:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] The stitching is not hidden. It is the design. That is what makes Japanese binding distinctive. :INFO What Japanese Stab Binding Is Japanese stab binding (yotsume toji and variants) sews the cover and pages together through pierced holes along the spine edge, with the thread visible on both the front and back cover. Unlike Western sewn binding, there is no sewing through signatures — all pages are loose sheets stacked into a text block, then sewn through as a unit. The exposed stitching pattern can be simple (4-hole) or elaborate (hemp leaf, tortoiseshell, hemp leaf). :COUNTER.half 4 Holes | :COUNTER.half 1/4 Inch :PATH Prepare the Text Block and Cover Stack sheets, add cover, and align edges precisely before piercing. | :INFO Prepare the Text Block and Cover Stack your pages (text block) neatly with all edges aligned. Place front and back cover pieces — slightly larger than the text block — at front and back. Jog the spine edge against a flat surface to ensure all pages are flush at the binding edge. Clamp or hold firmly while marking the hole positions. :PATH Mark and Pierce the Holes Mark evenly spaced holes 1/4 inch from the spine edge and pierce through all layers. | :INFO Mark and Pierce the Holes Mark holes 1/4 inch from the spine edge and evenly spaced — for a basic 4-hole pattern, place holes at 1/2 inch from top and bottom edges and divide the remaining distance in thirds. Pierce with an awl through all layers at once — hold the stack compressed firmly. A piece of cork or foam underneath catches the awl and keeps holes clean. :PATH Sew the Basic Four-Hole Pattern Enter hole 2 from front, wrap around spine, re-enter hole 2, go to hole 3, etc. | :INFO Sew the Basic Four-Hole Pattern Thread a needle with waxed linen thread 3x the spine height. Begin at hole 2 from the front. Wrap around the spine edge and enter hole 2 again (now you have secured the spine wrapping). Exit out hole 1. Wrap over the head and re-enter hole 1. Move to hole 2, 3, 4. At hole 4, wrap over the tail and re-enter hole 4. Sew back to hole 2 filling the gaps. Tie off at hole 2 with a square knot. :CHECKLIST What You Need [ ] Loose sheets for text block — copy paper, sketch paper, or specialty sheets [ ] Cover material — heavier than text stock [ ] Bookbinding awl [ ] Bookbinding needle [ ] Waxed linen thread [ ] Bone folder for a clean spine fold :NOTE Waxed Thread Glides Through Pierced Holes Unwaxed thread drags and tears the edges of the holes over multiple passes — Japanese patterns require passing through the same hole 2 to 4 times. Run thread over a beeswax block before every sewing session. The wax also stiffens the thread, which helps it maintain pattern geometry between stitches. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] The hole placement is everything. Get that right and the stitching teaches itself. :LINK https://www.mountainviewbookarts.com/japanese-stab-binding-tutorial/ Mountain View Book Arts — Japanese Stab Binding Patterns Tutorial