PDF - The Veatchs
Transcription
PDF - The Veatchs
THE VEATCHS ARTS OF THE BOOK catalo gue 74 THE VEATCHS ARTS OF THE BOOK Post Office Box 328, Northampton, Massachusetts 01061 [email protected] www.veatchs.com phone 413-584-1867 CATALOGUE 74 is sent to our friends and customers with our thanks and our best wishes for the holiday season. bob & lynne ordering information Payment is accepted in U. S. dollar check drawn on a U. S. bank, Visa and Mastercard. Libraries may request deferred billing. Massachusetts residents must add 6¼% sales tax. Any purchase may be returned within ten days. Shipping is additional. Item 72. Officina Bodoni. Ovid. Item 5. Ashendene Press. front cover: Item 56. Italian Block-printed Papers. nb: Many of these books are not on our web site. Item 1. Abbe. A World Heritage Site 1.Abbe, Elfriede. Viollet-le-Duc, Eugène Emmanuel. THE CITY OF CARCASSONNE. Manchester Center, 988. 0 × 3. 54 pages. Wood engravings by Elfriede Abbe throughout the text, printed from the original blocks, along with reproductions of the author’s original drawings from the Dictionnaire Raisonné de l’Architecture Française. Three-part binding: gray silk woven in a building-block pattern and black paper over boards, red spine and cover labels. Fine. Number 81 of 110 signed copies. Printed by the artist in black, silver, and red. Carcassonne is a fortified town in Languedoc, founded in the 5th century by Visigoths building on Roman beginnings. Viollet-le-Duc restored the fortress in 1853.$450 the veatchs art s of the bo ok Item 2. Allen Press. 2.Allen Press. Hall, Basil. THE GREAT POLYGLOT BIBLES. Including a Leaf from the First: The Complutensian of Acalá, 54–7. San Francisco: BCC, 966. 0¾ × 5. (38) pages. Loose in printed wraps as issued with clam-shell case (one corner bumped). Fine. The original leaf is set in three columns with text in Greek, Latin, and Hebrew. One of 400.$600 catalo gue 74 3.Allen Press. Allen, Lewis. PRINTING WITH THE HANDPRESS. Kentfield, 969. 8 × 2. (), 75, (2) pages. Printed Irish linen over boards. Fine with prospectus. Many small press printers learned their craft from this book. One of 140 copies printed in several colors on handmade paper.$2,000 4.Anderson, John; James Fraser; Eleanor Friedl. JOHN ANDERSON AND THE PICKERING PRESS, An Autobiography. With a Pickering Press Bibliography. Madison , (995). 8½ × ½. x, 74 pages, 20 color plates of Anderson’s typography. Linen cloth, leather spine label, cloth slipcase. Fine with prospectus, 2 Christmas cards, and several notes to Philip Sperling. Anderson’s typographic career spanned 45 years—from the 1930s with Goudy and Beilenson to more recent associations with John DePol and Claire Van Vliet (his apprentice). One of 150 copies handsomely printed on dampened Rives at the Yellow Barn Press.$95 5.Ashendene Press. Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de. THE FIRST PART [-THE SECOND PART] OF THE HISTOIRE OF THE VALOROUS AND WITTIE KNIGHT-ERRANT DON-QUIXOTE OF THE MANCHA. Translated out of Spanish by Thomas Shelton. Translated by Thomas Shelton. London, 927 & 928. Two folio volumes, 2 × 7. xiii, 268, (); x, 256, () pages. Printed in two columns in black and red, with woodcut decorative initials and borders by Louise Powell. Full dark green morocco over heavy boards by W. H. Smith and Sons (Douglas Cockerell) for the press. Slight extremity wear. A fine set with the prospectus. One of 225 sets on handmade Batchelor paper (20 copies were on vellum). A grand folio production printed in the first use of Ptolemy type. The initials, reminiscent of those done for the Kelmscott Press, were a significant departure from St. John Hornby’s usual calligraphic initial letters; this is the only Ashendene publication to use such ornamental material. A selection of the initials in shown on pages 152–4 in the Ashendene bibliography. Most copies were bound in cloth and boards (for 10 guineas). Special bindings in either morocco or pigskin were 14 guineas. W. H. Smith and Sons were responsible for all special Ashendene bindings from 1905 onward. Douglas Cockerell was designer and head of the bindery. Colin Franklin writes in The Private Presses (1969) it is accepted that Ashenthe veatchs art s of the bo ok dene books bound by W. H. Smith are indeed Cockerell bindings.” Franklin writes that Hornby enjoyed his large books best, but that long lines of poetry were problematic. “Of his grand works, Don Quixote in two volumes may be preferred; easier to read and turn pages of prose, and very fine in his later type with Louise Powell’s initials.” The Descriptive Bibliography of . . . The Ashendene Press XXXVI (pages 86–8).$8,000 6.Barbarian Press. Elsted, Crispin. UTILE DULCI. The First Decade at Barbarian Press, 1977 to 1987. A History & Bibliography. Mission, BC, 988. 6 × 0. 52 pages. Illustrated with photos and pressmarks, several of them engraved by John DePol. Cloth and DePol patterned boards, paper label. John DePol’s copy with his bookplate. Fine association copy. One of 150 copies, printed in terra cotta and black from handset types on Mohawk superfine.$400 7.Barbarian Press. Spenser, Edmund. PROTHALAMION & EPITHALAMION. The Wedding Songs of Edmund Spenser. Wood Engravings by Simon Brett. Mission, 998. 5 × 9. Tipped in wood-engraved frontis, (38) pages. Quarter red cloth and patterned boards. Fine with prospectus. One of 100 numbered copies. Three engravings by Brett. Calligraphic initials in red. A lovely edition printed in Cancelleresca Bastarda.$300 8.Barbarian Press. Elsted, Crispin. A NATURAL HISTORY OF SURPRISE. Four Poems & an Essay. (Mission), 2002. 6½ × 0. Tipped-in wood engraved frontis by Peter Lazarov, 20 pages. A portion of the engraving is repeated on the board covers. Fine. Crispin, in addition to being a fine letterpress printer, is a published poet and a Shakespearean actor. One of 120 signed copies printed in Van Dijck type in several colors on dampened Barcham Green handmade papers.$50 9.Barbarian Press. Elsted, Crispin. HOI BARBAROI: A Quarter-century at Barbarian Press. Essays by Simon Brett, Robert Bringhurst, Jan Elsted, and Sjaak Hubregtse. A photographic essay by David Evans. Mission, 2004. Two volumes. 9 × 2. vi, 33, (3) pages illustrated. With 9 tipped-in original leaves and wood engravings. Quarter black silk and printed boards. A red silk tray case holds 32 pieces of ephemera: prospectuses (mostly), keepsakes, broadsides, a catalogue, and catalo gue 74 a bookplate—all fine examples of Barbarian typography. Both are housed in red silk slipcase. Fine. One of 60 deluxe copies, signed by the Elsteds. Utile Dulci is reproduced in this bibliography.$,200 10.Bates, Wesley. Wilson, Alexander. THE FORESTERS. A poetic account of a walking journey to the Falls of Niagara in the Autumn of 1804. Newtown: Bird & Bull Press, 2000. 6 × 9¼. xx, 22 pages including 3 full page wood engravings by Bates printed from the original blocks. Quarter chestnut morocco, slipcase. Fine. One of 150 numbered copies. Known for his American Ornithology, Wilson’s account of this journey was first published in book form in 1818 in Newtown. Wesley Bates is one of the finest Canadian wood engravers.$400 11.Benson, John Howard. FLAGS OF THE OLD STATE HOUSE AT NEWPORT R. I. Wood engravings in color by John Howard Benson. Newport: Old State House Inc., (942). 6 × 9½. (2) text pages, 8 leaves bearing 24 engravings. Quarter cloth and decorated boards. Some glue offsetting in gutters of endpapers, all else fine. One of 150 signed copies printed by Benson on fine French paper at his Berry Hill Press.$50 12.Bewick, Thomas. AESOP’S FABLES. A PORTFOLIO OF WOOD ENGRAVINGS. 30 Fables from Thomas Bewick’s Works, Vol. IV (Memorial Edition). (Glencoe, IL), 974. 0 × 8. The thirty engravings, printed from the original blocks on Troya paper, are encased individually in a folder/mat with the title and couplet verse printed on the folder in red. With a booklet containing Introduction, Index, Fables text, and colophon. Housed in a pastepaper slipcase. Fine. One of 100 signed sets printed by Letterio Calapai. Bewick, with his white line engraving on endgrain, is considered the “father of woodengraving.”$400 13.(Bible Leaves) THE AMERICAN BIBLE, Original Leaves from Rare and Historic Bibles printed in the Colonies and the United States during the Seventeenth, Eighteenth, and Nineteenth Centuries. Preface by Michael Zinman. Ardsley, 993. Four volumes. 22 × 4 inches. 