All About Fabric Notebook Covers

Enon Avital
Dapper Notes
Published in
4 min readFeb 26, 2017
Five different Dapper Notes covers

Out of all the things that make Dapper Notes special, one feature that stands out above the rest are the fabric covers. If you haven’t seen my notebooks in person yet, let me explain:

How Dapper Notes covers are made

When I set out to create a new kind of pocket notebook, I gravitated towards fabrics right away. When I stepped into my local fabric supplier and found an endless supply of patterns, textures, and colors, I knew I’d be able to create many special notebooks and never run out of new ideas.

But fabric alone does not make a good cover. Even the heaviest linen-threaded cloths aren’t thick enough to create a notebook cover that feels like one. Through trial and error I’ve discovered that binding the fabric to a book cloth material not only creates a strong cover, but also gives me an opportunity to add a pop of color.

A roll of book cloth

What is book cloth?

Traditionally, hard cover books and spines are wrapped with a thin fabric-like material. Look closely at any bound book around you, and you’ll notice that the wrapping material is super thin, but at the same time is really durable and can withstand a lot of abuse. What makes book cloth so strong? In short: the backing.

Book cloth is manufactured using strong natural or synthetic fibers with a very tight weave, and has its own backing of either paper or glue. The backing is there for two purposes:

  1. It creates a strong, unrippable fabric
  2. When you bind it to a book, the glue won’t seep through
Cutaway of Dapper Notes covers, before sewing into a notebook

Connecting the two

Creating a new Dapper Notes cover takes a little bit of time, and a lot a bit of experimentation. It’s true that my local fabric shop has thousands of options, but not all can be used to make a Dapper Notes cover. The perfect material has to be not too thick (like canvas), not too thin (like silk), and woven well enough so that it doesn’t fall apart (like satin).

When I find a material that seems promising in terms of its durability, and has a design or texture that makes me swoon, I create a test notebook for myself to carry, use, and test. If the fabric passes my tests, it gets made into the next Dapper Notes edition.

Next, I bind the fabric to book cloth using archival ph-neutral glue. Once each sheet has been glued, smoothed, pressed, and dried, I cut perfectly-sized covers for one-by-one assembly.

(from left) A brand new Syrah Syrah edition. My personal well-used, well-loved notebook

Standing the test of time

If you use pocket notebooks like I do — carrying them in your pocket, bending them, tossing into a bag, and using them every day — you’re probably well versed in how they age. Traditional craft cover notebooks, for example, have a tendency to crease and their covers fall off.

Dapper Notes stand the test of time in their own unique way. Fabric naturally doesn’t crease like paper does, and the linen thread binding guarantees a cover that will always stay on. At the same time, fabrics fray, as do the edges of some Dapper Notes. The effect will vary greatly by material, but once you use you Dapper Notes for a while, some threads will wiggle their way out.

Natural character of The Runner edition

I intentionally don’t seal the edges of Dapper Notes, because I have a fondness for the fraying as a sign of a well-loved notebook. You can, if you prefer, either seal you Dapper Notes ahead of time with this specialty liquid, or snip the longer frays using a small scissor.

Whichever way you use your Dapper Notes, know that they are made with love and attention, and will last you a long, long time.

--

--