, and to secure the same by an interlaced thread applied in connection with the double threads that are v introduced into the sheets by book-sewing machinery, such as that shown in Letters Patent No. 220,312, granted to me October 7, 1879.
I remark that I do not herein lay claim to any particular machinery for sewing the book. My aforesaid patent illustrates the mechanism that may be employed for carrying the thread into the foldsof the paper and securing the same, and special mechanism for introducing the parchment strip and the thread that binds the same will probably form the subject of a separate application for aipatent.
In the drawings, Figure l is a perspective viewillustrating the manner inwhich the sewing is performed, and Fig. 2 is an enlarged view of the threads as laid together in the folds of the sheets and over the parchment or leather strip.
The sheets, a, of paper are grooved or channeled across the back at suitable distances apart, and wherever there are to be strips of parchment the distance between the channels corresponds to the width of the strip. There may be any desired number of these strips of parchment.
In sewing the sheet, the curved needles b carry the threads down into the fold of the sheet by passing into the channels 0 c, and they emerge at the channels 01 d, and the loops of thread are caught and passed over a needle, as shown in said patent, and afterward threads or cords e are drawn by said needle into the grooves or channels d, and passed through such loops of thread.
One peculiar feature of this mode of sewing I is, that all the needles do not pass into the same sheet, but the needles acting from left to right go into one folded sheet, those acting from right to left go into the next folded sheet, and then those acting from left to right go into the third sheet, and so on; hence the book will not come apart if one or more threads break or are cut, because thereare as many separate threads as there are needles, and the threads pass from one sheet, not to the next Ebut to the second sheet, and in that way hold the intermediate sheet between them.
In my present invention I make use of an interlacing thread or cord where the thread passes from one sheet to the second sheet away, and thereby prevent the thread cutting the paper. This is illustrated in Fig. 2, where the thread g is shown as laid between the thread It and the book. This is done by holding the thread 9 to the right while the needle descends and takes the stitch 1, and then holding the thread to the left while the stitch 2 is taken, so that the needle, as it descends and takes another stitch, passes elearot' said thread g, and so on, the thread 9 being thus passed between the paperQand the thread h, and under and over the respective stitches of the same.
The strip of parchment, leather, or other material I is laid across the back of the book, and the thread a is passed first to the right and then to the left, so that the said threads are'interlocked, as indicated in Fig. 2, the loop of thread a passing around the threads h as they are led from one sheet or signature to the second, and the thread it passes across the strip Z, firmly inclosing the same.
The book sewedin this manner is very strong, and does not come apart when a thread may break, and all the advantages of hand-sewed binding are attained, and also greater strength and durability, in consequence of the number thread, n, passing across the strip and inter- 1 looped with the threads h, to hold such strip I, substantially as set forth.
2. In sewing sheets together into books, the method herein specified of securing a strip of parchment or equivalent material to the hack. consisting in passing a thread, n, across said strip, introducing the threads it into the folded sheet, passingthe thread n around the thread h and across the strip in the opposite direction, 1
and introducing the threads h at the other side, passing the thread n around the same, and so on, whereby the threads are interlocked and the strip l secured to the back ot the book.
Signed by me this 5th day of March, A. D.
DAVID M. SMYTH.
Witnesses:
CHARLES E. GROSS, WM. WALDo HYDE.
US235466D David m Expired - Lifetime US235466A (en)

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