38 original leaves, each hinged into a heavy mat, printed with the Bible’s title, publisher, date, and significance. All mats are a uniform size, regardless of leaf size. In four sturdy cloth tray cases with large red leather labels. Prothe veatchs art s of the bo ok spectus. Fine. There are lots of “firsts” here. Leaves include the 1663 Eliot Indian Bible (the first Bible printed in America) and others in indigenous languages; the first complete Bibles in English, French, Hebrew, and Spanish, and the first New Testaments in Greek, Portuguese, Dutch, and Swedish printed in America; and from important English-language editions. A curious hieroglyphic Bible printed by I. Thomas is the first for children in this country. There’s a folio leaf in raised letters—the first American Bible for the blind. Excellent for teaching and for exhibition. One of 100 sets. $6,000 Historical Account With Specimens 14.Bidwell, John. FINE PAPERS AT THE OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS. Whittington Press, 999. Two volumes. 0 × 5. 85 pages, 2 photographic plates, tipped-in small specimen, tipped-in leaf, 38 large paper samples tipped to black paper. Quarter morocco. A portfolio contains 25 full size sheets (folded twice) of handmade and mouldmade papers, each identified. Both vols. in clamshell case. Fine. XL of 65 special copies. “. . . a complete historical account of the handmade and mouldmade papers at OUP from 1900 to 1970” with specimens of vintage papers stored at the Press. On the manufacture and sale of handmade paper, fine printing in a consumer society, John Johnson’s typographical adventure, rising prices and falling profits, origins and specifications of the Oxford papers; the mills which made them. Tipped-in leaf is from the Oxford/Bruce Rogers Hesperides series.$2,200 15.Bigus, Richard. THE MYSTIQUE OF VELLUM. Boston: Anne & David Bromer, 984. 9 × ½. 38 pages. One page of the text is printed in black, grey, and red—on vellum. Bound by Claudia Cohen in quarter vellum and decorated boards. Fine in tray case. Bigus’ manual on printing letterpress on parchment and vellum is supplemented with an introduction by Decherd Turner, and an historical essay on vellum printed books by Colin Franklin. One of 225 copies printed on handmade paper (and one page on vellum. $500 An Extraordinary Copy 16.Binding—Sarah Wyman Whitman. Hawthorne, Nathaniel. THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 899. Two volumes. 6 × 8¼. (xiv), 265; 277 pages, 20 plates. Vellum gilt with catalo gue 74 Art Nouveau floral designs and lettering by Sarah Wyman Whitman on spine and upper cover, top edge gilt. The untrimmed deckles have a hint of browning. The bindings are almost as new. They’ve been protected by canvas dust wrappers, titled on the spine, and by a canvas-covered slipcase. The wrappers have some old pinpoint foxing on the insides. The lightly worn slipcase is intended to sit on what is usually the spine of the case. One end of the case repeats Whitman’s design and lettering from the books’ spines. A fine set. No. 52 of 250 copies in the large paper edition. The acclaimed illustrations were created by twins Maude and Genevieve Cowles. Head pieces and decorated initials are by Edith and Mildred Cowles. $750 4½ × 7. Unpaged (about an inch thick). Each page printed within a pictorial woodcut border by Mary Byfield. Original black pebbled morocco titled in gilt. Owner’s name in ink in top margin of title page. Some invisible, professional repairs to spine. Very good, near fine. This reprint of the 1569 prayer book is considered Mary Byfield’s masterpiece. Her 100 different borders are based mostly on designs by Tory, Holbein, and Dürer. Ruari McLean (1963, pp. 10–11) writes “The cuts harmonize perfectly with the type (which is Caslon) and this small volume . . . is a triumph of printing as well as of illustration and typography.” Printed by Whittingham and Wilkins at the Chiswick Press. First published in 1853 by Pickering.$425 17.Bird & Bull Press. BIRD & BULL NUMBER 13. North Hills, 972. 9½ × 6. 70 pages. Vellum and pastepaper boards. Fine. One of 140 copies on handmade B&B paper. A collection of short pieces including Henry Morris’ instructions for printing dampened handmade paper on a power press; a letter from Joe Blumenthal printed on paper made from Blumenthal’s linen pillow cases; a letter from the infamous Dr. Bachaus printed on Henry’s cannabis paper.$350 21.Boreman, Thomas. Lance Hidy. MORAL REFLECTIONS ON THE SHORT LIFE OF THE EPHEMERON. Boston: David Godine, 970. 5¼ × 8. 8 leaves with 3 delicate hand colored etchings and two wood engravings. Cloth with cover label. Fine in tray case with leather spine label. One of 100 signed copies printed by Hidy in black and red, with green and yellow ornaments on Amalfi paper. Bound by Arno Werner. An early Godine imprint, and David’s favorite. Printer’s Choice 40.$800 18.Bliss, Carey. JULIUS FIRMICUS MATERNUS AND THE ALDINE EDITION OF THE SCRIPTORES ASTRONOMICI VETERES. With an original leaf printed by Aldus Manutius at Venice in 1499. Los Angeles: Kenneth Karmiole, 98. 9 × 2. 27, (5) pages. Cloth. Collector’s booklabel on pastedown. Spine faded, else fine. Handsome Aldine leaf in Roman type, has paragraph marks in red and blue, and a simple 3-line initial in blue. Worm hole at margin, else fine. One of 164 copies.$650 22.Brahams, Johannes. A GERMAN REQUIEM After Words of the Holy Scripture for Soloists, Chorus, and Orchestra (Organ Libitum). Np, Warwick Press, 975. 6 × 9½. (7) pages plus 4 mounted linoleum cuts hand colored by Carol Blinn. Green morocco and pastepaper boards. Fine. One of 45 copies, signed by Blinn. This copy not numbered. Printed on pale green handmade paper in Cochin type.$375 19.Bolton, Claire. DELITTLE 1888–1988. The First Years in a Century of Wood Letter Manufacture, 1888–1895. Oxford: Alembic Press, 988. 7½ × 0. 63 pages illustrated with type specimens (some on colored paper and tipped in). Quarter cloth. Fine. One of 145 copies printed letterpress. This history is based on the company’s copious records. $250 Mary Byfield’s Masterpiece 20.Book of Common Prayer. THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER . . . together with the Psalms of David. . . . London: R. and A. Suttaby, 863. the veatchs art s of the bo ok 23.Bringhurst, Robert. THE BLUE ROOFS OF JAPAN. A score for interpenetrating voices. William Hofer, 986. 7½ × . 9 leaves, French-fold. Blue wraps side-stitched Oriental style. Fine. In this “poem for two voices,” one voice is printed in blue and the other in blind on the lefthand side of each double spread. This text is reversed on the righthand side. One of 150 signed copies printed at Barbarian Press (who issued the book also under the Barbarian imprint, on different paper, in an edition of 100). “Blue Roofs required a more particular attention to the problems of design and printing than any previous production. . . .” $200 catalo gue 74 24.Buckland Wright, Christopher. TO BEAUTY. JOHN BUCKLAND WRIGHT’S WORK WITH JOSEPH ISHILL OF THE ORIOLE PRESS. Denby: Fleece Press, 2007. 6 × 9. 56 pages illustrated including 5 wood engravings printed from the original blocks. Half cloth and marbled boards. Fine in tray case. Some of Buckland Wright’s most exquisite engravings were created in the 1930s for the Oriole Press. The artist and the printer never met (the Press was in the U.S.), but corresponded over the course of five books. One of 246 copies.$255 orate ceremonial object is loose in paper folder. Half red morocco and boards with ceremonial inset on cover. The second volume (half cloth and boards) contains 20 more elaborate and larger (some folded) tipped-in specimens. Fine set in slipcase. One of 50 specials with the portfolio of rarer papers. These ritual papers have varies uses: Bank of Hell notes and paper clothing are burned at funerals; prints protect various rooms of the house. There are prayers for protection to specific divinities. New Year’s woodcut prints of the Eight Immortals hang in doorways for good luck.$900 25.Caliban Press. BRUCE ROGERS SELECTED LETTERS 1915–1918. Np, 988. 6 × 9½. viii, 6 pages, 5 illustrations. Calf spine, boards printed with the Tory “B.” Slight wear to spine, but fine. No. 22 of 190 copies. Candid letters to H. W. Kent, Ruth Grannis, Emery Walker, and Sydney Cockerell. $35 26.Canadian Small Presses. WAYZGOOSE ’84 ANTHOLOGY. A collection of signatures produced by Private Press Printers & bound by Hand Bookbinders. (Grimsby, 984). 