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and is still in use today. It is believed that flap-style jackets were in general use by the 1880s, and probably earlier, although the number of surviving examples from the 1850s, 1860s, and 1870s is too small to prove exactly when they became ubiquitous, and again, there are no known publishers' records that document the use of dust jackets during these decades. There are, however, enough surviving examples from the 1890s to state unequivocally that dust jackets were all but universal throughout that decade. They were probably issued more often than not by the 1860s and 1870s in
112:
315:. The period from the 1820s to 1900 was a golden age for publishers' decorative bookbinding, and most dust jackets were much plainer than the books they covered, often simply repeating the main elements of the binding decoration in black on cream or brown paper. For this reason, most people preferred to display their books in their bindings, much as earlier generations had displayed their library books in their gold-tooled individual bindings, usually in leather or
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433:, among many others. Prices for dust jackets have become so inflated in recent years that even early reprints of certain titles in jacket can command good prices. Conversely, if the book itself is unimportant, or at least has little demand, the jacket is usually of little value either, but nearly all surviving pre-1920 jackets add some additional value to the book they cover.
38:
403:, published in 1925. Without jacket, the book brings $ 1,000 or so. With the jacket it can bring $ 20,000 or $ 30,000 or more, depending on condition. One copy in a near mint jacket was listed for sale in 2009 for half a million dollars. The most valuable jackets are usually those on the high spots of
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As dust jackets became more attractive than the bindings, more people began to keep the jackets on their books, at least until they became soiled, torn, or worn out. One bit of evidence that indicates when jackets became saved objects is the movement of the printed price from the spine of the jacket
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The earliest known dust jackets of the modern style, with flaps, which covered just the binding and left the text block exposed, date from the 1850s, although this type of jacket was likely in at least limited use some years earlier. This is the jacket that became standard in the publishing industry
335:. Other types of publishers' boxes were also popular in the second half of the nineteenth century, including many made to hold multi-volume sets of books. The jackets on boxed volumes were often plain, sometimes with cutouts on the spine to allow the title or volume numbers of the books to be seen.
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After 1900, fashion and the economics of publishing caused book bindings to become less decorative, and it was cheaper for publishers to make the jackets more attractive. By around 1920, most of the artwork and decoration had migrated from the binding to the dust jacket, and jackets were routinely
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started coming into common use on all types of books in the 1820s, the first publishers' dust jackets appeared by the end of that decade. The earliest known examples were issued on
English literary annuals which were popular from the 1820s to the 1850s. These books often had fancy bindings that
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At the end of the 18th century, publishers began to issue books in plain paper-covered boards, sometimes with a printed spine label; this form of binding was intended to be temporary. Some collections of loose prints were issued at this period in printed paper wrappings, again intended to be
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that has lost its original jacket, will take a jacket from a later printing and "marry" it to the earlier one. This practice persists because some customers will pay more for a first edition in a later jacket than they would for a jacketless copy. However, switching jackets muddles the
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Most jackets of this type were torn when they were opened and then discarded like gift-wrapping paper; they were not designed to be reused, and surviving examples are known on only a handful of titles. The scarcity of jackets of this type, together with the lack of written
351:, it did not matter where the price was printed (and many early jackets were not printed with any price), but now if book buyers of the 1910s and 1920s wanted to save the jacket and give a book as a gift, they could clip off the price without ruining the jacket.
