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In-8° (cm. 22,3), pp. 30. Brossura editoriale, con rinforzo di colla e graffette lungo il dorso all'interno, strappo al piatto posteriore ombre marginali e segni a biro al piatto anteriore. STOLS, editore e coproprietario della Casa Editrice, Boosten & Stols; appassionato di tipografia dal 1922 al 1042 pubblicò 550 libri di pregio in edizioni limitate per bibliofili, perlopiù opere di poeti olandesi, assistito da Jan van Krimpen e poi da Helmut Salden. John Buckland Wright illustrò molti di questi libri, Nel 1951 si trasferì in America Latina.lavorando per l'UNESCO in Ecuador, Guatemala e Messico fino al 1962, poi tornò in Olanda e nel 1963 di nuovo in Messico come consulente culturale e giornaistico, infine a Tarragona (wiki). Raro. Esemplare da studio. Così com'è
pp. xxii, 48. Title page printed in red and black. Uncut and unopened. Printed on Van Gelder hand-made paper. Slight age stain. Penciled notation in gutter "The Rosenbach Co." Small 8vo. Original blue floral pattern paper binding. Original spine label. Limited Edition of only 950 copies. Nice copy. PRESS/W39
204p. Title page decorated and printed in red and black. Uncut. Top edge gold. Penciled ownership. Small 8vo. Original full green cloth, gold bordered. Binding worn and lightly stained. Hardbound. Nice copy. PRESS/W33
pp. xiii, 78. Title page printed in red and black. Deckle edges. Gutters stained. Old Christmas stamp on fly leaf. Tall 32mo. Original printed wraps decorated in red and black, slightly worn at edges. Nice copy. PRESS/W39.
pp. xi, 115. Title page printed in red and black. Uncut. Tall 32mo. Original printed paper wraps, lettered and decorated in red. Small loss at edges. Stamped number ownership on rear cover. Nice copy. Includes an unusual plea for illumination by gas lamps. PRESS/W39
25p. + Etched portrait frontis of Stevenson. Printed only on recto throughout. Tall thin 8vo. Original cloth backed patterned binding. "Braid Scots" R.L.S. on gold lettered spine. Hardbound. Printed in small edition by Charles J. Swayer, London. Nice copy. PRESS/W32 x 2c
pp. (xvii), 113 (1). Small folio. Designed, printed, and bound by Ward Ritchie. Set in Intertype Waverly; on Linweave Paper, deckle edged. Bound in paper boards decorated by the artist, backed in brown cloth. Slipcase covered in rice paper, slightly soiled. Number 769 of an edition limited to only 1500 copies, signed by the artist. A fine example. From Wiki: The story is told in the first person by John Wiltshire, a British copra trader on the fictional South Sea island of Falesá. Upon arriving on the island, he meets a rival trader named Case, who (in an apparently friendly gesture) arranges for him to be "married" to a local girl named Uma in a ceremony designed to impress the natives but to be completely non-binding in the view of Europeans. Wiltshire soon discovers that Uma has a taboo attached to her which causes all the other natives to refuse to do business with him, to Case's profit. He also hears rumors of Case having been involved in the suspicious deaths of his previous competitors. Although realising that he has been tricked, Wiltshire has genuinely fallen in love with Uma, and has their marriage legalised by a passing missionary. Wiltshire gradually learns that Case's influence over the villagers stems from their belief that he has demonic powers, as a result of his simple conjuring tricks as well as strange noises and visions they have experienced at a "temple" he has built in the forest. Upon investigating, Wiltshire finds that these experiences are also tricks produced by imported technologies such as luminous paint and Aeolian harps. Wiltshire sets out that night to destroy the temple with gunpowder. Case confronts him and the two men fight, resulting in Case's death. The story concludes with Wiltshire several years later living on another island, still happily married to Uma, worrying about what will happen to his mixed-race children. Stevenson saw "The Beach of Falesá" as the ground-breaking work in his turn away from romanticism to realism. Stevenson wrote to his friend Sidney Colvin: 'It is the first realistic South Seas story; I mean