A type of binding, common in notebooks, in which a cylindrical spiral of metal or plastic is wound through holes punched in the edges of the pages.
To bind using a wire or plastic spiral looped through holes in a stack of paper.
A method of binding using either plastic or metal spirals through circular holes in the paper allowing the book to open flat.
The binding of the book is a metal spiral wire woven through punched holes at the binding edge to secure the pages / leaves to the binding. [Back to the Top
A metal wire formed into a spiral of appropriate diameter passing through holes in the pages and cover, binding them all together. See also comb binding.
Bindery option in which a document is bound with a continuous plastic coil that is inserted through a series of holes punched along the binding side.
Mechanical binding using a single wire passing through pre-drilled holes.
A book bound with wire/plastic spiral form inserted through holes punched along the binding side.
A wire is inserted through a series of holes in a spiral fashion to bind the book. There is no flat spine for printing title information.
Single sheets are stacked together, holes are punched along the binding edge, and a plastic or wire coil is inserted into the holes.
A book bound with wires in spiral form inserted through holes punched along the binding side.
A binding in which wires in spiral form are inserted through holes punched along the binding side. to top
Wires in spiral form inserted through specially punched holes along the binding edge.