This invention relates to books with printed covers.
Books and photo albums are commonly assembled from single- and double-sided printed documents and photographs. Traditional bookbinding methods include gluing or stitching a set of pages together along one edge. This bound edge is then attached to a book cover, either directly, or through attachment to a spine sheet. A spine sheet spans the spine of the cover without being attached to it, and is adhered only to the two sides of the cover. The spine sheet permits a user to fully open a finished book because it flexes separately from the spine of the cover. The bound edges of the manuscript are glued to the spine sheet or cover, and the spine sheet is glued to the cover.
However, there is an increasing volume of prints made at home, or in a retail establishment. There is also a growing movement again in specialty, small-print presses. Non-traditional book-makers, including specialty presses and retail photo lab operators, have a need for a process for binding materials that does not require the heavy equipment typically used in conventional bookbinding. These book-makers also have a need for printing images on the front and back covers and the spine. For example, coffee-table books often include a single image printed on all three of those surfaces so that the whole image can be viewed when looking at the outside of the open book. This is referred to herein as a “fully-wrapped cover.”
Clamp- and ring-type binders, such as three-ring binders, do not have the appearance and function of conventional soft or hard covered books. Furthermore, these binders require a margin be provided in which perforations or other mounting features can be punched or placed. Moreover, sheets in these binders, e.g., three-ring binders, are susceptible to damage that permits pages to fall out, possibly without detection.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,326,018 describes a bundle of paper glue-bound to form a book. A glue band is wrapped around the bundle and heated to bind it. However, this scheme requires special equipment to wrap the glue band in a way that will not leave wrinkles or air bubbles in the band. Such wrinkles or bubbles would be perceptible to the touch of a person holding the book by the spine to read it, and could cause undesirable distraction or an impression of a lower-quality product.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,685,415 describes an adhesive matrix with a release liner. A cover is adhered to exposed adhesive after the release liner is removed. However, this scheme can leave a noticeable offset (at least the thickness of the matrix) between the endpapers at either end of the book. This can be objectionable. It also requires using a fixture to heat the adhesive matrix to attach to the inner sheets.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,909,141 describes a binding element having a flexible clamp with slots for the sheets. Although the cover is included, there are a limited number of slots, and a limited number of sheets (e.g., 1) can be inserted in each slot. Binding by this scheme is therefore limited in use, time-consuming, and tedious.
EP342957 issued to 3M (inventors Dwyer et al.) describes binding sheets together using pressure-sensitive adhesive. However, this scheme uses an adhesive spine, so does not provide full wrap-around covers.
There is, therefore, a continuing need for ways of producing bound books or other printed matter with lower cost than, and increased flexibility compared to, conventional bookbinding, while still proving a custom fully-wrapped cover. There is also a need for a way of producing books and book covers using a single printing device or technology, since many home users and retail establishments only have one type of printer (e.g., inkjet or thermal, respectively). There is also a need for books produced in these ways.
Moreover, none of the above-described schemes take into account that some printer technologies are limited in the size of sheets they can print. For example, optical printing is limited by the size of the field of view that can be exposed. Some cut-sheet printers are limited by the size of sheet that can be loaded into the input tray. For tall documents printed in portrait mode, in which the length (height) of a sheet significantly exceeds the width, hardware limits on sheet width set the widest sheet that can be printed. Since a book cover is generally more than twice as wide as the width of sheets in the book, these limits can make it difficult to produce a complete, covered book using a single printer (as opposed to one printer for the sheets and another for the cover).
