Gift
books -- anthologies of prose, verse, and
illustration, edited and packaged to be elegant
gifts --began to appear in the 1820s. Publishers
vied for the attention of the book-buying
public with new and improved styles of bindings.
The earliest covers, of engraved or embossed
paper with cloth spines, were replaced by
covers of silk or embossed leather. The advent
of the stamping press and of cloth cases
meant that elaborate gold designs could be
offered at lower prices than the older embossed
ones. The 1830s and 1840s were the heyday
of these volumes. They were created to be
given as gifts, and their bindings were,
so to speak, their wrappings. |