Hirro set his book down, and pulled another interesting contraption from the end of the table, although this she could more easily recognize. Two flat boards were held into two vices, and Lani recognized it as a press. She took the second one, of which there were four, and she fitted her book into it, exposing it’s spine, and began twisting the clamps down. Hirro nodded at her accurate assumption of the next step and pressed his into the device as well. Whereas Hirro could simply press his book block into the device, Lani had to adjust the seams so that it was somewhat even before clamping the vices down. Once they were done, she could see the threading on the spine was loose now that it was held in place by the vice, and thought it was worth mentioning now, in case it messed up the next step.
”Hirro?” She asked, turning her spine towards him and showing him her work. He frowned at it, and then waved his hand.
”Don’t worry about it. We are about to apply resin which will hold it in place. This time, it is okay, but the book will wear down and tear apart quickly if you do it too loose, so for next time make sure your stitching is tight.” The red-haired Inarta peered closer and Lani saw some streaks of grey in his hair while he examined her work. ”Also, if you do a chain stitch it will be easier.” He noticed, and her cheeks warmed at the thought of him thinking her stupid, but she hadn’t known what he said.
”What is a ‘chain stitch’?” She asked for the unfamiliar name, and Hirro simply turned his device to show his spine, and she could see the looped pattern of the stick on either end of the spine where the holes had not attached to chords but to themselves. Realization dawned on her, and she understood, making a mental note of that for the next time she bound a book. ”Ah, chain stitch.”
”Now, we have to protect the stitching of the spine so that it does not fall apart. We will do so with resin and cloth.” Hirro moved on, and it was clear that today was a work day, not a lesson day, and if the purpose was to produce books, so they would. Glancing at the air vents that ringed down from the ceiling; Lani realized it must have been a couple bells already. Not too long into the work day, but if this part had taken this long, than the book binding job would be an all-day affair. As a scribe she had always simply delivered her finished sheets to Hirro to bind, but now she realized how much work that took. If it took her two to three days to properly copy a book, it took him half a day to bind it, and the whole affair was a long process.