:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] The Coptic stitch is 1,500 years old. It is still the best structure for a notebook you actually write in. :INFO Why Coptic Binding Opens Flat A Coptic-bound book has no spine glue and no rigid spine structure. The signatures (folded groups of pages) are sewn directly to each other through their spines using a chain link stitch. This allows the spine to open fully — the book lies completely flat on a desk at any page. Traditional Coptic books from the 4th and 5th centuries AD survive in libraries today. The structure is durable, repairable, and does not require a book press. :COUNTER.half 4 to 5 Sheets | :COUNTER.half 4 to 6 Signatures :PATH Fold and Pierce the Signatures Fold sheets into signatures and pierce holes 1/4 inch from spine edge. | :INFO Fold and Pierce the Signatures Group 4 to 5 sheets of text-weight paper and fold in half — this is one signature. Fold a piece of cover stock slightly larger as the cover signature. Pierce holes along the spine fold: 1/4 inch from head and tail, with 2 to 3 additional holes evenly spaced. All signatures must have identical hole spacing — nest them together and pierce through all layers at once for perfect alignment. :PATH Attach the First Signature to the Cover Sew the cover to the first signature using a kettle stitch at each end. | :INFO Attach the First Signature to the Cover Thread a needle with waxed thread 4x the spine height. Begin at the head hole of the cover (outside in). Sew through all holes to the tail. Bring the thread outside at the tail. Nestle the first signature against the cover. Enter the tail hole of the first signature, travel to the head, exit, and link to the cover loop with a kettle stitch (a simple loop-through link). :PATH Add Subsequent Signatures with Chain Link Each new signature links to the previous with a kettle stitch at every hole. | :INFO Add Subsequent Signatures with Chain Link Nestle the next signature against the sewn one. Enter its tail hole from inside. Sew to the first hole. At each exit point, pass the needle under the corresponding stitch of the previous signature (the chain link). At the head and tail holes, tie a kettle stitch to anchor the signature. Continue adding signatures until the book reaches the desired thickness. :CHECKLIST What You Need [ ] Text-weight paper — standard copier paper works [ ] Cover stock — 80 to 100lb cardstock minimum [ ] Bookbinding needle [ ] Waxed linen thread [ ] Bookbinding awl [ ] Bone folder :NOTE Tension Controls the Spine Appearance Consistent thread tension produces a taut, even spine with visible chain links. Pulling too tight puckers the signatures; too loose and the spine is sloppy and the book does not hold its shape. Aim for firm but not tight — pull each stitch until it just seats against the paper without deforming it. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] A notebook that opens flat is not a luxury. It is the minimum requirement for a notebook worth using. :LINK https://www.bookbindingforum.com/coptic-stitch-tutorial/ Bookbinding Forum — Coptic Stitch Binding Complete Tutorial