5½ × 8½. There are 20 gatherings, by as many private presses, in a great variety of styles, types, papers, texts, and illustrations. The gatherings range from 4 pages to 2 pages. Bound in grey buckram titled on cover; the plain spine has a small spot as if a sticker was removed, all else fine. Al Purdy’s (Canadian poet and contributor to this volume) copy, signed by him. Some of the presses are Aliquando, All Sorts, Barbarian, Branstead, Eden, Imprimerie Dromadaire, Ontario College of Art Press, Pie Tree Press & Type foundry. Wesley Bate’s West Meadow Press makes its first appearance here. The 5 poems by Jane Berland are accompanied by 5 wood engravings. Signed by Bates and Berland. Jim Rimmer’s 12-page signature is printed in the first use of his Juliana type. Ontario College submitted 8 examples of student work, in a handmade paper folder. About 120 copies were made.$600 27.Cave, Roderick. CHINESE CEREMONIAL PAPERS: An Illustrated Bibliography. Lower Marston Farm: Whittington Press, 2002. Two volumes. 0 × 5. 62 pages with 38 colorful ceremonial papers: mock money, prayer sheets, even a paper bowl, some gilded, some with cut outs. Most specimens are tipped-in; one is in rear pocket; an elabthe veatchs art s of the bo ok Item 28. Cheloniidae. Lawrence. 28.Cheloniidae Press. Lawrence, D. H. TORTOISES, SIX POEMS. (Williamsburg), 983. 8 × . Etched portrait, 25 leaves with 8 wood engravings of turtles by James Alan Robinson. Quarter tan vellum and Japanese paper boards, in vellum and cloth tray case. Fine with prospectus (signed by Robinson under the engraving). No. 34 of 90 copies on Fabriano Perusia paper with a frontispiece etching of Lawrence signed by Robinson; with an extra suite of the prints, each signed and numbered.$650 catalo gue 74 29.Cheloniidae Press. Louÿs, Pierre. LEDA, In Praise of the Blessings of Darkness. (Easthampton), 985. 8 × . (42) pages. Seven erotic wood engravings and 5 drypoint etchings in color by Alan James Robinson. Blind-embossed blue paper boards edged with white pigskin. Extra suite of the engravings and etchings, numbered and signed is laid with the book into a quarter pigskin traycase. Fine with prospectus. One of 75 copies signed by Robinson, who printed the etchings on handmade Gampi. Harold McGrath printed the wood blocks, with letterpress by Wild Carrot. Bound by Peter Geraty. Translation by David Ball.$,350 An “Incunable” of American Lithography 30.Colden, Cadawallader D. MEMOIR PREPARED AT THE REQUEST OF COMMITTEE OF THE COMMON COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, AND PRESENTED TO THE MAYOR OF THE CITY, AT THE CELEBRATION OF THE COMPLETION OF THE NEW YORK CANALS. Printed by order of the Corporation of New York, 825. 7½ × 9½. Portrait of Colden engraved by A. B. Durand, v, 2-page Directions to the binders for placing the 47 plates, 408, (2) pages, 8 lithographic facsimiles. This copy has 46 plates; it lacks one of the maps of North America. There are 8 engravings by Durand, and many by Samuel Maverick & Morin. The 29 lithographs by Imbert include text, views, maps, and autograph letters reproduced by transfer lithography. Bound by Wilson and Nicholls. New tan calf spine, label, and corners, with original marbled sides and matching endpapers. Presentation label on upper cover from “The City of New York to William W. Gilbert Esquire, Member of the Committee of Safety in 775 and A Senator of the State of New York. . . .” Some offsetting from a few plates, some closed tears in folding maps, but mostly clean and attractive. There are some Gilbert family records on rear blanks. A very good association copy. A wonderful book which lays out this amazing celebration in evocative detail. The pageantry culminated with all the Trades, Fire Departments, Military, Societies, Associations, and even Columbia students carrying banners in a grand procession. 144 bookbinders marched with an almost 5-foot tall leather bound book, preceded by the finishers John Bradford and Isaac Peckham. Two printing presses “of recent invention” (a Hoe and a Rust & Turney, drawn by four the veatchs art s of the bo ok Item 30. Colden. horses) produced 11,000 copies of an Ode for the Canal Celebration during the procession. Henry I. Megary carried the banner for the Booksellers, Stationers, & Music Dealers. Great care was taken with the production of the book. It is finely printed on paper watermarked “John Butler.” Imbert’s lithographs and their technique receive special mention. $900 31.Cox, Morris. CRASH! AN EXPERIMENT IN BLOCKMAKING AND PRINTING. London: The Gogmagog Press, (963). 4¼ × 7½. 26 leaves, joined at fore edges, including 8 double page color prints. Plain brown wraps. Fine. One of 80 copies, signed by Cox. “This little book utilizes a series of blocks made from odds and ends of waste material, printed on a home-made press” (introduction). The title comes from a (carefully) broken beveled glass circle as the basis for a Sun block. Brief notes describe the process for each print. Chambers 11, pointing out that Crash! is a “survey or anthology of his discoveries across several years.”$575 32.DePol, John and Cathleen Baker. ENDGRAIN DESIGNS AND REPETITIONS. The Pattern Papers of John DePol. Tuscaloosa: Legacy catalo gue 74 Press, (2000). 5½ × 0. x, 54 pages plus 5 original patterned paper specimens mounted. Quarter cloth and patterned boards bound by Gray Parrot. Fine. Each of the 117 designs is displayed as a single block titled in red, and then shown in a repeat pattern. Seven pages are devoted to a history (date, inspiration, etc.) of the designs. One of 130 copies signed by De Pol and by Baker.$225 33.(DePol) Heyen, William. THE SHORE. (Roslyn), Stone House Press, 99. 6 × 9. 27 pages. Two original wood engravings printed in green, by John DePol. Quarter green cloth, grey cloth sides. DePol’s copy with his bookplate on pastedown. One of 85 copies bound in cloth (of 170) signed by poet and artist. $0 34.Dickens, Charles. A CHRISTMAS CAROL, or, The Miser’s Warning, a Drama in Two Acts Adapted from Charles Dickens’ celebrated work by C. Z. Barnett. Mission: Barbarian Press, 984. 7½ × . xii, 49 pages illustrated with wood engravings by Edwina Ellis. Red cloth, large cover label, red cloth slipcase (slightly soiled). Fine. One of 350 copies. The first illustrated Barbarian book.$85 35.Dickens, Charles. THE CHIMES, or Some Bells That Rang an Old Year Out & a New Year In, a Goblin Drama . . . adapted . . . by Mark Lemon & G. A. a’Beckett. (Mission): Barbarian Press, 985. 7½ × 0½. xi, 72 pages with wood engravings by Colin Payton. Cloth with spine and large cover labels. Fine in slipcase. One of 150 copies.$50 36.Double Elephant Press. Michael Kuch. A SPHINX’S FIELD GUIDE TO QUESTIONABLE ANSWERS. Asparagus Valley (Hadley), 2004. 7½ × 0. 6 leaves, 6 of which are fold outs, plus a coded spinning wheel. Printed in several colors on Japanese handmade paper. Printed wraps, in a heavy flax paper chemise. Fine, with prospectus. One of 150 signed and numbered copies. A marvelously inventive, colorful, exuberant work—unriddle the riddles, solve the cryptogram, septsec the circumference of the a circle, and behold the sacred geometry of the Great Pyramid. Lavishly illustrated with wood cuts by Michael Kuch. The text, impeccably printed by Art Larson, is set in 19th century wood type from the veatchs art s of the bo ok Item 35. Dickens. Chimes. his collection; a separate sheet identifies the type faces used. Book, Art, Object page 154.$,200 37.Dwiggins, W[illiam] A[ddison]. John Keats. TO AUTUMN. (Hingham: Püterschein-Hingham, 95). 7½ × 6½. Title plus 3 leaves printed rectos only, from WAD’s calligraphy. Three-color illustration on title. Green wraps printed in yellow. Fine. According to a prospectus, 200 copies were done.$75 38.Dwiggins, W[illiam] A[ddison]. PRELUDE TO EDEN. A Drama for Marionettes. (Hingham: Puterschein-Higham), 956. 7 × 8. 32 pages. Thirty illustrations in a variety of colors and silver. Quarter green paper and aluminum boards. Lower cover has a few scratches; light foxing to endpapers; slight separation between gatherings before half title, else very good. One of 175 copies. Dwiggins wrote the play and catalo gue 74 made the marionettes, which were photographed. Typography, printing, silk-screening, and binding by Dorothy Abbe. $50 39.Dwiggins, W[illiam]. A[ddison]. THE GLISTENING HILL. Athalinthia III. Püterschein-Hingham, 950. 5¾ × 7½. Double spread title, 30 pages. Pink wraps, silver foil wrap-around label with illustration stenciled in red. Very good. Printed by Dorothy Abbe in WAD’s Winchester type. Pen and ink drawings by WAD in black, blue, green, or lavender.$50 40.Dwiggins, W[illiam]. A[ddison]. THE WAR AGAINST WAAK. Bellona. (Püterschein-Hingham),948. 