File Preparation
Printing
- Case Binding Types
- Rounded and Backed Case Binding
- Casebound Cover Materials
- Cloth and Faux Leather Covers
- Cover Finishes
- Dust Jackets
- Embossing vs. Debossing
- Endsheets
- Foil Stamping
- French Folds
- Paper Coatings
- Paper Weights
- Printing Types
- Saddle Stitching
- Smyth Sewing
- Softcover Books
- Specialty Paper Options
Saddle Stitching
Saddle-stitching is the least expensive and simplest binding method available. In the saddle-stitching process, parent sheets are cut, folded, and stapled together to form a finished book. This type of binding is used for single-issue comic books, workbooks, small catalogs, cookbooks, and booklets of all kinds.
How Saddle-Stitched Binding is Made
To create a saddle-stitched piece, printed parent sheets are cut and folded using a folding machine, then the folded pages are fed through a saddle-stitching machine that inserts staples into the spine of the booklet.
Design Considerations: Unlike most other binding methods, saddle-stitching doesn’t come with any design-specific restrictions. Since the pages open completely flat, images can extend across two pages without the chance that any content will be lost in the gutter.
Cover Design: Covers for saddle-stitched projects are the exact same size as the inside pages of the project.