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  2. Bookbinding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bookbinding

    Bookbinding combines skills from the trades of paper making, textile and leather-working crafts, model making, and graphic design in order to create a book. For instances, these design and cut pages, assemble pages into paper sheets, et cetera.

  3. Microsoft Office shared tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Office_shared_tools

    Binder. Microsoft Binder was an application originally included with Microsoft Office 95, 97, and 2000 that allowed users to include different types of OLE 2.0 objects (e.g., documents, spreadsheets, presentations and projects) in one file.

  4. Guild of Women-Binders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guild_of_Women-Binders

    The Guild of Women-Binders was a British organization founded to promote and distribute the work of women bookbinders at the turn of the 20th century. It was founded by Frank (Francis) Karslake in 1898, and disbanded in 1904.

  5. Breast binding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breast_binding

    Binders on display at a Science History Institute exhibit dedicated to stretch garments. Breast binding, also known as chest binding, is the flattening and hiding of breasts with constrictive materials such as cloth strips or purpose-built undergarments.

  6. Bindery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bindery

    Bindery refers to a studio, workshop or factory where sheets of (usually) paper are fastened together to make books, but also where gold and other decorative elements are added to the exterior of books, where boxes or slipcases for books are made and where the restoration of books is carried out.

  7. Binder (material) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binder_(material)

    A binder or binding agent is any material or substance that holds or draws other materials together to form a cohesive whole mechanically, chemically, by adhesion or cohesion. More narrowly, binders are liquid or dough-like substances that harden by a chemical or physical process and bind fibres, filler powder and other particles added into it.