According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a bound document having a plurality of sheets having a length, the document comprising:
an outer cover sheet having a length less than twice the length of the sheets in the plurality of sheets, and having a selected edge, a cover image being printed on the outer cover sheet;
an inner cover sheet having first and second sides, the first side including a first portion on which an additional image is printed and a second portion over which adhesive is disposed, the first and the second portions separated by an alignment curve; and
a binding device binding the inner cover sheet and the plurality of sheets so that the second side of the inner cover sheet faces the plurality of sheets;
wherein the outer cover sheet is affixed by the adhesive to the inner cover sheet so that the selected edge aligns with the alignment curve.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a bound document having a plurality of sheets having a length, the document comprising:
an outer cover sheet having a length more than twice the length of the sheets in the plurality of sheets, a cover image being printed on the outer cover sheet;
an inner cover sheet having a length less than the length of the sheets in the plurality of sheets and having first and second sides, the first side including a portion over which adhesive is disposed; and
a binding device binding the inner cover sheet and the plurality of sheets so that the second side of the inner cover sheet faces the plurality of sheets and the inner cover sheet wraps around respective spine edges of the sheets in the plurality of sheets;
wherein the outer cover sheet is affixed by the adhesive to the inner cover sheet.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a bound document having a plurality of sheets having a length, the document comprising:
an outer cover sheet having a length more than twice the length of the sheets in the plurality of sheets, a cover image being printed on the outer cover sheet;
a binding device having an interior and an exterior and arranged to bind the plurality of sheets together in the interior, wherein the binding device has adhesive disposed over the exterior and the outer cover sheet is affixed by the adhesive to the binding device.
An advantage of this invention is that it can produce a bound book with a printed cover and printed inner sheets using a single type of printer. Various aspects can produce books with image data all the way around the cover even when the printer is not capable of printing a full-width sheet, by using pre-printed sheets. Various aspects can produce books simply and without requiring complex fixtures.
The above and other objects, features, and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent when taken in conjunction with the following description and drawings wherein identical reference numerals have been used, where possible, to designate identical features that are common to the figures, and wherein:
The attached drawings are for purposes of illustration and are not necessarily to scale.
Reference is made to commonly-assigned U.S. Pat. No. 8,182,188, incorporated herein by reference.
In the following description, some aspects will be described in terms that would ordinarily be implemented as software programs. Those skilled in the art will readily recognize that the equivalent of such software can also be constructed in hardware. Because image manipulation algorithms and systems are well known, the present description will be directed in particular to algorithms and systems forming part of, or cooperating more directly with, methods described herein. Other aspects of such algorithms and systems, and hardware or software for producing and otherwise processing the image signals involved therewith, not specifically shown or described herein, are selected from such systems, algorithms, components, and elements known in the art. Given the system as described herein, software not specifically shown, suggested, or described herein that is useful for implementation of various aspects is conventional and within the ordinary skill in such arts.
A computer program product can include one or more storage media, for example; magnetic storage media such as magnetic disk (such as a floppy disk) or magnetic tape; optical storage media such as optical disk, optical tape, or machine readable bar code; solid-state electronic storage devices such as random access memory (RAM), or read-only memory (ROM); or any other physical device or media employed to store a computer program having instructions for controlling one or more computers to practice methods according to various aspects.
The electrophotographic (EP) printing process can be embodied in Electrostatographic printers such as electrophotographic printers that employ toner developed on an electrophotographic receiver can be used, as can ionographic printers and copiers that do not rely upon an electrophotographic receiver. Electrophotography and ionography are types of electrostatography (printing using electrostatic fields), which is a subset of electrography (printing using electric fields).
A digital reproduction printing system (“printer”) typically includes a digital front-end processor (DFE), a print engine (also referred to in the art as a “marking engine”) for applying colorant to the receiver, and one or more post-printing finishing system(s) (e.g. a UV coating system, a glosser system, or a laminator system). Devices including printers, copiers, scanners, and facsimiles, and analog or digital devices, are all referred to herein as “printers.” Electrophotographic, inkjet, thermal, optical, or other types of printers can be used. For example, an electrophotographic printer can be used, such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,608,641, issued on Aug. 19, 2003, to Peter S. Alexandrovich et al., and in U.S. Publication No. 2006/0133870, published on Jun. 22, 2006, by Yee S. Ng et al., the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Sheets 110 can be the same type of medium, or different media. Each medium independently can be decorative, plain, mixed media, or have attachments thereto. Commercially available media such as photobook pages, templates, and framing pages (for example, of paper, paperboard, cardboard), can be used. A medium can have a V-fold shape, such that the edge for insertion is the V-folded edge, the free edges forming the edges of the pages for turning in the book cover. Pop-up pages, and pages with extension sections that open out from the book cover, can also be used. Image content can be printed on one or more sheets 110 using thermal printing, ink jet (drop-on-demand or continuous), laser printing, electrophotographic printing, or other techniques.
Inner cover sheet 121 and second inner cover sheet 122 are on opposite sides of sheets 110. In this example and throughout the figures, sheets are represented as either rectangles or curves for clarity. This representational difference does not require structural difference.
