The quick answer
Perfect bound is usually better for thicker books, polished catalogs, reports, manuals, and sales books.
Saddle stitch is usually better for thinner booklets, programs, small catalogs, comic-style booklets, and pieces that fold and staple through the spine.
How saddle stitch works
Saddle stitch booklets are folded and stapled along the spine. The page count normally needs to work in groups of 4 because each printed sheet creates four finished pages after folding.
That makes saddle stitch a practical option for event programs, smaller catalogs, short guides, and booklets that do not need a thick spine.
How perfect bound works
Perfect bound books are glued at the spine with a wraparound cover. The front cover, spine, and back cover are built as one cover file. The spine width depends on the final paper and page count.
That gives the book a more polished look, but it also means the setup needs to be more exact.
When saddle stitch is the better call
- The booklet is thinner
- The page count works cleanly in 4-page increments
- The job needs a practical fast booklet format
- The customer does not need a printed spine
- The piece is an event program, handout, or short guide
When perfect bound is the better call
- The book is thick enough for a spine
- The project needs a polished catalog or paperback feel
- The cover needs soft touch, laminate, or premium finish options
- The book is a report, product catalog, or high-value presentation piece
- The timeline allows correct binding, drying, and trimming
What Brandon checks
Brandon checks whether the book is thick enough, whether the page count makes sense, whether the cover is built correctly, and whether the deadline is realistic. If saddle stitch is the smarter call, he will tell you before the file is sent down the wrong production path.
Get with Brandon before the book goes to print
Perfect bound books look simple after they are finished, but the details matter before production starts. Send Brandon the interior PDF, cover file, finished size, page count, quantity, paper preference, finishing, and deadline. He can help flag setup problems early or confirm the job is ready to move.