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  2. The Reagan Diaries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Reagan_Diaries

    The diaries number five volumes of thick, maroon, leather-bound books, normally kept in the White House residence, written in simple, sing-song prose, with many misspellings. [4] Former First Lady Nancy Reagan made the diaries available to be transcribed in 2005, and the Reagan Library Foundation partnered with HarperCollins to print them in ...

  3. Richard Gordon Smith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Gordon_Smith

    He must have been a man of some means because he traveled first class, keeping a series of eight large leather-bound diaries in which he recorded his experiences. He called these his "Ill-Spelled Diaries", and they are full of idiosyncratic and chauvinistic observations of things he encountered, his impressions of Japan, the Russo-Japanese War ...

  4. Fred Williams (artist) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fred_Williams_(artist)

    The building houses Williams' easel, brushes, the leather-bound diaries he kept from 1963 until his death, clipping books, a range of works and includes a gallery for hanging and photographing the artist's works. [32] Works that are donated to public galleries and museums are prepared there. [32]

  5. The Red Leather Diary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Red_Leather_Diary

    The Red Leather Diary: Reclaiming a Life Through the Pages of a Lost Journal is a non-fiction book by Lily Koppel about a discarded 75-year-old diary, rescued from a dumpster, based on Koppel's 2006 New York Times [1] City section cover story. The diary was kept from 1929 to 1934 by a young Manhattanite with literary and artistic aspirations ...

  6. Maison Maquet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maison_Maquet

    Maquet also manufactured travel diaries and notebooks. The French author Prosper Mérimée notably wrote the short novel La Chambre Bleue in 1866, [ 24 ] dedicated to Empress Eugénie , on a Maquet notebook bound with dark green Morocco leather, discreetly hand-tooled in gold leaf.

  7. Limp binding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limp_binding

    From about 1775 to 1825, limp leather was commonly used for pocket books, but by the 1880s limp bindings came to be largely restricted to devotional books, diaries, and sentimental verse, sometimes with yapp edges. [1] Yapp edges are bent edges on a limp binding projecting beyond the textblock to reduce damage.