Inner cover sheet 121, sheets 110, and (optionally) second inner cover sheet 122 are bound together. They can be bound together using a binder clip, staples, wire, thread, glue, or other binding techniques. In this example, binder clip 130 binds inner cover sheet 121, sheets 110, and second inner cover sheet 122 together. Sheets 110, inner cover sheet 121, and second inner cover sheet 122 can be the same length or different lengths, or can extend to the same distance from the spine or to different distances from the spine. As used herein, the term “binding device” refers to the mechanical device used to hold inner cover sheet 121, 122 and sheets 110 together. The binding device can be, e.g., a binder clip using spring force to hold the sheets together, or a plastic comb passing through punched holes in inner cover sheet 121, 122 and sheets 110 to hold them together.
Outer cover sheet 141 and inner cover sheet 121 together form a cover for document 100. Image data for a cover image is divided into first and second image portions. The first image portion is printed on inner cover sheet 121. The print is represented graphically as a plurality of dash-dotted circles forming image 192.
The second image portion is printed on outer cover sheet 141, represented graphically as a plurality of dash-dotted circles forming image 194, which extends around both sides of document 100 as shown. The second image portion is printed borderlessly with respect to a selected edge 149, which does not have to be straight, of outer cover sheet 141. Alignment location 129 is defined on inner cover sheet 121. Outer cover sheet 141 is affixed to inner cover sheet 121 so that selected edge 149 aligns (within tolerances) with alignment location 129. Images 192, 194 together form the cover image visible to a person inspecting the document. The arrows for location 129 and edge 149 are dotted for clarity.
Outer cover sheet 141 can be affixed to inner cover sheet 121 or second inner cover sheet 122 using adhesive 180, e.g., pressure-sensitive adhesive strips with or without substrates. Impregnated foamed adhesives, gel adhesives, and cast adhesive strips can also be used for adhesive 180. Examples of specific adhesive strips useful as adhesive 180 include APETAPE Adhesive Tapes (Essex, UK), JELLY double-sided Very High Bond Tape, 3M 4905 VHB Double-Sided Tape Clear Acrylic Adhesive, and 3M SCOTCH Exterior Mounting Tape 4011 and VHB Tapes, both adhesive and foam.
Spine shim 188 can optionally be affixed to binder clip 130 using adhesive 180 or another adhesive. This can provide a square spine appearance even when using rounded binder clips, wire binding, or other non-square binding technologies.
Inner cover sheet 121 can also be a continuous sheet wrapped around sheets 110, as shown by carry-through 123. A first-side inner cover portion on one side of the plurality of sheets 110 is defined, corresponding to inner cover sheet 121 as labeled. A second-side inner cover portion on the opposite side of the plurality of sheets 110 is also defined, corresponding to second inner cover sheet 122 as labeled. Either portion can be either the front or the back of the bound document.
Outer cover sheet 141 or inner cover sheets 121, 122 can be of any media, hard or soft. Examples of materials include, but are not limited to, cardboard, paperboard, plastic, paper, any type of animal skin, metal, metallic coated materials, and fabric. The book cover can include a section for insertion of a photograph, paper, memento, or other object on the front cover. The book cover, or at least a portion thereof, can be printable or printed using, for example, thermal printing, ink jet (drop-on-demand or continuous), laser printing, electrophotographic, or other techniques, or can be writable with pens, pencils, or markers.
The book cover can be the same dimensions as the media to be inserted. If it is desirable to have at least some of the media exposed, such as tabbed pages, when the book cover is closed, the book can be narrower than at least some of the media, shorter than at least some of the media, or both. To protect the media, the book cover can be wider than all the media, longer than all the media, or a combination thereof.
Outer cover sheet 141 can be creased or scored at its corners shown in
In step 205, image data for a cover image is received. Step 205 is followed by step 210.
In step 210, the image data for the cover image is divided along a sheet-edge curve into first and second image portions. The sheet-edge curve can be a straight line or another shape. Division can be performed by cropping or interpolating. In various aspects, the spatial resolution of the image data is reduced in a selected blur region (e.g., 10 pixels wide) including the sheet-edge curve. Data can be blurred, frosted, beveled, shadowed, or otherwise modified on either or both sides of the sheet-edge curve to reduce the visibility of the edge. In other examples, the image data can be modified to include features parallel to the sheet-edge curve; this can mask the sheet-edge curve by reducing the extent to which the curve is perceived apart from the content of the printed cover image. Step 210 is followed by step 215 and step 225.
