0 someone whose work or skill involves fastening loose pages together inside a cover to make a book --
He married in 1839, and became a bookbinder on his own account.
He is, however, better known as a bookbinder, and numbers of stamped bindings are in existence which bear his device.
His grandfather, popular art bookbinder, cared for him.
He was a pharmacist, apothecary, printer, engraver/etcher, bookseller, stationer, publisher, bookbinder, librarian/owner of a circulating library, and stereotyper/stereotype founder.
She has been featured for her work as an amateur bookbinder and knitting.
He was a bookbinder, stationary to the king, and cashier to the ordinance office from 1699 to 1702.
He took classes in the evenings while apprenticed to a bookbinder.
Human factors also influence swell, especially the force with which the bookbinder bones down, or flattens, each section after sewing.