One of the most professional ways to present your documents or paper to others is by binding them. Nowadays, even manuals, reports, and brochures come in a binding form, in order to provide a professional touch to it. it does not matter whether one is going to give the document to their employees or clients, binding of the document of the paper adds a touch of professional elegance.

Talking about binding, one gets to see various forms of binding, such as coil bindings, slide bindings, plastic comb binding, thermal binding, binding screws and rings, and many other forms. All these forms of binding are appropriate for the book market. However, the type of binding one chooses, totally depends on the type of book and its purpose of use.

Saddle Stitch Binding:
Saddle stitch binding is the simplest way to bind books in our time. This method is used to bind notebooks, brochures, pamphlets, and other small books. This is a common type of book binding, and one that you will see this type of binding everyday.
A book stapled at the center two or three times is nothing but saddle stitched. The saddle refers to the center of the folded papers where it is stapled, which is why saddle stitch binding is one of the most common an popular methods of book binding.
You can also staple from one side of the book if you don’t prefer center stapled books. A long arm stapler is enough to start saddle stitching your books. Saddle stitch book binding is a popular method because of its combination of ease as well as overall effectiveness. If you are just getting started with binding books then this is a pretty good style for you to tackle to get a feeling for how it can work.

Thermal/Tape Binding:
Thermal binding is one of the recently developed type of bookbinding. In this method lose pages are secured or joined with a strip of plastic or tape and then fused with heat. It is similar to the perfect binding method where the pages are glued together. These are often used in a wide variety of office or business scenarios and are far less common with hobbyists, although thermal bookbinding can often happen simply because it’s useful on a practical scale for scripts, projects, collaborations, or many other similar situations. In other words, this might be one of the most practical bookbinding styles
This method is used mainly for office documents and presentations. It gives a neat and sturdy look to the finished books. Sometimes it is also referred to as Velo binding.

Spiral Binding:
Spiral bindings may be made of either plastic or wire and allow the printed document to lie flat and to double over, useful characteristics for documents such as technical manuals, notebooks, and calendars.
Spiral binding allows play between pages. One cannot add pages to documents once they are spiral bound. Also, rough handling may crush the spirals. Spiral wire coils range from 1/4″ to 2″ in diameter. They can bind books of up to 24″ in length.

Wire-O Binding:
A Wire-O binding holds the covers and pages of a document firmly in place by a double-loop wire inserted through holes drilled in their left edges. All of the document’s pages lay flat when opened, can turn easily through 360°, and stay in perfect registration with adjoining pages.
Wire-O bindings come in nine standard colors and loop diameters from 3/16″ to 1-1/4″. They can handle documents from 1/8″ to 1″ thick. Often, they are used to bind reference books, reports, proposals, and calendars. They are durable, but do not permit printing on the document spine or the insertion of new pages.

Tape Binding:
This process places a cloth strip of adhesive tape down the bind edge of the book and wraps around about half an inch onto the cover front and back.