7 773 résultats
194580837Washington D. C.: Government Printing Office. Fine. 1945. First Edition. Hardcover. Hardcover in blue cloth boards imprinted with picture and lettering in black. No dust jacket as issued. First printing from 1945. Marked "Restricted" from when first published. Book and boards are clean and crisp and present as new. Binding is tight and corners are sharp. Contents cover explosives navy gun ammunition small arms and trench warfare bomb-type ammunition pyrotechnics and chemical ammunition rockets and more. Illustrated. 256 pp. Including index . Government Printing Office hardcover
1626ST19298Antwerp: M. Snyders 1626. FIRST EDITION. 135 x 82 mm. 5 1/4 x 3 1/4". 39 of 40 leaves lacking C4. Two volumes one as issued the other a companion volume containing related plates without any title page. <br/> Very pretty late 18th or early 19th century red morocco covers bordered by delicate cresting roll with leaf cornerpieces smooth spine gilt in compartments with leafy centerpieces gilt lettering turn-in with gilt floral roll pale blue watered silk endleaves all edges gilt. Supplemental volume in late 19th century red half morocco over red paper boards similarly tooled spine. Housed together in a custom-made modern wooden box with sliding panel closure a heart mosaic in multi-colored hard-grain leather on its sides. Amoris Divini WITH engraved title page and 38 of 39; lacking plate XXXIV ENGRAVED PLATES 35 OF THEM ON VELLUM ALL DELICATELY COLORED AND HEIGHTENED IN GOLD plates 19 29 30 31 and 36 bound after text pages for plates 31 36 29 30 and 34 respectively; second volume with 45 plates on paper though without any text including many of these same emblems apparently from a later edition of this work ALL DAINTILY HIGHLIGHTED WITH GILT. Front pastedown of first volume with monogram book label in colors and gilt verso of front free endpaper with oval armorial bookplate "Ex Museo Van Der Helle" see below. De Vries "De Nederlandsche Emblemata" 121; Landwehr "Low Countries" 33; Praz p. 254; Brunet I 240 this copy; Delbergue-Cormont "Bibliothèque de M. Van der Helle" Paris 10 Février 1868 lot 69 this copy. Amoris spine very slightly dulled occasional hints of marginal thumbing but A LOVELY COPY clean and fresh internally with rich colors and glistening gold in a well-preserved binding; supplemental plates with faint marginal browning but excellent internally the engravings gently shimmering with gold and the binding with few signs of wear.<br/> <br/> The main volume here comprises a collection of emblems illustrating concepts of human and divine love; it is made all the more special by being printed on vellum beautifully hand colored and then delicately highlighted with gold. The emblems depict Divine Love as a beardless young man with nimbus who always represents love in its purest form. Human love or worldly love is variously embodied in a winged Cupid sometimes blindfolded who represents erotic love and who is accompanied by symbols of treasure or power that represent worldly desires. Landwehr Praz and De Vries make no mention of a vellum edition but Brunet describes one copy on vellum painted in colors and gold which he says sold at the Duriez auction. That book appeared as lot 3216 in "Catalogue des livres imprimés et manuscrits composant la bibliothèque de feu M. L.-M.-J. Duriez de Lille membre de la Société des Bibliophiles français" Paris J.-S. Merlin 1827 where its binding description matches our copy. Having uncovered no other hand-colored copies on vellum in auction records or in OCLC we think it quite likely that the present volume is in fact the Duriez copy. Louis Duriez 1753-1825 was a Lille lawyer of sufficient skill and cleverness to move without incident from serving as lieutenant provost for his district under King Louis XVI to becoming receiver of the district of Lille after the revolution 1791 and purchasing the estate of an aristocrat which had been seized by the state. He rose to successively more important and remunerative governmental positions and was named Knight of the Royal Order of the Legion of Honor in 1814. In 1820 he was one of the founding members of the Société des Bibliophiles français an elite group limited to 24 scholarly collectors. After his death his collection of more than 5000 carefully chosen works was dispersed