6 × 7½. (33) pages. Illustrated with 2 designs by WAD, of which seven are watercolors executed with stencils (pochoir) cut by the author/artist. Printed turquoise paper over boards. A bit dusty, very good. One of 194 copies printed and bound by Dorothy Abbe at the Press of the Little Red Hen, this is the fifth story in Athalinthia.$300 41.Dwiggins, William Addison. Thank you card with large stencil ornament in three brilliant colors by pochoir. Hingham, 952. 5 × 6½. 4 pages, printed on first and last pages. Interior blank pages have a few small spots. Very good. Uncommon piece of quintessential WAD.$25 42.Dwiggins, William Addison. Shimer, Florence. TWELVE POEMS. (Hingham: Püterschein-Hingham, 950). 6 × 8¼. Stenciled title page in purple and green, (5) pages. Blue boards, wrap-around label. A fine copy in the original shipping carton, which is worn. Inscribed by both Dwiggins and Dorothy Abbe to Edward A. Karr, a fellow calligrapher. Laid in is a typed note signed from Abbe to Carr on letterhead designed by WAD. $85 43.(Dwiggins) Abbe, Dorothy. STENCILLED ORNAMENT & ILLUSTRATION. A Demonstration of William Addison Dwiggins’ Method of Book Decoration and Other Uses of the Stencil, together with A Note by the Artist. Hingham: Püterschein-Hingham, 979. 6½ × 0. ix, 74 pages. Illustrated throughout in black and white, with several pasted in photographs. Quarter cloth and boards. Fine. One of 120 copies.$400 the veatchs art s of the bo ok Item 44. Ex Ophidia Press. “An Italy of the Mind” 44.Ex Ophidia Press. Gioia, Dana. JOURNEYS IN SUNLIGHT, Poems. Etchings by Fulvio Testa. 986. 8 × 3. 23, () pages, tissue guards. Laid in note about the binding. Morocco spine and delicately marbled boards. Fine in glassine and tray case. “An Italy of the mind,” with three “rich, meditative” etchings which are the perfect accompaniment to these poems inspired by Italy. One of 90 copies signed by poet and artist. Printed by Gabriel Rummonds with an Albion hand press on dampened handmade Magnani paper. Plain Wrapper Press #42. Artists of the Book 988, A Facet of Modernism #26.$,200 45.Feather, John. ENGLISH BOOK PROSPECTUSES, An Illustrated History. Newtown: Bird & Bull Press, 984. 6 × 9½. 09 pages. Quarter morocco, “Dutch gilt” paper boards by E. G. Parrot, slipcase. Illustrated with 24 facsimile prospectuses in the original size; those too catalo gue 74 large for the book are contained in a separate portfolio. Fine. One of 325 copies printed at the Bird & Bull Press.$85 illustrated, plus 8 tipped in color reproductions. Boards, dust jacket. Near fine. Written with the paper collector Olga Hirsch.$250 46.Fleece Press. MUD WALLS. Exerpts from the Sermons of John Donne. With 5 wood engravings by Jane Lydbury. (Wakefield), 986. 6½ × 9½. (ii), 6 pages. Brown boards, printed labels. Fine, with prospectus. One of 200 copies.$50 52.Hamady, Walter. PAPERMAKING BY HAND. A Book of Qualified Suspicions. Minor Confluence, WI: Perishable Press, 982. 7 × 0½. (2), 42, (3) pages. Illustrated with linocuts by Jim Lee. Irish linen, blind stamped title. Fine. One of 200 copies printed by Walter Hamady. Title page calligraphy by Hermann Zapf. Printed in five colors on 13 various Hamady Shadwell papers and 6 from other makers/mills. Illustrated, with one of the engravings signed by Walter Hamady. A Century for the Century 87.$,600 47.Franklin, Colin. EXPLORING JAPANESE BOOKS AND SCROLLS. (San Francisco): BCC, (999). Folio. 56 pages. Illustrated with 93 color plates. Index. Blue cloth, sides cover with Japanese print. Fine in slipcase, with prospectus. One of 450 copies printed at the Artichoke Press. $200 48.Gehenna Press. Gardner, Robert G. A HUMAN DOCUMENT. Northampton, 964. 6 × 9½. (5) pages. Wood engraved crow headpiece, owl press mark, pomegranate pressmark, some shaped typography. Wraps. Fine. With a signed proof of the crow on Japanese paper laid in. One of 500 copies; this signed “printer’s copy. Leonard Baskin.” (The edition was not signed.) A moving story by this filmmaker. $50 49.Gehenna Press. James Baldwin. GYPSY & OTHER POEMS. (Leeds), 989. 9 × 2. (24) pages. Copperplate portrait of Baldwin by Leonard Baskin, numbered and signed. Pomegranate pressmark in red. Pastepaper boards by Claudia Cohen with red morocco spine and cover labels. Some tips lightly creased, but fine. First edition. One of 325 copies signed by Baskin. In this copy the etching is numbered, but not the colophon. Printed by Wild Carrot Letterpress on Magnani handmade paper.$250 50.Grace Hoper Press. COMMON PLACE BOOK SIX. Aptos & Woodside, 983. 8 × ½. 48 pages. Cloth and boards. Fine in dj. Each page prints a delightful quotation, displaying a wide range of typefaces and ornaments in various typographic settings. One of 275 copies, printed in red, blue and black, with colored illustrations.$75 51.Haemmerle, Albert. BUNTPAPIER. Herkommen Geschichte Techniken Beziehungen zur Kunst. München, (977). 9½ × . 255 pages copiously the veatchs art s of the bo ok 53.Hassall, Joan. DEAREST SYDNEY. JOAN HASSALL’S LETTERS TO SYDNEY COCKERELL. (Wakefield): Fleece Press, (99). 6½ × 0½. 67 pages. Cloth and patterned boards. Fine. One of 220 copies.$25 54.Hopkins, Kenneth. SHE IS MY BRIGHT AND SMILING SHY DEAR. (Easthampton): Warwick Press, 985. 8½ × . (0), –63, () pages printed rectos only. Japanese paper boards. Fine. One of 75 copies signed by Hopkins and Carol Blinn, who designed, printed, bound, and illustrated the volume with four water colored drawings. A significant and lovely piece.$400 55.Hutner, Martin. THE MAKING OF THE BOOK OF COMMON PRAYER OF 1928. Sandy Hook: Chiswick Bookshop, 990. 0 × 4. 2 pages. With an original leaf (xix/xx) printed on vellum. Cloth, leather spine label, slipcase. Fine copy, inscribed by the author. One of 285 copies, designed by Jerry Kelly. A fascinating history of Updike’s magnum opus. J. P. Morgan sponsored a competition to design and print this book. Bruce Rogers was the unsuccessful competitor, and some of his designs are illustrated here. The leaf is “Lessons for the Christian Year,” with columns of Bible readings for each day.$450 56.Italian Block-printed Papers from Remondini/Rizzi and others. Twenty decorated paper specimens. Varese, late 9th and early 20th century. 2 Remondini/Rizzi (one duplicate, one pattern twice but in different colors); 6 Rizzi; 3 smaller, later, unidentified specimens. catalo gue 74 A few have penciled numbers in the margin. The patterns measure 6½ × 3½ on a sheet 20 × 6. The six Rizzi papers are stamped “Made in Italy” on back. These would have been exported after the McKinley tariff act of 890. The 2 Remondini/Rizzi papers bear the oval blind-stamp (in the margin) “Stampi Remondiniani PESP.” Seven are printed in a single color (ochre, red, or blue). Two are printed in two colors; two are in three colors. Designs range from large floral to tiny repeat stars. There’s a large floral stripe, cherries enclosed in checker boards, interlocking medallions, a diaper pattern with dots and flowers. Very good condition. The Remondini firm, established in Bassano in 1650, was renowned for its wood block and copper prints and block-printed papers. They dominated the market, employing a thousand persons, with 38 printing presses, a paper mill, die foundry, and a trade school of woodcarving. When the Remondini firm closed in 1861, 4 noble families rescued about a thousand of the old blocks. They granted Giuseppe Rizzi of Varese (hence the tern “Varese papers”) a license to print them—if he used the original methods. The blocks were printed by hand, with a separate block for each color; some were inlaid with metal for more intricate detail. The colors were from vegetable dyes. Such papers carried the embossed stamp (PESP stands for last names of the noblemen). The last Rizzi died in 1939; and the blocks were never used again. Information about the Remondini company is from Tanya Schmoller, Remondini and Rizzi. $,800 Item 41. Dwiggins. Thank you card. 57.James, Angela. THE ART OF BINDING BOOKS. Illustrated by Anthony Christmas. (Wakefield), The Fleece Press, (99). Miniature, ¾ × 2¾. 27 leaves. Floral cloth, unpaged. Fine. One of 290 set in 8pt Van Dijck at the Rocket Press.$60 58.Keats, John. THE EVE OF ST. AGNES. Wood engravings by Andy English. Barbarian Press, 2003. 5 × 7. Frontis and 4 other engravings, (24) pages. Purple cloth and boards patterned in purple and silver. Fine. One of 115 copies printed in black and purple.