The binding of Zebeth, at long last. For years I've wanted to make a printed copy of Planet Zebeth, but as the comic was still going, and colour printing was expensive, it didn't happen. At least not at the time. I still have plans on printing the comic to microfiche, as well as to waterproof paper when I'm rich enough... give those time. For the present though, and available for everyone to do, we have printed Zebeth! On regular paper! Yah, check out that link, Zebeth is finally in an easily printable format! Landscape format .PDF files with three comics to a page (usually), all 1300+ comics (and being added to as new comics come up) in a total of 475 (as of April 2025) pages! Yah, bulk printing is a lot cheaper now, and printing the whole shebang cost me about £65, just look up the cheapest colour printing available in your city. I had my own 32 hole punch (less here since this is landscape) for a coil binding if I wanted, but we need to be able to add new pages as new comics continue coming up (and being added to the latest .PDF section). And so, we got started. We printed out this entire thing (technically I printed two copies for myself, one to make hardcover and kept somewhere protected, and the other softcover to have kicking around readily available). And then... the great holepunching! Doing sections of 10 someodd pages at a time, we quickly made short work of that task, and then began adding the many book rings. It won't be _convenient_ to add new pages, but it'll be a lot more possible than if I had bound it in string. Though as a suggestion to other Zebeth fans, if you'd like, might I suggest printing out to current batch, and then keeping the bonus comics and back cover in their own much smaller book rings, which you could clip through the string binding of the main section. I dunno, just a thought. Or add to it every 6 months or so, and just re-string the thing. Or just have the whole shebang in a binder and call it a day, using only 3 or 4 holes type of thing. Nonetheless... Zebeth is printable! Ok, back to preparations, while waiting for a whole pile of 4.5cm book rings to arrive in the mail. I want one to be hardcover, the internet does not make it easy to buy hardcover book thick hardboard stuff, however... ring binders ARE easy to buy and readily available, c'mere you! Added bonus, the binder sides are larger than a4 paper, which lets me have some overhang overtop of the book pages. It won't be "naturally round" around all sides after trimming (or around any side it would turn out), but I need to cover up the brown colour anyway, so I can manually round the edges of the hardboard. Also as you can plainly seen some interesting construction has taken place around the binding holes. This is because evidently this hardboard is like... 1/2mm too thick to fit into my hole punch, so we had to sand the edge of these down a little bit to get them to fit into there. Strangely, once I got the hardboard to (barely) fit... the punch went straight through like it was nothing... strange. Ah well, no great issue, that adhesive paper will both cover up the sanded portion (which will be covered a second time once I put the cover on the... cover), and then sanded the edge of the adhesive paper to smooth the transition between it and the hardboard. We're going to have that on the inside anyway, but still, keeps the sanded portion stable. Also, I prepared the bookmarks that come with the files, while waiting for the binding rings, so those look awesome :D I put a pile of rings into the book with the covers to see how much 'sway' the pages will have, generally speaking, and gave it what would turn out to be 9mm of overhang over the pages (a few millimeters past the 'sway line'), and also aesthetically works well with the overhang at the front of the book (which was kept to natural length). We trimmed those to size, and then looked into wrapping a white adhesive sheet over the binding holes to cover up the cardboard colour. We determined that we needed like... half a millimeter more length on the back of the binding for a folded-over adhesive sheet, hole-punched, to wrap perfectly around the binding over both sides and have the holes line up, so we added a seam of glue to the backs of the hardboard, which will also serve to strengthen it a bit, and keep it from fraying in any way, so added bonus that. In the meantime, we got the softcover book version set up, and just need to ponder how best to add the binding cover. More to come once the glue dries. Finished May x, 2025 |
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