ALEPH-BET COLLECTORS' TERMS
DESCRIPTION OF BOOK TERMS

Describing the condition of books can be complicated in the field of children's and
illustrated books. All condition reports are subjective to some extent; not all books
with same grade will always be in the exact same condition. Any specific defect of a
book should be mentioned in the book description. The terms of description also cover
dustwrappers of the books where applicable. There are some books that are so scarce, or
that so seldom turn up in anything but worn condition, that to find that title in "Good"
condition, which normally is not desirable, may in fact be a plus. It is only by handling
many, many books over many, many years that a dealer can know what books are commonly found
in fine condition and what books are rare in any condition.
TERMS USED TO DESCRIBE CONDITION
| MINT |
- |
As new |
| FINE |
- |
No defect, yet not quite as "fresh" as a new book. Sometimes books are described as Near Fine. |
| VG |
- |
Very Good. Can also be VG+ or VG-. A book in VG condition will show some
general shelfwear. It can have rubbing, slight fading, perhaps even tiny margin nicks,
the dustwrapper can be frayed as well, but this should all be noted. The above three
grades are all acceptable for collectible copies of books.
|
| G |
- |
Good. A book in Good condition is generally not "good" as a collectible
copy. It can have any number of significant defects but it is complete and soundly
bound.
|
| FAIR |
- |
A book in fair condition shows considerable wear, may be loose in
the binding, may lack endpapers. In general, this is a reading copy.
|
SIZE OF BOOKS
The abbreviations commonly used today that denote the size of the book were originally used
to describe how many times a sheet of paper was folded before binding. There is generally a
correlation between the number of folds and the size of the book. A Folio book is bound from
leaves folded only once. If that leaf is then folded in half it becomes a quarto (4to).
Generally, the terms are only used today to denote approximate size.
| TERM USED |
COMMON ABBREVIATION |
SIZE |
| Folio |
|
15 inches |
| Quarto |
4to |
12 inches |
| Octavo |
8vo |
9 inches (the size of most modern novels) |
| Duodecimo |
12mo |
6 inches |
| Sixteen-mo |
16mo |
4 inches |
| Thirty-two-mo |
32mo |
2-3 inches |
BINDINGS
| CLOTH |
- |
cloth over boards |
| PICTORIAL CLOTH |
- |
the cloth is printed in a design |
| CLOTH BACKED BOARDS |
- |
cloth spine (backstrip) with the rest of the covers in boards that are usually covered in printed paper. |
| WRAPS |
- |
a soft cover book. Sometimes the binding is somewhat stiff, yet flexible. |
| VELLUM |
- |
sheepskin over boards |
COMMONLY SEEN ABBREVIATIONS
| TEG |
top edge gilt, or gold |
| AEG |
all edges gilt, or gold |
| DW |
dustwrapper, the same as DJ |
| DJ |
dust jacket, the same as DW |
| EP |
endpaper |
| PASTE-DOWN |
The paper that is pasted inside the front cover |
| FREE ENDPAPER |
The page opposite the paste-down. |
| FFEP |
Front Free End Paper - the free end paper in front of the book |
| RFEP |
Rear Free End Paper - the free end paper in rear of the book |
| PICT EP'S |
Pictorial End Papers |
PICTORIAL PASTE-ON |
This refers to the color plates that were often pasted on the front covers of books. |
| ND |
no date of publication. When there is no date in the book, but the date is known from
other sources, it should appear in brackets i.e. nd [1885]. (If the date is in the book
but not on the title page, is should appear within parentheses). |
| CA |
circa. Refers to the approximate date when the actual date is not known. |
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