In step 225, which is a second printing step, the second image portion is printed on an outer cover sheet. Steps 215, 225 can be performed in either order. The second image portion is printed borderless with respect to a selected edge, not necessarily straight, of the outer cover sheet. The outer cover sheet can be the same size as or larger than the inner cover sheet. First and second printing steps 215, 225 can include printing the first and second image portions, respectively, using a single printing device. Two identical or different printing devices can also be used. Steps 215, 225 can also include printing the first and second image portions, respectively, on respective sheets of a single type of media, e.g., photo paper, or on respective sheets of different types of media, e.g., glossy paper and matte paper. Step 225 is followed by step 230, or optional step 227.
In step 227, a second inner cover sheet is printed. Dividing step 210 further includes dividing the image data along a second sheet-edge curve to form a third image portion. In this step 227, a third printing step, the third image portion is printed on the second inner cover sheet so that a second alignment location is defined on the second inner cover sheet corresponding to the second sheet-edge curve. Binding step 220 further includes binding the second inner cover sheet opposite the plurality of sheets from the inner cover sheet. Second printing step 225 includes printing the second image portion borderlessly with respect to a second selected edge (straight or not) of the outer cover sheet. Cover-affixing step 230 further includes affixing the printed outer cover sheet to the second inner cover sheet so that the second selected edge aligns (within tolerances) with the second alignment location. Step 227 is followed by step 230.
In step 215, which is a first printing step, the first image portion is printed on an inner cover sheet. An alignment location is defined on the inner cover sheet corresponding to the sheet-edge curve. In various examples, the first image portion includes thumbnails or other graphical representations of content in the bound document, e.g., thumbnails of photos in a photobook. In other examples, the first image portion includes personalized content that is not merely representative of content appearing in the bound document. For example, the first image portion can include purchaser names, dedications, metadata or other information about the content, or print-shop or equipment-vendor marketing information (e.g., “printed on a KODAK printer”). Step 215 is followed by step 220.
In step 220, the inner cover sheet and the plurality of sheets are bound together. This can be done by various techniques, including clamping in a binder clip, wire-binding, saddle-stitching, or other binding techniques. A second inner cover sheet can also be bound opposite the plurality of sheets from the inner cover sheet.
Step 220 can also include wrapping the inner cover sheet around the plurality of sheets to define first-side and second-side inner cover portions of the inner cover sheet on opposite sides of the plurality of sheets (either portion can be front or back). Cover-affixing step 230 can then include affixing the outer cover sheet to the first-side inner cover portion so that the selected edge aligns with the alignment location, and affixing the outer cover sheet to the second-side inner cover portion. Step 220 is followed by step 230, and can include optional steps 222 and 224.
In optional step 222, the inner cover sheet and the plurality of sheets are inserted into a binder clip and clamped therewith. The binder clip can include a center panel and two side panels, e.g., as shown in
In optional step 224, a spine shim is affixed to the binder clip before cover-affixing step 230. The spine shim can be rectangular or another shape, can be thin (e.g., <=1 mm thick), and can be made from metal, plastic, or other materials rigid enough to withstand handling without deforming significantly. A spine shim provides the outer cover with a flat-spine look in aspects using binding methods that do not result in a flat spine, e.g., wire binding. Step 224 is followed by step 230.
In step 230, which is a cover-affixing step, after binding step 220, the outer cover sheet is affixed to the inner cover sheet so that the selected edge of the outer cover sheet aligns with the alignment location to form the bound document. As a result of the alignment, the first and second image portions align to form the full image. Alignment is performed within desired tolerances, e.g., 1 mm, ( 1/300)″, or ( 1/600)″. Tolerances can be selected based on the distance between the reader and the document, the resolution of the cover image, or the image content of the cover image. The sheet-edge curve, the alignment location, and the selected edge can be straight (within tolerances such as those given above) or curved. If a second inner cover sheet was used (step 220, above), the outer cover sheet can further be affixed to the second inner cover sheet. Step 230 can include optional step 232.
