2 781 résultats
174238209Amsterdam: Pierre Mortier 1742. A BEAUTIFUL HAND-COLORED MAP OF WESTERN LANGUEDOC and areas to the west and north. 60 x 45.5 cm plate 62 x 52 cm sheet. The areas described in the title are FULLY COLORED BY A CONTEMPORARY HAND. Printed on fine thick laid paper. Reverse blank. A fine impression. A PRISTINE EXAMPLE with the paper FINE AND BRIGHT. Very scarce in such fine condition. <br/><br/> Pierre Mortier unknown
1640M2804Paris: Mariette Pierre 1640. Very Good. Size : 372x510 mm 14.625x20.125 Inches Coloring: Original Outline Coloring Category: Maps Africa North Egypt Mariette, Pierre unknown
1785M10224Paris: Chez Brion 1785. Very Good. Notes: Detailed large map of Germany with large decorative cartouches. Size : 465x652 mm 18.31x25.67 Inches Coloring: Original Hand Coloring Category: Maps Europe Germany; Chez Brion unknown
1785M10271Paris c.1785. Very Good. Size : 470x658 mm 18.50x25.91 Inches Coloring: Original Outline Coloring Category: Maps Europe Czech Republic Slovakia; Maps Europe Germany; unknown
BN91478dalida: Une garde-robe de la ville à la scène <br/><br/>dalida: Une garde-robe de la ville à la scène Kaprièlian Nelly; Tinturier Sandrine; Lefort Gérard; Samson Alexandre and Collectif unknown
1995x-0803975988Sage Pubns 1995. Hardcover. New. 2nd sub edition. 273 pages. 9.75x6.50x1.00 inches. Sage Pubns hardcover
1979309907MADISON: WISCONSIN. Fine in Near Fine dust jacket. 1979. First Edition; First Printing. Hardcover. 0299076601 . First edition. About fine in like dust jacket. Light shelf wear to jacket. SIGNED on neatly tipped-in cards by cast members: May McAvoy William Demarest Roscoe Karns Myrna Loy & Audrey Ferris. . WISCONSIN. hardcover
1948622650Los Angeles: Twentieth Century-Fox 1948. Softcover. Very Good. Quarto. Mimeographed sheets printed rectos only in brad-bound pale blue mimeographed wrappers. Faint stamp on front wrap from the studio's legal department tiny tears on the yapped edges very good or better. A continuity and dialogue script taken from the screen. The film featured Betty Grable and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. Twentieth Century-Fox unknown
18458614Paris 1845. Pen ink and watercolour. Very good condition apart from some minor foxing. A rare example of an original watercolour design for porcelain by the Samson factory of Paris.<br/> <br/> This finished design was intended as a reference source from which the porcelain painters could work using the design as a guide for the colours and image to be transformed from paper into fine porcelain. The French porcelain manufactory of Samson & Cie. was established by "Edmé Samson b. Paris 1810; d. Paris 1891 at 7 Rue Vendôme later Rue Béranger in Paris. The intention of the firm was to reproduce ceramics from museums and private collections and it claimed that all such reproductions would be distinctly marked to avoid confusion with the originals. In 1864 the factory was moved to Montreuil by Samson's son Emile Samson 1837-1913. The range of wares included copies of 18th-century porcelain from such factories as Sèvres Chelsea Meissen and Derby Chinese export-wares especially armorial wares decorated with famille rose colours and mugs decorated with the Fitzhugh pattern Delftware Iznikware maiolica and faience." Grove Dictionary of Art. unknown
184513948Paris 1845. Pen ink and watercolour. Very good condition apart from some light soiling and a small brown stain at the right edge of the sheet. A rare example of an original watercolour design for porcelain by the Samson factory of Paris.<br/> <br/> This finished design was intended as a reference source from which the porcelain painters could work using the design as a guide for the colours and image to be transformed from paper into fine porcelain. The French porcelain manufactory of Samson & Cie. was established by "Edmé Samson b. Paris 1810; d. Paris 1891 at 7 Rue Vendôme later Rue Béranger in Paris. The intention of the firm was to reproduce ceramics from museums and private collections and it claimed that all such reproductions would be distinctly marked to avoid confusion with the originals. In 1864 the factory was moved to Montreuil by Samson's son Emile Samson 1837-1913. The range of wares included copies of 18th-century porcelain from such factories as Sèvres Chelsea Meissen and Derby Chinese export-wares especially armorial wares decorated with famille rose colours and mugs decorated with the Fitzhugh pattern Delftware Iznikware maiolica and faience." Grove Dictionary of Art. unknown
