vellum

noun·/ˈvɛl.əm/

A fine writing material made from prepared animal skin, prized for smoothness, durability, and the way ink seems to sit with quiet authority. Vellum carries the sense of permanence, text meant to outlast weather and politics.

The charter on vellum looked less written than engraved, as if the law had grown a skin.

Etymology

From Old French velin, from Latin vitulinus “of a calf” (vitulus “calf”). The word remembers the body behind the page.

Related Words

parchmentsimilar material; often broader term
codexbook-form commonly made on such leaves
illuminatedecorate manuscripts; frequent companion craft
palimpsesta scraped-and-reused skin-page