at 59 auctions held between 22 January and 1 April 1828 at Maison Silvestre in Paris. A perusal of the lots on offer finds a strong emphasis on fine bindings works on vellum and illustrated books many noting hand coloring. The emblems in the second thinner book here on paper without coloring--but with gold highlighting allow the reader to experience the pleasure to be found in comparing the degrees of decoration and opulence of the two volumes. These illustrations likely come from one of the later printings of this title each of which added new emblems to the original 39 called for in Landwehr and Praz. It is not clear when or by whom this second volume was wedded to the first. After its presumed residence in the Duriez collection our copy of the 1626 edition and perhaps its sidecar volume moved to another distinguished library--that formed by the scholarly and erudite French collector M. Van Der Helle of Lille who amassed a collection particularly rich in illustrated books and works on vellum. In the catalogue for the sale of his library in 1868 Paris auction house Delbergue-Cormont described him as a bibliophile "of the school of Renouard . . . who only liked irreproachable copies." We bought this item without being warned that it is slightly defective but given its distinguished provenance and the many other features it has going for it we did not ask the seller to take it back. M. Snyders unknown
190114974Paris, Bibliothèque Chacornac (La-Roche-sur-Yon, Petite Imprimerie Vendéenne), 1901 ; in-8, broché ; (4), VII, (1 bl.), 267 pp., (4) pp. de table et imprimeur, couverture beige clair rempliée, dessinée par Alexandre Séon et imprimée en violet.
196334184Washington D. C.: United States Government Printing Office 1963 87pp. Stapled wraps. Wraps have light stains. Staples are rusty. Edges of text block are foxing. Tips and spine ends are bumped. Text appears to be unmarked. . Paperback. Good. United States Government Printing Office paperback
Produced in conjunction with the Vancouver Arts of the Book Exhibition, March 16 - April 20, 1986. 150 pages. Illustrated in black and white. Sections include: Printing & Publishing; Bookbinding; Calligraphy; Papermaking; Typography and Type Design; Selected References; Directory of British Columbia Book Artists. Includes decorated craft dust jacket. Unmarked with moderate wear. A sound copy from a print run of only 1,000 copies. Book
pp. xvi, 190. Title page printed in red and black. Decorative red initials. Printed on Van Gelder hand-made paper. Deckle edges. Blue swirl watercolor paste downs and endpapers, slightly browned. Inked ownership of Mildred Palmer Caire, 1924. Small 8vo. Original full paper binding. Original paper spine label. Fourth edition. Limited Edition of only 925 copies. Nice copy. PRESS/W39
1950403143-UF26Amsterdam : Town Printing Office 1950. Softcover. Good. Folder with stapled booklet and loose attachments maps photographs etc. small 4to.; Edges folder partly browned. Amsterdam : Town Printing Office paperback
1818PHO-2123Paris, [Imprimerie de Molé] pour J. Eberhardt, 1818-1819. In-4 (26,8 × 21,2 cm), 24 pages non chiffrées, texte en arabe, encadrements et séparations ornementales, non coupé tel que paru.
1397314265.Ghardcover. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. hardcover
31p. + Plus four full page bold color drawings by Rey Abruzzi through Frank R. Ewing of Art Service Associates. Color pictorial title page lettered in red, green and gold. Text printed in black with large gold initials. Title and page numbers printed in red. Format and Typography by Robert Donald. Christmas Greeting insert poem. 8vo. Original full embossed sky blue cloth binding with a Dickens figure embossed in gold and white. Also on front cover title and author gold and white lettered. Gilt lettered spine. Original yellow slip case. Binding by Albert Oldach & Son. Limited Edition. Number 786 of only 1300 copies. This edition prepared as a Christmas Greeting from Samuel A. Dalton. A charming crisp copy. Fine books from earlier Christmas seasons make great gifts today. CHRISTMAS/W68.
Large 8vo, [iv],114pp., limited edition, presentation inscription from the author to George Folsom (lawyer, antiquarian, editor and librarian of AAS and NY Historical Society), 3 large foldout plates, orig. cloth backed boards.
