Bibliographic format: Difference between revisions
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== Same words, different meanings == | == Same words, different meanings == | ||
Many of the same terms were long used as standard names for paper of various sizes (often known as "Imperial standard" size), the same way we now talk about "A4 paper" or "letter size paper". Then, beginning in the 19th century, the terms started being used to indicate a book's height: "octavo" means "little", "quarto" means "ordinary size", "folio" means "big", and "elephant folio" means "huge". Many libraries, including the Folger, use these [[Call numbers#Size designations | size designations]] to describe sections of shelving in the stacks. For example, the "folios" section | Many of the same terms were long used as standard names for paper of various sizes (often known as "Imperial standard" size), the same way we now talk about "A4 paper" or "letter size paper". Then, beginning in the 19th century, the terms started being used to indicate a book's height: "octavo" means "little", "quarto" means "ordinary size", "folio" means "big", and "elephant folio" means "huge". Many libraries, including the Folger before 2023, use these [[Call numbers#Size designations | size designations]] to describe sections of shelving in the stacks. For example, the Folger's "folios" section was for books with a spine height of 30.1 cm through 50 cm, or oblong with a width of 23.1 cm and up (anything bigger than that would have been in the "flats" section). | ||
When someone associated with the Folger | When someone associated with the Folger refered to "a folio," you had to rely on context to know if they mean an oversize book, a book in folio format, or one of the first four editions of Shakespeare's collected plays. Similarly, you have to know from context whether a researcher interested in the "the same work in different formats" is interested in different bibliographic formats, different media types (play, opera, movie, etc.), different carrier types (DVD, VHS tape, etc.), or what. | ||
== Bibliographic format in | == Bibliographic format in Folger catalog records == | ||
[[ | [[Catalog]] records for Folger vault material display the bibliographic format in parentheses at the end of the "Description" field, after the book's height (rounded up to the nearest centimeter) when applicable. Folger catalogers use the "DCRM(B)" abbreviations found in the left-hand column of the chart in this article. To search the catalog for books in a specific format, [https://catalog.folger.edu/search?ln=en&p=300%25%25c%3A16mo&f=&c=Books%20%26%20Serials&c=Manuscripts&c=Subscription%20databases&c=Art%20%26%20Objects&c=Other%20formats&sf=&so=d&rg=50 use the example in this link]. | ||
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==Abbreviations and names for formats== | ==Abbreviations and names for formats== | ||
This chart lists abbreviations and names for each of the main bibliographic formats. The column on the far left shows the abbreviations used in | This chart lists abbreviations and names for each of the main bibliographic formats. The column on the far left shows the abbreviations used in the Folger catalog. | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" |
Latest revision as of 09:47, 13 April 2023
Bibliographic format (also known simply as "format") refers to the proportional relationship between a full sheet of paper and the folded and cut leaves of a book. For example, a text printed two-up so that the sheet of paper needs to be folded once to make the leaves of a book is in "folio" format. A book printed four-up on a sheet that's folded in half, then in half again, is a "quarto" and so on. Bibliographic format is usually determinable on books from the hand-press era (roughly 1450 to 1830), when books were routinely printed on hand-made sheets of paper. For machine-press books, it is usually impossible to tell the actual format of the book, regardless of any printed signatures present, unless it is bound loosely enough to see the sewing in the middle of the gatherings.
Same words, different meanings
Many of the same terms were long used as standard names for paper of various sizes (often known as "Imperial standard" size), the same way we now talk about "A4 paper" or "letter size paper". Then, beginning in the 19th century, the terms started being used to indicate a book's height: "octavo" means "little", "quarto" means "ordinary size", "folio" means "big", and "elephant folio" means "huge". Many libraries, including the Folger before 2023, use these size designations to describe sections of shelving in the stacks. For example, the Folger's "folios" section was for books with a spine height of 30.1 cm through 50 cm, or oblong with a width of 23.1 cm and up (anything bigger than that would have been in the "flats" section).
When someone associated with the Folger refered to "a folio," you had to rely on context to know if they mean an oversize book, a book in folio format, or one of the first four editions of Shakespeare's collected plays. Similarly, you have to know from context whether a researcher interested in the "the same work in different formats" is interested in different bibliographic formats, different media types (play, opera, movie, etc.), different carrier types (DVD, VHS tape, etc.), or what.
Bibliographic format in Folger catalog records
Catalog records for Folger vault material display the bibliographic format in parentheses at the end of the "Description" field, after the book's height (rounded up to the nearest centimeter) when applicable. Folger catalogers use the "DCRM(B)" abbreviations found in the left-hand column of the chart in this article. To search the catalog for books in a specific format, use the example in this link.
Abbreviations and names for formats
This chart lists abbreviations and names for each of the main bibliographic formats. The column on the far left shows the abbreviations used in the Folger catalog.
DCRM(B)[1] | Gaskell[2] | Ordinary spoken English | Latinate spoken English | Other |
---|---|---|---|---|
full-sheet | 1⁰ | broadsheet, full sheet | ||
fol. | 2⁰ | folio | folio | fo., 1/2⁰, f⁰, F |
4to | 4⁰ | quarto | quarto | 1/4⁰, Q⁰, Q |
8vo | 8⁰ | octavo | octavo | 1/8⁰, O |
12mo | 12⁰ | twelvemo | duodecimo | 1/12⁰, D |
long 12mo | long 12⁰ | long twelvmo | long duodecimo | |
16mo | 16⁰ | sixteenmo | sextodecimo | 1/16⁰, S |
18mo | 18⁰ | eighteenmo | octodecimo | 1/18⁰ |
24mo | 24⁰ | twenty-fourmo | vicesimo-quarto | 1/24⁰, T |
long 24mo | long 24⁰ | long twenty-fourmo | long vicesimo-quarto | |
32mo | 32⁰ | thirty-twomo | trigesimo-secundo | 1/32⁰, Tt |
48mo | 48⁰ | forty-eightmo | quadragesimo-octavo | Fe |
64mo | 64⁰ | sixty-fourmo | sexagesimo-quarto | 1/64⁰, Sf |
72mo | 72⁰ | seventy-twomo | ||
96mo | 96⁰ | ninety-sixmo | ||
128mo | 128⁰ | one-twenty-eightmo |
NB. for search-and-replace updating to DCRM(B) abbreviations:
- character following the number may be:
- degree symbol
- superscript zero
- superscript lower-case letter "o"
- be careful of the order of operations, e.g. change "12⁰" to "12mo" before changing" 2⁰" to"fol." or you'll end up with "1fol."
References
- ↑ Descriptive Cataloging of Rare Materials (Books), the national standard for cataloging rare books in library collections, generally adopted by English-speaking countries and some non-English-speaking countries.
- ↑ Philip Gaskell, A New Introduction to Bibliography. Reprinted with corrections in 1995. New Castle, Del.: Oak Knoll Press, 2007