Another recent acquisition, Die Buchbinderin, #5 in the series Die Frau im Handwerk (Women in the Trades). The pamphlet was written by Agnes Richter, herself a Buchbindermeisterin, and published with permission of the Soviet military administration in 1949.
In short it outlines the trade and apprenticeship in the way it would have been introduced and experienced by Babette/Bärbel.
Cover showing the seals of the trades in the series. See the last image for the other publications in the series. |
The series was written for all women thinking about starting a career in the trades, other trade Meister, the Guilds, etc. |
The authors' forward |
Forward: This small pamphlet is particularly written for those women and girls deciding what trade and career to choose. I want to introduce a trade to them, one that has always employed women, but is particularly encouraging them formally learn the trade.I want to describe the bookbinding trade and all of its varied facets so that girls leaving school and women contemplating a new career are filly informed about the work, apprenticeship, the exams, and opportunities for advancement.I would be delighted if this publication helped career guidance counselors and supports the trade unins in their work. They could bring eager and interested future binders to the trade.To those in the trade, I ask you to share your critiques so that I can update and improve this publication.To those that helped finding illustrations and other documentation, my heartfelt thanks.Schönbeck/Elbe, fall, 1948.The author
Some statistics from Die Buchbinderin. The years 1939 and 1942 are being compared. |
Binding by Maria Lühr (in German with pictures), first Buchbindermeisterin in Germany. Lühr got her start with W. Collin in Berlin and studied with Cobden-Sanderson, among others. She also wrote the introduction to the 2nd German edition of Cockerell's Bookbinding and the Care of Books (1925). |
Bookbinder working on a folding machine. |
Apprentices making cases for books. |
The Meisterin checking the work of the apprentices. |
From the author's conclusion |
Now, in the 21st century the tables have flipped and women represent the majority of those learning and working as bookbinders (and conservators). At the same time, the numbers of binderies and available positions have contracted greatly due to any number of changes. On the positive side, the number of people practicing the books arts and number of learning opportunities has been increasing for decades. Those experiences cannot be compared to the traditional trade apprenticeships, schools, and overall situation described in Die Buchbinderin and publications like the Buchbinderlehrling and its successor Das Falzbein that ceased publication in 1960... I still need to write up a summary like I did for the Buchbinderlehrling.
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