Hardcover, 16 pages, illustrated, 12mo, 18 cm. SUBJECT (S) : Freedom of the press -- Early works to 1800. Franklin, Benjamin, 1706-1790. Originally published in the Pennsylvania Gazette for the week June 3 to June 19, 1731. Other Titles: Pennsylvania gazette (Philadelphia, Pa. : 1729) . Edited and with an introduction by Randolph Goodman ; a prefatory note by Philip Wittenberg ; and wood engravings by John De Pol. Light wear. Very good condition. (BIB-11-1)
193195612Little Rock Arkansas; Dayton Ohio; et al. 1931 through 1932. 1931. 1931. - A collection of 12 letters penned by E. Harold Hugo addressed to Parker Breese Allen President of the Meriden Gravure Company chronicling Hugo's sales trips on behalf of the printing company. Hugo's letters are preceded by a March 27th 1931 Inter-Office letter from Parker Allen to E. Harold Hugo initialed by Allen. At the bottom of this one-page typed letter is a 25 word annotation penned by Allen about the "Manning-Bowman" job. Hugo's subsequent letters are penned or penciled on 34 pages the first 3 of which are on 9-1/4 inch high by 5-7/8 inch high hotel stationery including that of the Southwest Hotels in Little Rock and The Dayton-Biltmore in Ohio. The very last letter is penned on 11 inch high by 8-1/2 inch wide Lord Baltimore Hotel stationery. All of the other letters are written on The Meriden Gravure Co.'s 11 inch high by 8-1/2 inch wide "Inter-Office Correspondence" stationery. The letters are as follows:<p>1 April 20 1931. A 4 page Autograph Letter Signed from Hugo to "Parks" Parker Allen on Little Rock Hotel letterhead. Hugo has met with the State of Arkansas geologist George Casper Branner. "He was very much interested is sold on the process and plans to use us on some of his fossil publications."<p>2 April 21 1931. A 2 page Autograph Letter Signed from Hugo to Parker Allen on Dayton Ohio's "The Dayton-Biltmore" hotel letterhead. Hugo met with the Kentucky State geologist Willard Rouse Jillsen "rather a hard-boiled chap & his father is in the engraving business. However he had to admit the superiority of our work."<p>3 April 22 1931. A two page Autograph Letter Signed from Hugo to Parker Allen on "The Dayton-Biltmore" letterhead. Hugo met with the American geologist and paleontologist August F. Foerste who "gave me a couple of leads." "Foerste liked our work immensely."<p>Subsequent letters are from Hugo's 1932 sales trip. The letters probably date from January but we have not been able to precisely pin down the exact sequence. All but the last one are written on "The Meriden Gravure Co. Inter-Office Correspondence" stationery. Deducing from the content they go at least through March.<p>4 A 4 page Autograph Letter Signed penned in Chicago addressed to Parker Allen. Hugo met with Albert C. McFarland who was the manager of the Manufacturing Department of the University of Chicago Press. He receives information on where the work is done for the press. "Mac Farland sic seemed like a nice fellow and says he'll remember us and I believe he will . as far as I can see Mac Farland is the Dictator." He also met with Carey Croneis the curator of paleontology at the Walker Museum. "Croneis likes our stuff very much and will recommend it."<p>5 A 2 page Autograph Letter Signed and a note written from Urbana Illinois to Parker Allen. He met with Dorothy Rose the editor of scientific publication for the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. "We are certain to get their next book on fossils." i.e. J. Marvin Weller's Doctoral Thesis.<p>6 A 4 page Autograph Letter Signed to Parker Allen from Nebraska. Hugo met with Dr. Erwin Barbour director of the Nebraska State Museum and "a classmate of your Dad's at Yale." He then met with Dr. George Condra director of the Conservation and Survey Division of the University of Nebraska. "He promised us his next job of 1500 of about 50 plates." Condra arranged a meeting with Hugo of men in the Experimental Agronomy Dept mis-spelled "Agrenamy". ".excellent reception here . By golly our stuff just sells itself with a little persuasion."<p>7 A 3 page Autograph Letter Signed from Kansas to Parker Allen. Hugo met with Ray C. Moore of the University of Kansas. Moore initiated the massive "Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology" the definitive encyclopedia of invertebrate fossils. Moore tells Hugo about a company in Canada ". Who are quoting ridiculous prices. I can't figure it out. He'll continue with us however."