with real South Sea character and details of life. Everybody else that has tried, that I have seen, got carried away by the romance, and ended in a kind of sugar candy sham epic, and the whole effect was lost - there was not etching, no human grin, consequently no conviction. Now I have got the smell and look of the thing a good deal. You will know more about the South Seas after you have read my little tale than if you had read a library.' In an unusual change for Stevenson, but in-line with realism, the plot of the story is less important, rather the realistic portrayal of the manners of various social classes in island society is foregrounded; it is essentially a novel of manners. As Stevenson says to Colvin in a letter, "The Beach of Falesá" is "well fed with facts" and "true to the manners' of the society it depicts." Other than the island itself which is fictional, it contains the names of real people, real ships and real buildings which Stevenson was familiar with from his personal travels in the South Seas. W42 L
pp. xiv, 93. Title page printed in red and black. Deckle edges. Top edge gold. Penciled notation. Ownership number stamped on rear end paper. Tall 32mo. Original limp leather binding, decorated and lettered in gold. Loss at edges and spine. PRESS/W39
pp. vii, 136. Illustrated with full page etchings by Denis Tegetmeier; designed by Eric Gill; printed and bound by Hague & Gill; hand-set in Bunyan type, designed by Gill, and first used in this book; full tan buckram, stamped in blue, red and gold. 4to. 9 1/8 x 11 1/2 inches. Top edge gold. Binding curiously stained at bottom front corner and rear top corner. From the original slip case? Paper slip case paper label has slight chipping. Number 413 of an edition limited to only 1500 copies, signed by Denis Tegetmeier and Eric Gill. The books published by the Limited Editions Club are justly treasured for the quality of the texts, the beauty and artistry of the illustrations, the creativity of design, and the overall excellence of the paper, presswork, and binding. Each book would make a wonderful gift for any occasion. W42
Thick 8vo, 24pp., followed by [212] leaves (mostly printed on one side only), a couple of samples excised from to leaves, orig. decorated cloth, gilt, a very good copy. This specimen book presents a fine and extensive example of the period. Provenance: From the library of Ruari McLean with his signature to front-endpaper.
79 S. Original Halbleinwand mit verziertem Deckeltitel (Jugendstil). Einband etwas berieben und bestoßen. Innen sauberer, ordentlicher Zustand.
[2],449-468pp., 1 plate, orig. printed wrappers.
This is a very good softcover copy with just light wear. Completely clean inside and out. Folded illustrated wrapper with loose sheets. Text in English and Dutch. Essay by Sonja Herst. 11" high X 8" wide.
In 8°, pp. 13. Brossura.
4to., with a folding frontispiece and numerous illustrations and type samples in the text; original printed wrappers, sewed as issued, a very good, clean copy. Scarce. The advisory panel includes Francis Meynell, Stanley Morison and Mortimer Wheeler.
Cm. 19,5, cart. edit., pag. 142 (2). Con ill.ni nel testo. Ottimo esemplare. Breve storia della nascita della carta e della stampa e interessante analisi economica e produttività sul mondo cartaceo a meta' degli anni '980.
LIMITED EDITION OF 1800 COPIES. COPY No.454. SIGNED BY DANIEL SPERBER and ZVI NARKISS. An ornate edition of Perek Ha-Shalom, a chapter from the Babylonian Talmud highlighting the importance of peace and reconciliation. This edition, published on the occasion of the peace treaty between Israel and Egypt in 1979, features beautiful typography and elaborate gilt text decorations by the Israeli artist Zvi Narkiss, on high-quality paper. The English translation appears parallel to the original Hebrew text. Extensively annotated. 325x265mm. Unpaginated. Brown leather embossed Hardcover. Gilt cover and spine. Pages upper edge gilt. Cover slightly dirty. Cover corners and spine upper edge worn/slightly peeling. [SUMMARY]: This bibliophile edition of Perek Ha-Shalom is in very good condition. PLEASE NOTE: This item is overweight. We may ask for extra shipping costs.