$200 59.Kinney, Arthur F. BIRDS AND BEASTS FROM SHAKESPEARE. Illustrated with wood engravings by Alan James Robinson. Cheloniidae Press, 990. Folio, 0½ × 6. Etched frontis signed, i–(v), 87 Frenchfold pages. Twenty-one birds and 7 animals are depicted in one or the veatchs art s of the bo ok Item 111. Whittingham. catalo gue 74 Item 107. Village Press. Item 69. Mason Hill Press. Traherne. Item 16. Binding. Whitman. the veatchs art s of the bo ok Item 99. Shakespeare Head Press. Froissart catalo gue 74 Item 40. Dwiggins. The War Against Waak. more engravings (55 engravings in all). Each page is set within a red rule border. The appropriate line from Shakespeare is also printed in red, with more quotation and commentary in black. Bound in full citron morocco, titled in gold on upper cover. With an extra suite of the engravings, in cloth portfolio, numbered and signed. Both volumes in cloth tray case with leather spine label. Fine, with prospectus. One of 100 copies bound in full leather, signed by Robinson. (The total edition was 155, with 100 copies in full leather.) Printed by Harold McGrath in Centaur and Arrighi types, on a sheet “the exact untrimmed size of the First Folio.” Bound by Sarah Creighton and Claudia Cohen. Professor Kinney directs the center for Renaissance Studies at UMass. His introduction discusses the importance and the prevalence of animal imagery in Shakespeare’s works.$3,750 60.Koch, Peter. REAL LEAD DEEP DRIVE LETTERPRESS. (Berkeley): Hormone Derange Editions, (200). 5 × 0. (36) pages. Three-quarter cloth and printed boards. Fine. Antique metal and wood type specimen book. An amusingly arranged collection gathered from defunct California businesses, the advertising cuts and electrotypes are display with humorous text. One of 100 copies.$250 What Wood Engraving Can Do Today Item 39. Dwiggins. The Glistening Hill. the veatchs art s of the bo ok 61.Lazarov, Peter. PETER LAZAROV, A Selection of Engravings with an Introduction by the Artist. (Mission): Barbarian Press, 2003. 0½ × 5. text pages on cream Zerkall paper, color frontis and 47 leaves of wood engravings in black on white Zerkall paper. Quarter morocco and patterned boards, in matching slipcase. With a proof of the large frontis printed in a different color and signed. Fine. One of 60 deluxe copies. (There were also 135 regular copies.) Some of the engravings are abstract; a number of them are for bookplates; three were commissioned for this book. “In our field, [Peter Lazarov] is the great virtuoso of the age. . . . [His work] seems to live a life of its own, dancing between image and abstraction, surface and depth, the modelled and the line, the sketch and the fully resolved, to be always a pyrotechnic display. . . . With this book, however, one can begin to push aside dazzlement and sense what lies beyond catalo gue 74 Item 61. Lazarov. it. It is essential reading and viewing for anyone who wants to know what wood engraving can do today”—from a review by wood engraver Simon Brett.$700 62.(Leaf Book) De Vinne, Theodore. ALDUS PIUS MANUTIUS. With an essay by Theodore Low De Vinne together with a leaf from the Aldine Hypnerotomachia Poliphili printed at Venice in 1499. San Francisco: BCC, 924. 8 × ¾. (6), leaf, (25) pages. Illustrations in the text. Cloth-backed boards. Spine silverfished, upper tips bumped and worn, contents fine. One of 192 copies printed by the Grabhorn Press on handmade paper. The leaf (numbered 124 by hand) is in fine condition. It has two quarter-page woodcuts: the vertical cut shows a cupola above an entrance to a crypt; a horizontal cut, on the verso, shows a sarcophagus with three lines of inscription beginning “Interno Plotini.” One of the world’s celebrated books, the Hypnerotomachia Poliphili is renowned for the perfect integration of text and woodcut illustration.$850 63.Lee, Brian North. THE BOOKPLATES OF RICHARD SHIRLEY SMITH. Fleece Press, 2005 (actually 2006). 6 × 9½. 0 pages. Numerous illustrations, including 9 from original wood blocks. Quarter cloth and wood veneer boards, slipcase. Fine. One of 275 copies. With a checklist of 65 bookplates.$275 the veatchs art s of the bo ok Item 62. Leaf—Aldine. catalo gue 74 Two Harmless Drudges 64.Littlejohn, David. DR. JOHNSON AND NOAH WEBSTER. Two Men & Their Dictionaries. SF: Book Blub of California, 97. 0 × 2½. 84 pages. Quarter cloth and boards, leather spine label (rubbed). With matching original leaves from their two dictionaries. Lower cover very slightly scratched. Very good copy. One of 500 copies. Tipped in is matched pair of original leaves (letter “A” ) from Johnson’s 1755 A Dictionary of the English Language and Webster’s 1828 An American Dictionary of the English Language. $250 Flip Book for Adults 65.Macgregor, Miriam. COUNTRY CHAOS. Andoversford: Whittington Press, 980. 6 × 7½. 6 pages, each leaf cut horizontally into 3 parts. With 6 vinyl engravings by Macgregor showing the fronts and backs of 8 colorful country characters. Printed boards with engraving on cover. Fine in slipcase. No. 15 of 30 copies hand colored by the artist (total edition was 630). A delightful flip book for adults.$600 66.McGovern, Melvin. SPECIMEN PAGES OF KOREAN MOVABLE TYPES. Los Angeles: Dawson’s Book Shop, 966. ×½ × 6½. Frontis, 73 pages. Original cloth-backed boards covered with a special handmade Korean embossed paper. Cloth slip case, with a little joint and extremity wear. Two previous owners have pasted descriptions etc. on 3 pages; of value is a full page prospectus from Dawson’s as well as a letter describing how to identify original vs. facsimile specimens in this particular copy. The first owner has underlined some text in ink on three pages and has a small date note in ink at the foot of two pages. Book is in otherwise fine condition. Copy 126 of 300 copies. Pages 9–18 provide a brief history of the development of Korean moveable type. Following this, are 22 specimens (from 1420 to 1858) each using a different font with a facing page of descriptive text. In this copy there are 15 original and 7 facsimile specimens; the earliest original is Specimen 5 from 1484. The first 95 copies had 22 original specimens. The succeeding copies had fewer and fewer specimens as the copy number went up., e.g. copy 176 had only 3 original specimens.$6,000 the veatchs art s of the bo ok Item 67. Mackley. 67.Mackley, George. Colt, Armida Marie-Theresa. WEEDS AND WILDFLOWERS. Some Irreverent Words. With Wood-Engravings by George Mackley. London: Two-Horse Press (965). Two vols. 9 × 2. 54 pages with engravings. With a separate suite of the engravings on Japanese paper, laid into a matching portfolio. One of the loose prints has 4 small holes away from the image (paper defect?). Green cloth spines, handmade yellow Japanese paper boards, slipcase a bit toned from acidic paper. A fine set. One of 250 numbered sets, printed by Will Carter at Rampant Lions. Printed in lovely 16pt Arrighi type on Turkey Mill paper. Signed by the artist. Exhibited at The Grolier Club as one of the best books created in the twentieth century. “The delicate and refined Arrighi typeface is the perfect complement to Mackley’s senisitve and detailed” engravings. A Century for the Century 69.$,000 68.Mason Hill Press. Ditmas, K[itty]. K[ouwenhoven]. COUNTRY POEMS. Woodcuts by James Dignon. Pownal, 969. 4¾ × 7¾. (4), , () pages with 5 color woodcuts of the Vermont countryside mounted in the text. Cloth with title label. Few touches of foxing, trace of white paint on bottom edge, near fine. Warm inscription catalo gue 74 from the author. The first book of the press, and scarce. According to the colophon, Dignon printed 400 copies on Rives paper. This is copy number 53. It is unlikely that all the sheets were bound up.$300 69.Mason Hill Press. Traherne, Thomas. ONE HUNDRED MEDITATIONS & DEVOTIONS, Comprising the First Century of Thomas Traherne 1637–1674. (Pownal), 975. 7½ × 0. 54 pages, with 99 large initials hand painted by Mark Livingston in red, blue, or green. The first line of text is engraved in wood and printed in red. Bound by Arno Werner and Tara Devereux in quarter vellum and blue boards. Fine. One of 75 copies printed in Palatino on dampened handmade Hayle paper by James Dignon and Mark Livingston. Dignon writes “This must be the closest set book in history . . . Because of all the initials you need the strong blacks—we wanted it solid to resemble the early manuscripts.”$,250 70.Moser, Barry. “ABM ætat 32.” Self portrait etching in black. Circular etching 9½ inches in diameter on a sheet measuring 2 × 6. Signed artist’s proof. $200 71.Moser, Barry. LEONARD BASKIN 1922–2000. Barbarian Press, 2000. 6 × 9. Tipped-in wood engraved portrait of Baskin, signed by Moser, 3 leaves. Wraps titled on cover. Fine. One of 150 copies.$35 “A Lyric Delicacy of Great Refinement” 72.Officina Bodoni. Ovid. AMORES. Verona, 932. 