<p>8 A 2 page Autograph Letter Signed from Norman Oklahoma to Parker Allen. Hugo met with Charles Newton Gould who had organized the geology department at The University of Oklahoma. "I got an original from Gould to proof - a pencil sketch." "The trip is getting a little tiresome but interesting and I think will be very profitable."<p>9 A 4 page Autograph Letter Signed from Chicago to Parker Allen. Hugo meets again with Albert McFarland of the University of Chicago Press. "We will get Byzantine Testament & Papyrus Milbank as soon as they are ready." He refers to the color printer Max Jaffe. "Jaffee ea sic Vienna is doing a color job for them and they are in a mess over it." William Kittredge Director of Design and Typography for the Lakeside Press missed his appointment. Hugo gives a positive report on The Field Museum's gelatin plant. On the verso of this letter Hugo types the copy of a January 20 wire from Allen.<p>10 A 2 page Autograph Letter Signed written while en-route from Detroit. Hugo meets with the historian Eugene S. McCartney at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. From him he receives copy for a 15 page publication. From there he goes on to Detroit where he meets with someone from the advertising firm Campbell-Ewald. He calls the man "a bag of air that kept me waiting for an hour and a half." "Detroit was . a disappointment but Ann Arbor took the edge off a little."<p>11 A 2 page Autograph Letter Signed from Cleveland to Parker Allen. Hugo meets with Edd A. Ruggles the Cleveland Museum of Art's photographer from 1916-1941. Ruggles ". is enthusiastic about the process." He can get the OK for "an order for 30M postcards at approx 8.5M soon."<p>12 Later in the year on a different trip Hugo writes to Parker Allen from Baltimore in a 3 page Autograph Letter Signed penned on "Lord Baltimore Hotel" letterhead. In the letter dated October 4 1932 Hugo writes in detail of "8 good interviews at Princeton" . and several "jobs which will come our way eventually." He is told that "the only jobs in production are those started before we entered the Picture."<p>Several of the letters are folded for mailing and all are in generally very good condition.<p>In addition there are 9 typed transcriptions of the letters on poor yellowing copy paper several of which have short tears at the edges and holes from having once been stapled to other correspondence. <p>E. Harold Hugo August 8 1910 - 1985 was only 20 and 21 years old at the time of these letters and sales trips. Hugo had begun working at Meriden in 1924 at the age of 14 while still in High School.<p>According to his obituary published by the New York Times on October 5 1985: "Under Mr. Hugo's leadership the company won international renown for the quality of its art reproductions posters and illustrations for books and catalogues. . He began working part time at the Meriden Gravure Company when he was 14. During World War II he became general manager and in 1950 was named a director. He became president in 1969 and retired in 1975. In 1984 he received the W.A. Dwiggins Award from the Book Builders of Boston for distinction in graphic arts and printing."<p>William J. Glick an associate of Hugo's at Meriden Gravure has documented Hugo's life and work in a personal and scholarly book: "In the Service of Scholarship: Harold Hugo & The Meriden Gravure Company." New Castle Delaware: Oak Knoll Press 2017. Little Rock, Arkansas; Dayton, Ohio; et al. 1931 through 1932. [1931]. unknown
First edition, 8vo (207 x 125 mm), xxxii, 365, [3]pp., without the half-title but with the final errata leaf, cont. calf, neatly rebacked, leather spine label lettered in gilt. "Samuel Crumpe (1766?1796) came to prominence in 1793 with a carefully argued essay on unemployment, entitled An essay on the best means of providing employment for the people. In this he emphasised the importance of agriculture, and attacked low wages as 'a premium to idleness'; he also maintained that people would be lazy when working unless well paid. The essay also echoed popular concerns of the time when Crumpe argued that a prosperous Britain would lead to a prosperous Ireland, and it hinted at the dangers of separation."?(DIB). Provenance: With the printed bequest label of the Right Reverend Doctor F. Moylan, to the Diocese of Cork. McCulloch, p.284; Goldsmiths'-Kress, no. 15519.
