Does no one ship decent-sized hardcover books anymore???
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Some of my players don't like this. Often they prefer the 10 x 12 inch standard music sheet rather than US Letter or A4 formats (yes, I know they are different).Gary wrote: ↑Tue Apr 21, 2020 11:06 am I quit this hard-copy mailing years ago. I eMail the music for the recipient to print out at their end, reducing the total cost that would've been spent for mailing and packings. If the recipient feels better with something tanbible, I send a CD with the materials on it for printing out.
Howcome you guys in the U.S don't like A4? That's the best.
Daniel, it's hard as heck to find paper cut into A4 size in the US. American paper sizes are cuts from 34 x 22 inches where Metric sizes are standardized on A1 (841 x 594 mm, about 33 x 23 inches). A4 is a little narrower and a little longer than US Letter Size. I don't know that either is better than the other.
Yes, that's exactly why a lot of music was printed in 10x13 size: to make it harder to copy. And also, I suspect, harder to store, forcing people to by specially sized music folders.harrisonreed wrote: ↑Wed Apr 22, 2020 1:11 am It's not any better for music. Sheet music should be on like 10"x13" (and double that width if you aren't using comb binding)
Good luck finding a print service to do that size. Lulu won't do it for me, or any other self publisher.
Buying a printer that handles that size and can do a pro quality job is extremely expensive, it's like music publishers lobbied against being able to do it yourself lol.
The adoption of the large size music sheets predates photocopiers by about a century. Copy protection was not on the horizon back then.AndrewMeronek wrote: ↑Wed Apr 22, 2020 8:08 amYes, that's exactly why a lot of music was printed in 10x13 size: to make it harder to copy. And also, I suspect, harder to store, forcing people to by specially sized music folders.harrisonreed wrote: ↑Wed Apr 22, 2020 1:11 am It's not any better for music. Sheet music should be on like 10"x13" (and double that width if you aren't using comb binding)
Good luck finding a print service to do that size. Lulu won't do it for me, or any other self publisher.
Buying a printer that handles that size and can do a pro quality job is extremely expensive, it's like music publishers lobbied against being able to do it yourself lol.
I was just pulling your imperial leg - I had a hunch that A4-sized paper would be hard to find in the U.S, and I just wanted to mock your incomprehensible and confusing measurements with a jestering slight. I mean: Whats up with 1,685" or 5'7 3/4" eh?BGuttman wrote: ↑Wed Apr 22, 2020 1:08 amDaniel, it's hard as heck to find paper cut into A4 size in the US. American paper sizes are cuts from 34 x 22 inches where Metric sizes are standardized on A1 (841 x 594 mm, about 33 x 23 inches). A4 is a little narrower and a little longer than US Letter Size. I don't know that either is better than the other.
I just received some music (Snedecor - Lyrical Études) from Hickey's in a (non-USPS) very sturdy 12"x10" brown cardboard mailing envelope. Arrived in perfect condition - postman respected the "Do Not Bend" sticker and dropped off the envelope at our front door instead of cramming into the mailbox.harrisonreed wrote: ↑Wed Apr 22, 2020 12:30 am Hickeys ships their sheet music out and uses ... let's say, repurposed USPS and UPS mailers as rigid inserts around the corners of the music. They're free so I guess they think that is ok to do...