Tuesday, 7 April 2026

Dust jackets

 Earlier today I tooted a link to an online article on the history of dust jackets - you know, these paper sheets folded around hardback books.

Working with historical library books up at the Athenaeum, I don't get a lot of time with dust jackets - those from the 1920s and 30s are mostly gone as are the majority of those on later books, although sometimes the dustjacket illustration has been pasted on the cover like this


which I'm guessing was just something someone did.

The interesting thing is that dust jackets didn't really appear until the 1920s.

Before then, while yellowbacks and other mass produced books had illustrated covers, sometimes in colour, more expensive books did not, although, perhaps following the trend for illustrated covers, increasingly hardback books did have some form of decoration on the cover, sometimes in monochrome, sometimes with a little colour.

Designs varied from simple floral designs

to illustrated


to those with a little colour in them



I'm going to wildly wave my hands here and suggest that sometime around 1920 the paper dustjacket was introduced, perhaps because that reduced production costs, allowing books to be produced with simple minimalist covers, and also, perhap because it was a way of making hardbacks as attractive as these pesky paperbacks that were making inroads into mass market publications...









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