This is a fine hardcover copy in a fine dust jacket. Completely clean inside and out. As new. This book collects 17 of the best essays from 'Typographica' magazine, the leading periodical on modern typography which was published irregularly from 1949 to 1967. The 14 original issues of 'Typographica' are virtually impossible to obtain, full sets even scarcer. The articles collected here are from the 'New Series' published 1960-67. Foreword by Aaron Burns. Illustrated throughout in black, white and red. Subjects include visual poetry, Dieter Rot, Paul van Ostaijen, Richard Hamilton, Polish avant-garde graphics (1920's- 30's), Henryk Berlewi, Piet Zwart, Paul Schuitema, John Heartfield, Rodchenko, Herbert Bayer and Kurt Schwitters. 11" high X 9"wide, 229 pages. Large heavy book, foreign shipping will be extra. This book will be securely wrapped and packed in a sturdy box and shipped with tracking.
In 8' gr., br. ed. con sovrac., pp. 58, ill. in n. e col. n.t.; due leggeri aloni al piatto ant., strappetti e piccole mancanze ai margini della sovrac., lievi fioriture diffuse alla cop., ai tagli, e agli interni, complessivamente in buono stato.
Crown 8vo (246 x 150 mm), ff. 63, tipped-in is a small folio sheet (280 x 213 mm) printed of one side only "Prices of Type and Materials Manufactured and Sold by Stephen Sutton & Co. at the Caxton Letter Foundry...", later quarter red morocco, green boards. A very rare specimen of printing types from this little known foundry. The specimen begins with 34 samples of different size font from "the most modern faces, cut by artists of first-rate skill and acknowledged talent." Then follows 27 priced specimens of "a beautiful and extensive assortment of Stereotype Ornaments." The tipped-in price list is printed in double-column and gives prices for type, wood type, leads' and metal furniture, galleys, brass rule, cases, frames, and furniture. At the foot is a list of "Agents for the Country": Mr. Joseph Graham, 2 Jewry Street, Aldgate; Mr Simmons, Artillery Lane, Bishopsgate Street; Messrs. Renshaw and Kirkman, Budge Row; Messrs. Shepherd and Sutton, Foster Lane. Provenance: From the typographical library of John Lewis (his bookplate) and John Brinkley (his signature). The only other copy recorded is that of The British Library.
This is a very good hardcover copy long ago released from a library, so rebound in black buckram, with title in gilt on the spine, also a number at the base of the spine. NO other library marks or pockets, etc. The title page has a bit of oxidation to the top of the page. This very soft paper typically attracts foxing. Very clean throughout. A few edge tears now closed. The color plates are printed on white glossy sheets and are fine. 36 color plates + 121 black & white illustrations + 27 figures in the text. 11" high X 8" wide, 189 pages + ads. Heavy book, foreign shipping will be extra. This book will be securely packed and shipped with tracking.
This is a fine softcover copy with no wear at all. Completely clean inside and out. This is a sale catalog for an auction held at Sotheby's London on May 5, 2010. Sale code: L10409 "CORONELLI". The sale consisted of the Benevento Collection (71 lots) of important maps and atlases. All illustrated in color. Prices realized sheet included. 11" high X 8" wide, 88 pages.
in-8, pp. 11, broch. edit. Estratto da: 'Bollettino della 'Società Pavese di Storia Patria', anno XI, (1911), fascicoli III-IV.. .
Milano, (primi '900), 4to (cm. 32 x 24) brossura, pp. 56 con numerosissime illustrazioni in nero nel testo. Piccoli strappi alla brossura, specie al dorso. Interno buono.
<p>circa. 32 cm, br. edit, p. 59, (1) con 44 ill. nel testo</p>