In optional step 232, pressure-sensitive adhesive (PSA) is used. Binding step 220 includes binding the inner cover sheet near a spine edge thereof, and the inner cover sheet includes pressure-sensitive adhesive (PSA) arranged closer to the spine edge than the alignment line. Cover-affixing step 230 includes this step 232, in which pressure is applied to affix the outer cover sheet to the inner cover sheet using the PSA.
In step 310, image data for an interior image are received. Step 310 is followed by step 320.
In step 320, the image data for the interior image are divided into a margin image portion and a bulk image portion. The division can be along a straight line or a non-straight curve of a desired shape. Step 320 is followed by step 330.
In step 330, before binding step 220, the bulk image portion is printed on an interior side of the inner cover sheet. Step 330 is followed by step 340.
In step 340, before cover-affixing step 230, the margin image portion is printed on an interior side of the outer cover sheet. Step 340 is followed by step 230.
In step 220, the inner cover and sheets are bound as described above with reference to
In step 230, in addition to the description with respect to
Inner cover sheet 121, the plurality of sheets 110, and optionally second inner cover sheet 122 are bound so that alignment location 129 is defined on inner cover sheet 121 corresponding to the sheet-edge curve, as discussed above.
Second image portion 194 is printed on outer cover sheet 141. Second image portion 194 is printed borderlessly with respect to selected edge 149 of outer cover sheet 141.
Supplemental cover sheet 441 is affixed to inner cover sheet 121, e.g., using adhesive 480. Selected edge 449 of supplemental cover sheet 441 aligns with alignment location 129, within tolerances. Alignment location 129 and corresponding features can be selected based on the thickness of the final bound book and the length of outer cover sheet 141: the thicker the book, the closer alignment location 129 is to the spine of the book. Outer cover sheet 141 is also affixed to inner cover sheet 121 so that selected edge 149 aligns with alignment location 129, within tolerances. Any gap between supplemental cover sheet 441 and outer cover sheet 141 can be filled by toner, plastic, potting compound, or other techniques, or can be left unfilled.
Supplemental cover sheet 441 can wrap around the end of inner cover sheet 121, as shown by extension 442. Extension 442 can be adhered to inner cover sheet 121 by adhesive between the two (for clarity, not shown).
Carry-through 123, binder clip 130, adhesive 180, and spine shim 188 are as discussed above with respect to
In step 205, image data for a cover image is received. Step 205 is followed by step 210.
In step 210, the image data for the cover image is divided along a sheet-edge curve into first and second image portions. The sheet-edge curve can be a straight line or another shape. Step 210 is followed by step 225, step 515, and step 220 in any order or simultaneously.
In step 220, the inner cover sheet and the plurality of sheets are bound together, as discussed above. An alignment location is defined on the inner cover sheet corresponding to the sheet-edge curve. Step 220 is followed by steps 531 and 535.
In step 515, which is a first printing step, the first image portion is printed on a supplemental cover sheet. The first image portion is printed borderlessly with respect to a selected edge (straight or not) of the supplemental cover sheet. Step 515 is followed by steps 531 and 535.
In step 225, which is a second printing step, the second image portion is printed on an outer cover sheet. Steps 515, 225 can be performed in either order. The second image portion is printed borderlessly with respect to a selected edge, not necessarily straight, of the outer cover sheet. Step 225 is followed by steps 531 and 535.
Steps 531 and 535 can be performed in any order or simultaneously. In step 531, which is a supplemental-cover-affixing step, after binding step 220, the supplemental cover sheet is affixed to the inner cover sheet so that the selected edge of the supplemental cover sheet aligns with the alignment location.
In step 535, which is a cover-affixing step, after binding step 220, the outer cover sheet is affixed to the inner cover sheet so that the selected edge of the outer cover sheet aligns with the alignment location to form the bound document. As a result of the alignment, the first and second image portions align to form the full image.
Referring back to
Inner cover sheet 121 wraps around sheets 110 using carry-through 123, as discussed above. Inner cover sheet 121 therefore includes carry-through 123 and inner cover sheet 122. Inner cover sheet 121 has first side 131 and second side 132. First side 131 includes a first portion on which additional image 192 is printed, and a second portion (beginning at alignment location 129 and extending, with gaps, counter-clockwise around side 131) over which adhesive 180 is disposed. The first and second portions are separated by an alignment curve (not shown; corresponds to alignment location 129).
