![]() The trouble with pigments, though, is that they tend to crack, peel, and flake off over time. As such, the era’s most fashionable shade of green pigment could grace the covers of popular books. Bookmakers produced a colorful array of books with dyes, which are solutions that chemically bond to the substance they’re applied to, and pigments, which are materials that physically coat the substance, like dried mud on a Sunday dress. What we do know is that book covers could suddenly take on a wide range of hues. “It meant a lot of money to publishers, so unfortunately, there’s not a lot of documentary evidence about bookcloth making,” Tedone says. “They were making books accessible to a much wider demographic, catering to people on all levels of the economic spectrum.”Ĭloth-bound books took off in the 1840s, and the process of creating bookcloth became a closely guarded secret. “Cloth was so much less expensive than leather, which meant you could sell books at different price points.” The process affected more than just the publisher’s bottom line it changed how books were read. In the 1820s publisher William Pickering and bookbinder Archibald Leighton developed the first commercially viable process to coat fabric with starch, filling in the gaps of the weave and producing a sturdy material: the first bookcloth. Traditional clothing fabric can’t withstand the book binding process, and it isn’t sturdy enough to function as a cover. ![]() Early 19th-century books were handcrafted, leather-bound artisan creations, but the industrial revolution quickly provided a way to mass produce books for a growing population of readers.īy Melissa Tedone Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library While toxic green goods flooded parts of Europe and the United States, another invention transformed the bookmaking industry. Despite the risks, emerald green was ingrained into Victorian life-a color to literally die for. Wallpapers shed toxic green dust that covered food and coated floors, and clothing colored with the pigment irritated the skin and poisoned the wearer. To say that Victorian England was bathed in emerald green is an understatement: By 1860 more than 700 tons of the pigment had been produced in the country alone.Īrsenic’s toxicity was known at the time, but the vibrant color was nevertheless popular and cheap to produce. It was used everywhere, from clothing and wallpaper to fake flowers and paint. The toxic pigment was commercially developed in 1814 by the Wilhelm Dye and White Lead Company in Schweinfurt, Germany. A color to die forĮmerald green, also known as Paris green, Vienna green, and Schweinfurt green, is the product of combining copper acetate with arsenic trioxide, producing copper acetoarsenite. ![]() ![]() “Any library that collects mid-19th-century cloth publishers' bindings is likely to have at least one or two.” So just how common are these poison green books? “It's somewhat hard to predict because our data set is still small, but I would certainly expect there could be thousands of these books around the world,” Tedone says. Serious cases of arsenic poisoning can lead to heart failure, lung disease, neurological dysfunction, and-in extreme situations-death. Against the skin, arsenic can cause irritations and lesions. People who handle them frequently, such as librarians or researchers, may accidentally inhale or ingest particles that contain arsenic, which could make them feel lethargic and light-headed or suffer from diarrhea and stomach cramps. While these poisonous books would likely cause only minor harm unless someone decided to devour a nearly 200-year-old tome, the alluringly vibrant books are not totally without risk. Tedone even found an emerald green book on sale at a local bookstore, which she purchased. Seventy of them are covered with vivid green bookcloth, and the rest have the pigment incorporated onto paper labels or decorative features. To date, the team has uncovered 88 19th-century books containing emerald green. So Melissa Tedone, the lab head for library materials conservation at the Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library in Delaware, has launched an effort dubbed the Poison Book Project to locate and catalogue these noxious volumes. Many of them are going unnoticed on shelves and in collections. These toxic books, produced in the 19th century, are bound in vivid cloth colored with a notorious pigment known as emerald green that’s laced with arsenic. The poisons described in these books are merely words on a page, but some books scattered throughout the world are literally poisonous. Libraries and rare book collections often carry volumes that feature poisons on their pages, from famous murder mysteries to seminal works on toxicology and forensics.
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