End papers may be made of special papers used by the binder, but it is wise to have a 100-pound manila guarded with jaconet on the outside and also on the inside of the fold.
Make end papers and fly-leaves of 60-pound kraft paper or 80-pound manila, guarded with jaconet on one side of the sheet.
The English cloth called jaconet is the best for this purpose.
Fly-leaves should be made of white book paper, 80 pounds to the ream, guarded with jaconet on both sides.
Therefore, when the end paper is pasted to the board it carries with it first the canton flannel, then the bands and lastly the jaconet guard.
Guarding with jaconet prevents the threads which lie in the middle of the signatures from pulling through the paper.
End papers may be made of paper specially made for the binder, but it should be equal in strength to an 80-pound manila paper and should be guarded with jaconet on the outside of the fold in the same way as fly-leaves.
Ordinarily, a book defective in this manner should be bound at once; but if it is deemed best to attempt mending it, a strip of jaconet should be cut 1-1/4 inches wide and the length of the book.
If the back of the signature is badly worn, mend it by guarding with jaconet on the outside, or by pasting a strip of bond paper down through the center of the fold.
Underdress of jaconet muslin, trimmed with lace, or embroidery.
Underdress and undersleeves, jaconet muslin, trimmed with lace or embroidery.
Cut a guard of jaconet or bond paper three-fourths of an inch wide and as long as the book.
When small folded maps are badly torn line them throughout with Japanese tissue, jaconet or nainsook.
Prepare and place end sheets and waste papers as above described, except here paste the jaconet guard only along one side, the outer, of the folds of all of them.
Guard with jaconet the inner side of the inside leaf of every signature that is at all worn or weak; if badly worn guard also the outer side of the outside leaf.
After rounding and backing, glue to the back and over onto the sides, passing beyond the jaconet guards, a strip of medium weight, soft, bleached muslin.
We have also seen a jaconet dress, embroidered a l'Anglaise as an apron to the waist; the body embroidered at the edge flat, as well as in the skirts and sleeves; and three knots of blue taffeta fastened the bodice.
For the country, dresses of Chinese nankeen and Persian jaconet are worn; and to protect from the sun, a kind of hood, of similar stuff.
To do this take a piece of jaconet and pin it out flat on the board, then evenly paste the back of the map with thin paste in which there are no lumps, and lay it on the linen, rub down through blotting-paper, and leave to dry.
If the two pieces of jaconet are carefully pulled apart when dry, half the paper should be attached to each, unless at any point the paste has failed to stick, when the paper will tear.
The paper to be split should be well pasted on both sides with a thickish paste, and fine linen or jaconet placed on each side.
The jaconet and paper attached must be put into warm water until the split paper floats off.
For heavy books a strip of jaconet is folded in the middle of the inner sheet of each section before sewing, and, in any case, this should be done with every first and last three sheets.
The end section is pasted in behind the first sheet of the first section, the white sheet is pasted upon the second sheet of the ruled paper; around the whole section a strip of jaconet is sewn, or 3a.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "jaconet" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.