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Thread: A Quick and Easy Bookmount

  1. #1

    A Quick and Easy Bookmount

    My wife tells a story from when she was little; one morning she was dashing out the door late for school, and turned around to her mom and shouted "QUICK! I need a hard-boiled egg!" We use this phrase often when something urgent, but forgotten, suddenly emerges.

    I experienced this during my most recent installation, when I realized that I had forgotten to include making bookmounts for several vintage magazines into my schedule. Suddenly, I needed to figure out how to recover and make 10 bookmounts as quickly and efficiently as possible, while maintaining museum standards and looking reasonably well made. I initially planned to use archival corrugated, but as I was working out a prototype, I thought about adhesives and other issues that would involve, and it hit me that I had some Sintra on hand, and that it is an easily workable thermoplastic that is archival and nice-looking. I rethought my prototype, and quickly imagined a process where I could easily create a least-common-denominator size mount that would work for all the books, the set to manufacturing the quantity I needed. My older, craft-level heat bending strip was perfect for the job. Total time from concept to execution: 90 minutes.

    While these were far from perfect, they serve their purpose and look pretty good. In hindsight, I'd make better jigs to keep the folding more consistent, and more time would be spent cleaning edges up and just prettying them up. As I installed them into the cases, they sometimes needed a little tweak using a heat gun to get the best position, and some required screws to fix them in the cases as they didn't quite balance.

    Here's a timelapse video of the process.https://youtu.be/PuaIeom_hgk Photos and descriptions below.
    Attached Images Attached Images
    Last edited by jwilliams; 04-18-2017 at 09:53 AM. Reason: clarity

  2. #2
    Site Administrator Paul Brewin's Avatar
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    Thumbs up

    Nicely done, and cool that you uploaded a timelapse too (makes it seem even faster!). Do you screw or stick these mounts down when installing in the case?

    Cheers!
    Paul Brewin - PACCIN Site Administrator

  3. #3
    Site Administrator Paul Brewin's Avatar
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    I've taken the liberty of reposting your video using the Insert Video icon (amongst the formatting tools when creating or editing your post). Select and paste the URL from your browser address bar rather than the "share" option from Youtube - this seems to work best for me.

    Last edited by Paul Brewin; 05-02-2017 at 02:33 PM. Reason: added how to select URL
    Paul Brewin - PACCIN Site Administrator

  4. #4
    Thanks, Paul! To answer your question, a few needed to be fixed to the deck with screws, but mostly they were well balanced, and these were wall-mounted cases, so I didn't need to worry about them being jostled.

  5. #5

    Book Mounts

    Nice work,

    At our museum, we made quick book mounts using Vivek plastic (I believe that's the name). We have a foot operated guillotine cutter that was capable of quick precise cuts, and a steel bender that worked well for this plastic. As a result, we did not need to use the heated line bender. I don't have a photograph, but they look like this:




    Here is an example of a slightly more complex mount made by bending Vivek, but with an attached acrylic wedge (using VHB tape) and Mylar page tie-downs.



    Nick Clemens
    Attached Images Attached Images
    Last edited by domeprep; 02-26-2018 at 09:03 AM. Reason: Additional Photographs

  6. #6
    Those are really nice, Nick. The Vivek will hold the bend without heating? I'll have to try that. --Jim

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