| *''Ôbon'' ("large books"), roughly 10x7 in., and ''chûbon'' ("medium books"), which were roughly half that size, were made using Mino paper, which was roughly 10-13 x 13-17 inches in size. | | *''Ôbon'' ("large books"), roughly 10x7 in., and ''chûbon'' ("medium books"), which were roughly half that size, were made using Mino paper, which was roughly 10-13 x 13-17 inches in size. |
− | *''Hanshi-bon'', roughly 9x6 inches in size, and ''kobon'' ("small books"), roughly half that size, were made from Hanshi paper, roughly 9-10 x 13-14 inches wide.<ref>Kazuko Hioki, "History and Physical Characteristics of Printed Books in Early Modern Japan," presented at [http://historyofthejapanesebook.weebly.com/ Histories of the Japanese Book: Past, Present, Future] symposium, UC Santa Barbara, June 1 2013.</ref> | + | *''Hanshi-bon'', roughly 9x6 inches in size, and ''kobon'' ("small books"), roughly 6x5", were made from Hanshi paper, roughly 9-10 x 13-14 inches wide.<ref>Kazuko Hioki, "History and Physical Characteristics of Printed Books in Early Modern Japan," presented at [http://historyofthejapanesebook.weebly.com/ Histories of the Japanese Book: Past, Present, Future] symposium, UC Santa Barbara, June 1 2013.</ref> |