Binder clip 130 binds inner cover sheet 121 and the plurality of sheets 110 so that second side 132 of inner cover sheet 121 faces the plurality of sheets 110. Outer cover sheet 141 is affixed by adhesive 180 to side 131 of inner cover sheet 121 so that selected edge 149 aligns (within tolerances, as discussed herein) with the alignment curve (alignment location 129).
Image 192 on side 131 of inner cover sheet 121 can include text or image content. It can be printed simplex (only on side 131) or duplex (also on side 132). Image content described above with respect to step 215 (
Inner cover sheet 621, sheets 110, and optional second inner cover sheet 622 are bound together, as discussed above, e.g., using binder clip 130. Inner cover sheet 621 and second inner cover sheet 622 are shown as extending significantly less distance from the spine than outer cover sheet 641. However, any length inner cover sheet 621 or second inner cover sheet 622 can be used. Inner cover sheet has first side 631 and second side 632, and adhesive 180 is disposed over a portion of first side 631.
In various examples, inner cover sheet 621 includes carry-through 623 and second inner cover sheet 622. Inner cover sheet 621 has a length less than the length of sheets 110 in the plurality of sheets. In other examples, the plurality of sheets 110 forms a stack having thickness 611. Inner cover sheet 621 has a length equal to thickness 611 plus an adhesive allowance. The portion of inner cover sheet 621 over which adhesive 180 is disposed includes two spaced-apart areas on first side 631 that are not adjacent to spine edges 610 of sheets 110, which are the edges of sheets 110 closest to binder clip 130. In the example shown, two separate segments of adhesive 180 are disposed over side 631 away from carry-through 623 of inner cover sheet 621.
Outer cover sheet 641 is a cover for document 600. Outer cover sheet 641 has a length more than twice the length of the sheets in the plurality of sheets, so it can wrap around the sheets. Image data for a cover image is printed simplex on outer cover sheet 641 as image 694. Outer cover sheet 641 is affixed to inner cover sheet 621 or second inner cover sheet 622 using adhesive 180, e.g., pressure-sensitive adhesive strips with or without substrates. In various examples, interior image 695 is printed on the side of outer cover sheet 641 opposite image 694, i.e., outer cover sheet 641 is printed duplex.
Sheets 110 are bound together, as discussed above, e.g., using binder clip 130. Outer cover sheet 741 is a cover for document 700. Image data for a cover image is printed simplex on outer cover sheet 741 as image 694. Outer cover sheet 741 is affixed to binder clip 130 using adhesive 180, e.g., pressure-sensitive adhesive strips with or without substrates. Binder clip 130 has a squared-off shape (not necessarily exactly 90° angles) to provide both a square spine and the binding force to secure sheets 110 together. A spine shim can also be used, e.g., as shown in
In various aspects, outer cover sheet 741 has a length more than twice the length of sheets 110. Binder clip 130 has interior 731 and exterior 732. The plurality of sheets 110 are bound together in interior 731. Binder clip 130 has adhesive 180 disposed over exterior 732. Outer cover sheet 741 is affixed by adhesive 180 to binder clip 130.
In various aspects, binder clip 130 includes center panel 735C and side panels 735A, 735B. The respective angles A, B between center panel 735C and side panels 735A, 735B are less than 90°. Adhesive 180 is disposed over exterior 732 of center panel 735C and of each side panel 735A, 735B.
The invention is inclusive of combinations of the aspects described herein. References to “a particular aspect” and the like refer to features that are present in at least one aspect of the invention. Separate references to “an aspect” or “particular aspects” or the like do not necessarily refer to the same aspect or aspects; however, such aspects are not mutually exclusive, unless so indicated or as are readily apparent to one of skill in the art. The use of singular or plural in referring to the “method” or “methods” and the like is not limiting. The word “or” is used in this disclosure in a non-exclusive sense, unless otherwise explicitly noted.
The invention has been described in detail with particular reference to certain preferred aspects thereof, but it will be understood that variations, combinations, and modifications can be effected by a person of ordinary skill in the art within the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application is co-filed with and has related subject matter to U.S. patent application Ser. No. ______, (attorney docket no. K001176), filed herewith, titled “PRODUCING BOUND DOCUMENT HAVING INNER COVER SHEET,” which is incorporated herein by reference.