6¼ × 9½. (0), –34, (8) pages. Original oatmeal cloth, spine and upper cover titled in gilt; top edge gilt. In original dust jacket, professionally repaired inside the spine which is darkened on the outside. Oatmeal cloth slipcase has some hand soil and two small spots, very good condition. The book is in fine, almost new condition. One of 120 numbered copies on Magnani handmade paper. Printed in Warde’s Arrighi-Vincenza italic for which Mardersteig commissioned Charles Malin to cut a smaller size of the capital letters; with initials in red, hand done by the calligrapher/scholar Claudio Bonacini. “The beauty of the type and the paper, and the perfect printing and spacing of Ovid’s verse, combine to create a lyric delicacy of great refinement.” A Century for the Century No. 31.$5,000 the veatchs art s of the bo ok Item 73. Officina Bodoni. Gide. 73.Officina Bodoni. Gide, André. THESEUS. ( James Laughlin, New Directions, 949). 9½ × 3. 04 pages plus 2 lithographs by Massimo Campigli. The first lithograph is signed and laid in loose. White paper wrapper titled in black, covered with glassine (which is missing a small piece). The book is fine, in new slipcase. Inscribed “ex dono JL” ( James Laughton), this copy was for Dudley Fitts. Translated into English by John Russell from Gide’s revised edition. The book is a pleasure to handle and to read. No. 98 of 190 copies printed by Mardersteig on Magnani handmade paper in Garamond type. (There were also 10 copies on Fabriano). “This copy printed for Dudley Fitts” is printed in the colophon. Fitts was best known for his translation of Greek classics. Massimo Campigli “is one of the most prominent contemporary Italian painters to occupy himself extensively with book illustration, in which he adapts his characteristic types and compositions to the locale of the story.” The Artist and the Book 860–960 page 39.$2,500 74.Pennyroyal Press. A FAMILY LETTER, Written in Nineteen Thirty-Two by George Moser to his Nephew Arthur Moser. Easthampton, 979. 0 × 7. catalo gue 74 (32) pages. Wood engraving of the family sword, on japanese paper (8 × 4), overlays the double-spread title. Boards. Two tiny dings to board edges, fine. One of 175 signed. Engraving of sword is signed also. Letter is printed in black with Barry Moser’s commentary alongside in red. Moser writes “My father died when I was an infant. The strongest attachment I have to him is this letter. . . .” Pennyroyal Checklist 21.$25 The Only Bible Illustrated by a Single Artist 75.Pennyroyal Press. THE HOLY BIBLE. Containing all the Books of the Old and New Testaments. West Hatfield, 999. Two volumes. × 6. 87, 247, 09, (5-page list of illustrations); 234, (4-page list of illustrations) pages in double columns. Illustrated throughout with engravings by Barry Moser. Full vellum titled in gold. Each volume in a cloth tray case. A fine set, signed by Moser. The Pennyroyal Caxton Bible is the only edition of the Bible to be illustrated by a single artist. For this beloved King James version, Moser created over 235 full page and smaller engravings on resingrave blocks. The large opening “God” and the final “Amen” cut by John Benson are printed in red, as are the initial letters throughout. Bound by Claudia Cohen and Sarah Creighton. One of 400 copies (and 25 printed on vellum). $2,500 76.Prickly Pear Editions. BILLETS-DOUX, Being an exquisite Nosegay, or Posy, now newly pluckt from popular Letter-writing Manuals of Yore. Np, 998.7 × 9. 20 pages delicately decorated (mostly by pochoir). Several leaves are scalloped in imitation of stationery. Gold cloth with ornamental label inset on upper cover. Fine with prospectus. A gem from the collaboration of Coriander Reisbord (decorations and binding) and Asa Peavy (typography and printing). These love letters come from three early c19 texts. One of 45 copies. $325 77.Randall, Karen Pava. INFANTS OF THE SUN. Easthampton: Propolis Press, 200. 7 × 9. Nine french-fold leaves with nine relief images. Bound by the artist in Japanese paper dyed a saffron yellow, side stiched, titled with wood type and bearing a large color monotype; in a black cloth tray case topped by a small glass bee. Exhibited in the juried show “Girl Printers.” No. 21 of 52 copies. Printed on Hosho paper the veatchs art s of the bo ok from hand set foundry and wood type. The nine relief images are monotypes—differing in every copy of the book. Artist and author Karen Randall creates a world of alchemical bees and melliferous madness.$325 78.Red Angel Press. THREE POEMS BY HART CRANE from THE BRIDGE. NY, 2004. 2½ × 7½. Double spread title, 5 text leaves, 3 prints (two double spread), 42-inch fold out with the text of “To Brooklyn Bridge” and a pop-up construction of the bridge. Textured cloth, design of suspension cables in silver. Fine with prospectus. The horizontal format reflects the span of the bridge. The typographic layout of the foldout forms the bridge’s roadway; it is bordered by a construction of suspension cables which rise up from the pages when opened. Printed letterpress in 6 colors. One of 100 copies numbered and signed by the artist/printer Ronald Keller. Beyond the Text #1.$795 79.Red Angel Press. Hawthorne, Nathaniel. SIGHTS FROM A STEEPLE. NY, 988. 9 × 5. A 3-color woodcut By Ron Keller unfolds to 38 inches wide and surrounds the -page text (8½ × 7½). Green cloth. Fine, with prospectus. The text is a philosophical analysis of a New England seaport viewed from a chuch steeple. In the woodcut, the viewer’s perspective is as Hawthorne’s—from the top of the steeple. The book’s structure allows the one to read Hawthorne’s words while sharing his view. One of 100 numbered and signed copies printed by the artist in black, green and blue. Beyond the Text 37.$500 80.Red Angel Press. Melville, Herman. ROCK RODONDO. Sketches Third & Fourth of “The Encantadas.” NY, 98. 2 × 2. 24 pages (6½ × 2) with embossed birds in flight on the title and half titles. A two-color woodcut of the Galapagos birds folds out vertically to 2 × 36, with a facing page of text and key to the birds. Bound by Ronald Keller in sand-colored cloth painted to resemble breaking waves; the front pastedown is a cast paper sculpture of the rock and birds in flight. Fine, with prospectus. One of 100 numbered and copies signed by printer/ artist Ronald Keller. Beyond the Text 52.$750 81.Red Hen Press. Shirley Jones. FALLS THE SHADOW. Six Essays. 995. 2 × 5. Each essay, printed in brown, is preceded by a blindcatalo gue 74 embossed shell and followed by a sepia mezzotint. Mezzotints are interleaved with Japanese Unryushi. Quarter brown morocco and cloth by the Gwasg Gregynog bindery, with a brown morocco onlay of angel-wing shells. Fine in slipcase, with prospectus. One of 40 copies signed by the artist/printer. Shirley Jones describes this as “a multi-layered work which explores the gulf between Man’s ideals and the realization of those ideals.”$985 82.Red Hydra Press. Gunn, Thomas. DEATH’S DOOR. Np, 989. 5 × 7. (4) pages, gravestone rubbing in taupe. Bound by Paula Gourley in colorful pastepaper boards, leather spine. Fine. No. 8 of 20 signed copies (of 80) in this binding. Printed in black and blue on Twinrocker handmade paper. Title page calligraphy by Anita Karl.$275 83.Red Ozier Press. Glass, Mark. ANCIENT SONG. Illustrated by Janet Morgan. NY, (980). 2 × 8. One large sheet folded into thirds. Opens to 24 inches. One of 10 copies hand-colored by the artist, and signed by printer and artist. (Total edition was 100.)$50 84.Red Ozier Press. Wright, Charles. FIVE JOURNALS. NY, 986. 7 × 0. 39 pages. Red cloth spine, blue paper boards with title printed in black. Some discoloration on lower cover, but a fine copy signed by Wright. One of 5 Artist Proof copies on Amora paper; this is the only one bound in boards. (The total edition was 100 copies: 25 in boards and 75 in wraps.)$275 85.Reed, Ronald. THE NATURE AND MAKING OF PARCHMENT. WITH SPECIMENS OF PARCHMENT. Elmete Press & Dawson’s Bookshop, 975 & 976. Two volumes. 8 × . Text volume is 96 pages with 4 illustrations in the text. Quarter vellum and cloth. A cloth and printed board portfolio contains a title sheet and 9 original specimens hinged to a sheet printed with descriptive text. Portfolio tips are bruised; all else fine. “The Specimens” is limited to 200 copies, this having 9 original specimens. (Half the sets had 9 specimens; half had 10.) The specimens here are parchment, vellum, and manmade vellum substitutes. Earlier specimens are from an antiphonal, an indenture, and a Mosher Press book. There are unused specimens of sheep parchment, goat the veatchs art s of the bo ok parchment, parchment made by H. Band & Co.to the specifications of the Kelmscott Press, and thin manuscript calf. Letterpress describes the nature and uses of each. Text, limited to 425 copies, covers the history of parchment from ancient times to the Medieval period.