The simple difference
Perfect bound books are glued at the spine with a wraparound cover. They look more like paperback books, polished catalogs, annual reports, and thicker magazines.
Spiral bound books are punched and bound with a plastic coil. They are easier to open flat, flip around, and use at a desk, counter, jobsite, or training session.
When perfect bound makes sense
- You want a polished book or catalog look
- The book does not need to lay flat
- The page count is thick enough for a spine
- The cover can be built as a full wrap
- The inside margins can handle the glue edge
- You want a more retail or presentation-style finish
When spiral bound makes sense
- The book needs to lay flat
- People will write in it or use it while working
- It is a training manual, recipe book, workbook, or field guide
- You want a clear cover or backer option
- The book may need easy page turning during a class or meeting
The turnaround question
Neither binding should be chosen only because of speed. Perfect bound books can be fast when they qualify, including 3-day turnaround on qualifying jobs, but they still need correct spine setup, cover setup, glue time, and trimming.
Spiral binding can be a better choice when the book needs to function like a manual or lay flat. Brandon can help decide before the file is built the wrong way.
What to send Brandon
- Interior PDF
- Page count
- Finished size
- Quantity
- How the book will be used
- Deadline
- Any cover or divider needs
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.