4to. 67, (1) pp. With a figural woodcut initial. Marbled wrappers. First edition of this rare treatise on human action and the voluntariness of man's ethical dispositions: "an investigation of whether the formation of a virtuous or vicious habit is due to our freedom of choice. The treatise is divided into fourteen chapters and begins with a doxographical survey in which the Aristotelian position is opposed to the doctrines of the Stoics and the Platonists. What these latter positions have in common, according to Porzio, is that they both deny the complex nature of the human being, which he forcefully depicts as inescapably composed of both rationality and materiality. His analysis of the limits of human freedom touches upon Renaissance concepts of man and his place in the universe, as well as combines a distinctive approach to Aristotle’s teaching with an heterodox attitude towards divine grace" (L. Casini, "En renässansaristoteliker om den mänskliga frihetens gränser", in: Lychnos [2009], pp. 49-67, at p. 61). Porzio (1497-1554), a student of Pietro Pompanazzi and variously a writer on medical subjects, taught philosophy in Pisa and Naples. He held that the soul is the individual and corruptible form of the human body. - A finely printed work, showing some slight brownstaining throughout. From the library of the historian of medicine Walter Pagel (1898-1983). Edit 16, CNCE 34585. BM-STC Italian 537. Adams P 1957. Durling 3741.
4to, 273pp., orig. cloth, d.w. torn. This work deals with well over 2,000 books, listed under 52 German towns; no detail has been spared in the description of type-faces, borders, devices, initials and other characteristics of the printers and publishers concerned. This was the last part the author completed of his great index of early printed books.
19147749SF: John J. Newbegin 1914. 1st edition. #26/500 cc. Blue paper wrapped boards with spine & front board paper labels. VG some fading to boards. 25 pp 8vo. <br/><br/>Printed by Taylor Nash & Taylor. John J. Newbegin hardcover books
A clean, unmarked book with a tight binding. 359 pages. Full black cloth boards. 5 1/2"w x 8 5/8"h. Small tears and edge wear on price-clipped dust jacket Yellowing paper. This book explains English book production up to about the year 1800, from the receipt of the author's manuscript to the issue of the final product. Illustrated.
1943320987U. S. Government Printing Office 1943. unbound. Original poster. Color Lithograph. Measures 27.75 x 21.75"<br/> <br/> Hard to find WWII bond drive poster. Colors are vibrant with striking font design. Small chip to right margins and closed tears otherwise in good condition.<br/> <br/> U. S. Government Printing Office unknown
1943320990U.S. Government Printing Office 1943. unbound. Original Poster. Color Lithograph. Measures 28 x 22".<br/> <br/> Powerful text only WWII era poster. Folded as issued in very good condition. War bonds sometimes referred to as victory bonds particularly in propaganda are debt securities issued by a government to finance military operations and other expenditure in times of war without raising taxes to an unpopular level. They are also a means to control inflation by removing money from circulation in a stimulated wartime economy.<br/> <br/> U.S. Government Printing Office unknown
82p. Red chapter headings and initials. Uncut. Bookplate of J. M. Bundscho Typographers, Chicago. 12mo. Original vellum-like backed paper printed boards. Spine darkened. Original slip case, soiled. Nice copy. Very scarce. Fine books from earlier Christmas seasons make great gifts today. CHRISTMAS/W70
2000ABE-1182026063University of California Press 2000 1st Printing 1st edition of the US hardback. Large collection of writings by the great director Luis Bunuel including pieces on film of course but also on surrealism theatre and some personal history. An absolutely essential reference for film fans this unread looking Fine/Fine first printing is a perfect collectable. Language: eng Language: eng 0.0 Language: eng 0.0 Language: eng 0.0 Language: eng. 1st Edition. Hardcover. Fine/Fine. University of California Press hardcover
7653Chez l'auteur 91 pages in8. Sans date. broché. 91 pages. Ouvrage académique du Dr Émile Meyer Chaouat analysant les dynamiques des conflits religieux et raciaux avec une attention particulière à l'antisémitisme et aux dimensions philosophiques de ces tensions. Le livre publié par l'Imprimerie Bosc présente une étude approfondie sur 91 pages
A9781165315000New. unknown
B9781165315000New. unknown