$750 86.Rogers, Bruce. Kenyon, Frederic G. ANCIENT BOOKS AND MODERN DISCOVERIES. Chicago: Caxton Club, 927. 9 × 2¼. (v), 83 pages, 30 collotype plates by Emery Walker. Vellum and marbled boards. Two tape marks on rear pastedown, slight bump at head, and wear to lower tips. A very good copy lacking dust wrapper and slipcase. Penciled note of the collector M. S. Slocum, Pasadena, that he purchased this from Duschnes in 938. About early books on papyrus, clay, vellum, wood, and bark. One of 350 copies, printed at Rudge on Kelmscott handmade paper, with head-and tailpieces from various combinations of printers’ flowers printed in brown. One of BR’s 30 favorites. The Printed Book in America #38.$335 87.Rogers. Adams, Randolph G. THE PASSPORTS PRINTED BY BENJAMIN FRANKLIN AT HIS PASSY PRESS. Ann Arbor: Clements Library, 925. 9⅛ × 2½. 0 pages plus Aquatone reproductions of three passports discovered since the 94 publication of Livingston’s Franklin and His Press at Passy. Cloth-backed marbled boards, printed spine label. Very slight wear to tips, else a fine copy. One of 550 printed at Harvard University Press. A BR “favorite 30.” $00 88.Rogers. Nicholas Breton. THE TWELVE MONETHS & CHRISTMAS DAY. From “Fantastickes.” NY: Clarke & Way, 95. 6 x9. (64) pages. Full navy morocco, upper cover gilt with design by BR, t.e.g. Lightly rubbed along joints, else fine in marbled board slipcase. With prospectus for the regular edition. One of 100 deluxe copies signed by Rogers Printed on dampened English handmade paper with decorations in 14 colors. Decorated with Trafton calendar cuts and with 15 ornaments designed by BR. The only book for which Rogers himself handset the Caslon type; and the first book from the Thistle Press.$225 89.Rorer, Abigail. Clemens, Samuel L. IS HE LIVING OR IS HE DEAD? Etchings by Abigail Rorer. Colin Press, (984). Folio, 9½ × 3. Eight catalo gue 74 leaves with 3 etchings in the text, plus 3 hors text prints. Loose as issued in a folder of stiffened marbled paper with cover label. Lower tips just slightly creased. Fine. Letterpress text was printed by Darrell Hyder. Rorer’s etchings were printed by Elena Colin, who also marbled the cover paper. No. 12 of 100 copies signed by Rorer and Colin. Abigail’s fine etchings make an interesting contrast to her wood engravings.$650 barian Press, 2007. 6½ × 9. Frontis and 9 other engravings, 78 pages. Cloth and illustrated boards. Fine. One of 125 copies printed in black and wine inks.$375 92.Rufinus. THE COMPLETE POEMS, in English Versions by Robin Skelton. Barbarian Press, 997 5 × 9. Twenty-one leaves sewn on vellum strips and woven into wraps printed in graduated colors from wood type. Illustrated with 7 erotic wood engravings by Wesley Bates. Fine. No. 26 of 200 copies signed by Skelton. Printed in Van Dijck and Cancelleresca Bastarda—types suggested by “the elegant music” of the poems. This is only the second translation of all Rufinus’ poems. The first, published privately and anonymously in 1917, is rare. $75 A Good Read Item 90. Rorer. 90.Rorer. ABIGAIL RORER, a Selection of Engravings, with an Introduction by the Artist. (Mission, BC, 200.) 7½ × 0. Tipped on wood engraved frontis, 0 text leaves on cream paper, 43 full page wood engravings on white paper. Three engravings are hand colored, one is folding. Quarter morocco and patterned boards, in matching slipcase. With a signed proof of “The Dress Rehearsal.” Fine. One of 60 deluxe copies (there were also 150 regular copies). Rorer is known for her use of black-line engraving and attention to minute detail. Three engravings were commissioned for this book. $700 91.Rorer. Clough, Arthur Hugh. AMOURS DE VOYAGE, An Epistolary Novela in Verse. Illustrated with wood engravings by Abigail Rorer. Barthe veatchs art s of the bo ok 93.Russem, Michael. A KAT RAN PRESS CHECKLIST. Limited editions designed, printed, and/or published between 1994 and mid-2012. With an introduction, occasional comments, and an essay about fine printing. Cambridge, 202. 6 × 9⅜. 60 pages illustrated in color throughout. Bound by Sarah Creighton in red cloth. Kat Ran Press was founded by Michael in 1994 with the goal of combining classical typography and contemporary art with the old ideals of fine printing. Michael’s commentary on his some 80 books is humorous and enlightening. Printed on Mohawk Superfine by offset lithography. This is one of 40 copies bound in cloth. (There is also a deluxe leaf-book edition of 10 copies, and a paperbound edition of 300 copies, $40, available directly from Michael.)$80 94.Russian Printers’ Manual. 94. 5½ × 8½. 70 pages with 46 text illustrations. Printed wraps. Four oily stains at spine and in gutters. Good copy. Text in Cyrillic. Illustrations are typical of 19th c. printing equipment, cases and other furniture, lay of the cases, and room arrangements. The manual appears to be for handset types; but there are two illustrations of keyboards. There is no illustration of a printing press.$00 95.Schanilec, Clayton. THE INTRUDER. Stockholm (Wisconsin): Midnight Paper Sales, 2004. 5 × 7½. Color wood engraving by Gaylord Schanilec on gray paper (opens to 3 inches) shows Clayton fishing catalo gue 74 his favorite pool; 9 pages. Quarter cloth, slipcase. Fine. One of 120 signed copies.$25 96.Schanilec, Gaylord. Logue, Mary. A HOUSE IN THE COUNTRY. Minneapolis: Midnight Paper Sales, 994. 6¾ × 0. 62, (3) pages. Quarter leather and marbled boards with separate portfolio, all in brocade-lined clamshell case. Small typographic bookplate on pastedown. Fine. Three letters (2 autograph, typed) from Schanilec to the collector are laid in. One of 50 special copies. With a separate portfolio of five signed engravings, including one (The Wrong House) not in the regular edition.$800 97.Shaffer, Ellen. THE GARDEN OF HEALTH, AN ACCOUNT OF TWO HERBALS, The Gart der Gesundheit and the Hortus Sanitatis. SF: Book Club of California, 957. 9 × 3. 4 pages, original herbal leaf tipped in. Cloth-backed boards. Collector’s label on paste down. Near fine with prospectus. One of 300 copies. Folio leaf in two columns bears 4 woodcut illustrations of capitulum. An early hand has labeled two in English: Indian quince and poppy. The leaf bears a bull’s head watermark. Original leaf is from Hortus Sanitatis (Strassburg: Johann Pruss, 1499).$350 98.Shakespeare, William. VENUS & ADONIS. Wood engravings by Andy English. (Mission): Barbarian Press, 2005. 5½ × 0½. 53 pages with 2 engravings. Green cloth and patterned boards. Fine copy of this charming book. One of 135 copies, printed letterpress in Poliphilus type for narrative and Blado italic for dialogue. $300 Item 98. Shakespeare. the veatchs art s of the bo ok 99.Shakespeare Head Press. Froissart, Jean. FROISSART’S CRONYCLES. Translated by Sir John Bourchier, Lord Berners. (Oxford, 927) 8 volumes. 7 × 9½. 486 pages. Decorated with 6 hand colored maps, heraldic headpieces and tail pieces, and over 600 hand colored coats-of-arms of English, Scottish, and Irish princes and knights drawn by Paul Woodroffe. Text includes lengthy indices of persons and places, Holland-backed blue paper boards, paper spine labels (extra labels tipped-in at rear). With the printed publisher’s note. A little wear to labels. A fine, beautiful set. One of 350 sets printed by Bernard Newdigate on untrimmed Batchelor handmade paper. One of the three major works issued at Shakespeare Head Press, which “became the most mature and sophisticated of the [between war] private presses, producing some works in the grand manner which are a great pleasure to read and examine now.” Colin Franklin goes on to say (The Private Presses pp. 147–149) “Newdigate must stand as the best user of Caslon in the history of book design, of pure typography as adequate in itself.” Froissart’s chronicles, 1322–1400, describes the conditions leading to the Hundred Years War and the first 50 years of that war, and the age of chivalry. This translation was first printed by Pynson in 1523.$2,500 100.St. Teresa’s Press. THE DREAM OF THE ROOD. Taken from the Ninth Century Anglo-Saxon. (Flemington: Carmelite Monastery, 966). 8 × 0. 