147:, or in bespoke bindings commissioned by the customer. At this date, publishers did not have their books bound in uniform "house" bindings, so there was no reason for them to issue dust jackets. Book owners did occasionally fashion their own jackets out of
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of the nineteenth century, publishers started issuing some smaller books in bindings of printed paper-covered boards, and throughout the 1820s and 1830s some small popular books, notably annual gift books and almanacs, were issued in detachable printed
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Throughout the nineteenth century, nearly all dust jackets were discarded at or soon after purchase. Many were discarded in bookstores as the books were put out for display, or when they were sold; there is evidence that this was common practice in
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Cloth dust jackets became popular late in the nineteenth century. These jackets, with the outer cloth usually reinforced with an underlayer of paper, were issued mostly on ornate gift editions, often in two volumes and often with a
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from publishers of the period, makes it very hard to determine how widely these all-enclosing jackets were used during the period from 1820 to 1850, but they were likely common on ornately bound annuals and on some
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Dust jackets originally displayed cover information on top of a simple binding, at a time when it was not feasible to print directly onto the binding. The role of a dust jacket has been largely supplanted by modern
108:. The information on the dust jacket often resembles that of the binding but may have additional promotions about an edition, and the information on the flaps is not typically copied onto the binding.
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407:. Condition is of paramount importance to value. Other examples of highly prized jackets include those on most of Ernest Hemingway's titles, and the first editions of books such as Harper Lee's
370:, both hardcover and softcover books frequently come with two dust jackets β a full-sized one, serving the same purpose as in the West (it is usually retained with the book), and a thin "
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styles which are highly prized by collectors. Some of them are worth far more than the books they cover. The most famous example is the jacket on the first edition of
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Modern dust covers still serve to display promotional material and shield the book from damage. The back panel or flaps of the dust cover are printed with
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The dust jacket protects the book covers from damage. However, since it is itself relatively fragile, and since dust jackets have practical,
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319:. Even late in the nineteenth century there were still some publishers who were not using dust jackets at all (the English publisher
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sheaths. These small boxes are sometimes loosely and erroneously referred to as the first dust jackets. True publisher's bindings in
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to a corner of one of the flaps. This also occurred in the 1910s and early 1920s. When jackets were routinely discarded at point of
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printed with multiple colors, extensive advertising and blurbs; even the underside of the jacket was now sometimes used for
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in Oxford by
Michael Turner, a former curator and Head of Conservation at the Library. Its existence was announced by
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in 2009. It is three years older than the previous oldest known jacket, which was discovered in 1934 by the
English
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and printed with text and illustrations. This outer cover has folded flaps that hold it to the front and back
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value, the jacket may in turn be wrapped in another jacket, usually transparent, especially if the book is a
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618:. Pinner, Middlesex, England: Private Libraries Association; New Castle, Delaware: Oak Knoll Press, 2016.
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needed protection. The jackets that were used at this time completely enclosed the books like
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is one example). Some firms, such as subscription houses which sold millions of cheap books
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for 1833 (issued in 1832). Both jackets are of the type that completely enclosed the books.
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The oldest publishers' dust jacket now on record was issued in 1829 on an
English annual,
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604:. Charlottesville, VA: Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia, 2011.
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information about the author, a summary of the book from the publisher (known as a
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or authorities in the book's subject area. The back of a dust jacket often has a
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Before the 1820s, most books were published unbound and were generally sold to
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printing technologies, which print such information directly onto the binding.
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Some collectors and dealers, in an effort to increase the value of a
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A dust jacket, propped up and partially unfolded for illustration
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Dust jackets from the 1920s and later were often decorated in
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Similar bands occasionally appear in the west, for example in
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either in this form, or in simple bindings executed for the
490:"Earliest-known book jacket discovered in Bodleian Library"
672:"Dust Jackets from American and European Books, 1926β1947"
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505:, reported his find in the September 22, 1934, issue of
492:(Michelle Pauli, guardian.co.uk, Friday 24 April 2009).
30:"Dust cover" redirects here. For the firearm part, see
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519:"About Us | Brodart Books & Library Services"
300:Hermione and Her Little Group of Serious Thinkers
542:Graphic Novel Friday: Enter the New Palookaville
65:is the detachable outer cover, usually made of
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602:Book-Jackets: Their History, Forms, and Use
115:The back of a dust jacket, showing the ISBN
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640:The Illustrated Dust Jacket, 1920β1970
441:bibliographical record and creates a
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738:"A Brief History of the Dust Jacket"
354:In 1939, Arthur Brody, a student at
104:for retail purchase, and the book's
228:for 1830. It was discovered at the
282:Late 19th and early 20th centuries
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73:; these flaps may also double as
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642:. London: Thames & Hudson.
616:Nineteenth-century dust-jackets
167:from ancient times through the
501:Carter, author of the classic
1:
1239:Conservation and restoration
327:, probably never used them.
175:temporary. In the first two
171:and into the modern period.
586:. Aeonix Publishing Group.
568:, unsold as of April, 2009.
243:on another English annual,
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720:Victoria and Albert Museum
665:Early Dust Jackets website
638:Salisbury, Martin (2017).
584:Book Design and Production
213:and were sealed shut with
96:) or critical praise from
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674:. New York Public Library
290:Front dust jacket art by
27:Paper wrapper for a book
897:Collection (publishing)
821:Illuminated manuscripts
582:Pete Masterson (2005).
566:listing at ABEbooks.com
503:ABC for Book Collectors
303:
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1266:Intellectual property
892:Volume (bibliography)
410:To Kill A Mockingbird
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226:Friendship's Offering
114:
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32:Dust cover (firearms)
600:G. Thomas Tanselle,
555:, November 12, 2010.
385:As collectible items
692:"Fake Dust Jackets"
686:Dust Jacket Artists
401:F. Scott Fitzgerald
362:Supplementary bands
356:Columbia University
200:Oldest dust jackets
1303:World Book Capital
716:Prints & Books
547:2010-11-18 at the
430:The Maltese Falcon
420:Catcher in the Rye
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204:After publishers'
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1181:Coffee table book
1012:Bookworm (insect)
663:Mark R. Godburn,
649:978-0-500-51913-4
632:978-1-58456-347-1
624:978-0-900002-88-5
614:Mark R. Godburn:
610:978-1-883631-13-0
507:Publishers Weekly
194:William Pickering
16:(Redirected from
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396:The Great Gatsby
230:Bodleian Library
123:, and sometimes
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1197:Banned books
950:Bibliophilia
935:Bibliography
865:advance copy
848:instant book
816:Illustration
799:dust jackets
798:
740:β biblio.com
728:. Retrieved
724:the original
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700:. Retrieved
696:the original
676:. Retrieved
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379:Palookaville
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246:The Keepsake
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90:biographical
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1362:Book design
1219:Book curses
1095:Netherlands
965:Bookselling
940:Bibliomania
923:Bestsellers
911:Consumption
902:Book series
887:Typesetting
470:Book design
341:advertising
313:World War I
296:Don Marquis
260:trade books
241:John Carter
169:Middle Ages
161:manuscripts
98:celebrities
71:book covers
51:book jacket
49:(sometimes
47:dust jacket
18:Book jacket
1356:Categories
1164:audiobooks
1063:By country
1016:Furniture
1007:Digitizing
1002:Collecting
992:Censorship
975:book towns
860:Publishing
843:incunabula
782:Production
730:2011-04-03
702:24 January
678:2014-01-09
528:2020-09-27
465:Book cover
445:of sorts.
405:literature
274:, and the
182:pasteboard
145:bookseller
59:dust cover
1234:Book tour
1207:incidents
1139:miniature
1134:fictional
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1331:Category
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391:art deco
349:purchase
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1321:Outline
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309:England
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1341:Portal
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1169:Ebooks
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1070:Brazil
970:blurbs
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794:Covers
646:
630:
622:
608:
590:
317:vellum
311:until
268:Europe
234:Oxford
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1276:Novel
1259:codex
1174:Folio
1124:Other
1105:Spain
1090:Japan
1085:Italy
997:Clubs
775:Books
455:Blurb
381:#20.
368:Japan
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1271:ISBN
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215:wax
57:or
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