4 pages, hand colored initials throughout. Quarter calf and Japanese paper over boards, title on upper cover printed in gold uncial type. Collector’s book label on pastedown. Tiny bit of wear at spine extremities, else fine. One of 150 copies hand printed in Solemnis and Palatino Italic, on English handmade paper. The capital letters, based on those in the Book of Kells, are “black goldless letters filled in with unshaded colors and designs.” The second book of this press, founded in 1965, which took its inspiration from the Stanbrook Abbey Press and which produced exquisite work.$375 101.Stone House Press. CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS. By Charles Bertin. Translated by William Jay Smith. Roslyn, 992. 6 × 9½. 85 pages. Six wood engravings, each in a different color, by John DePol. Dark grey cloth. Fine. A poetic drama set aboard the Santa Maria, which evolves catalo gue 74 around a series of tempters (the crew-chorus) who “encircle the chief protagonist until he is deprived of all human support and is left alone with God.” One of 200 copies signed by translator, artist, and printer. Engravings are based on 15th and 16th century illustrations in Brown Library. $85 102.Stone House Press. CHECKLIST STONE HOUSE PRESS BOOKS & EPHEMERA 1978–1988. Compiled by Catherine Brody. NYPL, 989. 6½ × 9½. 3 pages. Cloth and patterned boards. Copiously illustrated with specimen pages. Fine. DePol’s own copy, dated and signed by him on pastedown. No. 181 of 200 signed copies. John DePol was the “house artist” for this press. Laid in is a prospectus and a list of DePol’s copies which he has marked #181 “personal copy.”$50 boards, but fine. Contents are excellent. An attractive specimen showing text layout for various sizes, ornamental material (32 pp.), and sample display designs using the type and ornaments with several in different color inks. Between 1909–1913 Weiss Fraktur was used exclusively by Tempel Verlag editions in Leipzig. In 1913 Bauer, with this specimen, made the typeface available to the public.$20 103.Stoneback, H. R. CARTOGRAPHERS OF THE DEUS LOCI: The Mill House. Newtown: Bird & Bull Press, 982. 6½ × 9½. 6 leaves. Vellum and pastepaper boards. Fine copy in plain dj, with prospectus. Inscribed by Henry Morris. One of 240 copies, printed on Dard Hunter’s 1930 Lime Rock paper. Title page drawing of The Mill House by Hunter. This was the site of his first paper mill.$45 104.Type Specimen. Bauer Type Foundry (Bauerschen Giesserei). HAUPTPROBE. Frankfurt, c. 907. 8½ × . 500 pages (plus 8 subscripted pages, and 6 section dividers). Original gilt cloth. Binding a little shaken due mostly to its size (about 2 inches thick). Contents are excellent, a small corner clipped on title page (? previous owner’s name); there are no excisions in the specimen. Very good. A wonderful comprehensive specimen in 6 sections. The sections include: job faces, display faces, italic/cursive faces, numbers and mathematical symbols, and various decorative material including cuts. One of the largest sections is titled Spezial-Schriften and appears devoted to their most recent faces and decorative material—with many contemporary layouts. Among the largest specimens from Bauer. Rare, OCLC locates only a single copy at the Staatsbibliothek in Berlin.$,500 105.Type Specimen. Bauer Type Foundry. WEISS-FRAKTUR, Die Schrift des Tempel-Verlags. Frankfurt, 93. Oblong × 9. 04 pages. Original boards with printed label on upper cover. A little toning to the the veatchs art s of the bo ok Item 106 Type Specimen. Connor. 106.Type Specimen. James Conner’s & Sons (United States Type Foundry). ABRIDGED SPECIMENS OF PRINTING TYPE, Brass Rule, Electrotypes and Revised Catalogue of Printing Materials. New York, 888. 9½ × 3. (2), 252 pages. Original cloth boards, joints and extremities a bit worn. Brittle end papers are chipped. Library stamp on introductory page and remnant of old card on rear blank—no other marks. catalo gue 74 Contents are complete with no excisions, and very good. The first 30 or so pages include price lists, some equipment, and job faces. The bulk of the specimen is an extensive showing of display faces plus approximately 50 pages of decorative material. A rare specimen from this venerable old New York City foundry. Annenberg/Saxe note five institutional copies.$,500 tipped-in photographs. Nubby oatmeal cloth with engraving inset. Harold Hugo’s copy. Fine in slipcase. One of 240 copies. Engravings are grouped by subject matter: those from a book are captioned; the others are unpublished. Printed from the blocks in black, blue, or red. With a catalogue raisonné of published work.$250 107.Village Press. PRINTING. An Essay by William Morris & Emery Walker. Park Ridge, 903. 7 × 9. 6 pages in black and red. Kelmscott-style -line woodcut initial, one illustration, tailpiece, and woodcut pressmark. Tan boards titled on upper cover, lightly soiled, chipped at head of spine. Very good copy. A most appropriate first book from the Village Press, as Frederic Goudy was inspired by William Morris. One of 231 copies printed by Goudy in his Village type (the first of over 100 faces he designed) based on Morris’s Golden type.$600 “Chief Typographic Event”of the Mid-9th Century in the Original Dutch Gilt Binding 108.Wakeman, Geoffrey. GRAPHIC METHODS IN BOOK ILLUSTRATION. (Leicestershire), The Plough Press, 98. 8½ × 2. Text booklet in wraps, 8 fascicles describing each illustration process, and each with an original leaf laid in. Fine in cloth tray case. The 18 prints are: woodcut, wood engraving, etching, copper engraving, stipple engraving, steel engraving, aquatint, mezzotint, chalk lithography, line lithography, chromolithography, relief color print, hand colored print, photograph, woodburytype, collotype, photogravure, photomechanical printing (3 examples laid in). The “purpose of this book is to assist with the identification of prints used in book illustration . . . [the prints] have been taken mostly from damaged and imperfect books. . . .” Includes a folio leaf (folded) from Foxe’s Actes and Monuments (1610) with a large woodcut, and one from Bewick’s British Birds. One of 120 numbered copies.$950 109.Warde, Beatrice. STANLEY MORISON, MAN OF LETTERS. (Wakefield): Fleece Press, 988. Miniature, 2 × 2½ inches. About 32 pages. Striped yellow cloth, slipcase. Fine. One of 240. Eleven type specimens in colors accompany the Sunday Times obituary of Morison.$80 110.Weissenborn, Hellmuth. HELLMUTH WEISSENBORN, ENGRAVER. With an autobiographical introduction by the artist. Whittington Press, (983). 0½ × 5. (3) text pages, 63 plates of engravings, several the veatchs art s of the bo ok 111.Whittingham Printers. Rathbone, Hannah Mary. SO MUCH OF THE DIARY OF LADY WILLOUGHBY AS RELATES TO HER DOMESTIC HISTORY, & to the Eventful Period of the Reign of Charles the First. London: Longman, 844. 6½ × 8½. 74 pages. Bound by Remnant & Edmonds (ticket at rear) in pink and gilt paper over boards, marbled endpapers, printed paper spine label. Both covers are cracked along joints but still attached by linen tapes. Housed in a sturdy cloth chemise and cloth slipcase with leather spine label. Publisher’s printed notice mounted inside front cover states that copies were bound also in morocco, and that this copy could be returned to the publisher for a morocco rebinding. The gilt paper, however, seems far more appropriate for this fictional diary. Printed by Charles Whittingham at Chiswick Press in 17th century style with ruled pages, woodcut headpieces and initials, catch words, and swash letters, it is a very pleasing book. Revolutionary in its attempt to raise the bar during a period of debased typography and shoddy printing, The Diary revived Caslon fonts for book work. Updike called this revival “the chief typographic event of the mid-nineteenth century.” (Printing Types II, pp. 197–199.) In Victorian Publishers’ Book-Bindings in Paper McLean illustrates this first edition of The Diary, a fourth edition, and the 1848 sequel each in a different decorative paper, all bound by Remnant & Edmonds.$800 112.Winchester, Simon and Carol Blinn. THE WRITER, THE MADMAN & THE PRINTER. Notes on a Writer’s Artistic License, Or, Setting the Record Straight. Easthampton: Warwick Press, 2002. 6 × 9. Six leaves printed in colors. Silk cloth, wrap around label. Fine. Title page bears a whimsical portrait of the printer fashioned from printers’ ornaments and printed in 6 colors. One of 120 copies.$65 catalo gue 74 Please visit us at the 46th California International Antiquarian Book Fair February 15–17, 2013 San Francisco Item 96. Schanilec. Logue. the veatchs art s of the bo ok Item 65. Macgregor. Item 56. Italian Papers. Item 104. Type Specimen. Bauer.