184513950Paris 1845. Pen ink and watercolour. Very good condition apart from some light soiling minor foxing and a small brown stain left by a paperclip at the top edge of the image. A rare example of an original watercolour design for porcelain by the Samson factory of Paris.<br/> <br/> This finished design was intended as a reference source from which the porcelain painters could work using the design as a guide for the colours and image to be transformed from paper into fine porcelain. The French porcelain manufactory of Samson & Cie. was established by "Edmé Samson b. Paris 1810; d. Paris 1891 at 7 Rue Vendôme later Rue Béranger in Paris. The intention of the firm was to reproduce ceramics from museums and private collections and it claimed that all such reproductions would be distinctly marked to avoid confusion with the originals. In 1864 the factory was moved to Montreuil by Samson's son Emile Samson 1837-1913. The range of wares included copies of 18th-century porcelain from such factories as Sèvres Chelsea Meissen and Derby Chinese export-wares especially armorial wares decorated with famille rose colours and mugs decorated with the Fitzhugh pattern Delftware Iznikware maiolica and faience." Grove Dictionary of Art. unknown
184513967Paris 1845. Pen ink and watercolour. Very good condition apart from some light soiling and minor foxing. A rare example of an original watercolour design for porcelain by the Samson factory of Paris.<br/> <br/> This finished design was intended as a reference source from which the porcelain painters could work using the design as a guide for the colours and image to be transformed from paper into fine porcelain. The French porcelain manufactory of Samson & Cie. was established by "Edmé Samson b. Paris 1810; d. Paris 1891 at 7 Rue Vendôme later Rue Béranger in Paris. The intention of the firm was to reproduce ceramics from museums and private collections and it claimed that all such reproductions would be distinctly marked to avoid confusion with the originals. In 1864 the factory was moved to Montreuil by Samson's son Emile Samson 1837-1913. The range of wares included copies of 18th-century porcelain from such factories as Sèvres Chelsea Meissen and Derby Chinese export-wares especially armorial wares decorated with famille rose colours and mugs decorated with the Fitzhugh pattern Delftware Iznikware maiolica and faience." Grove Dictionary of Art. unknown
184510201Paris 1845. Pen ink and watercolour. Very good condition apart from a few mild creases and some very minor soiling. A rare example of an original watercolour design for porcelain by the Samson factory of Paris.<br/> <br/> This finished design was intended as a reference source from which the porcelain painters could work using the design as a guide for the colours and image to be transformed from paper into fine porcelain. The French porcelain manufactory of Samson & Cie. was established by "Edmé Samson b. Paris 1810; d. Paris 1891 at 7 Rue Vendôme later Rue Béranger in Paris. The intention of the firm was to reproduce ceramics from museums and private collections and it claimed that all such reproductions would be distinctly marked to avoid confusion with the originals. In 1864 the factory was moved to Montreuil by Samson's son Emile Samson 1837-1913. The range of wares included copies of 18th-century porcelain from such factories as Sèvres Chelsea Meissen and Derby Chinese export-wares especially armorial wares decorated with famille rose colours and mugs decorated with the Fitzhugh pattern Delftware Iznikware maiolica and faience." Grove Dictionary of Art. unknown
184510162Paris 1845. Pen ink and watercolour. Very good condition apart from some light foxing and a few small spots in the image and margin. A rare example of an original watercolour design for porcelain by the Samson factory of Paris.<br/> <br/> This finished design was intended as a reference source from which the porcelain painters could work using the design as a guide for the colours and image to be transformed from paper into fine porcelain. The French porcelain manufactory of Samson & Cie. was established by "Edmé Samson b. Paris 1810; d. Paris 1891 at 7 Rue Vendôme later Rue Béranger in Paris. The intention of the firm was to reproduce ceramics from museums and private collections and it claimed that all such reproductions would be distinctly marked to avoid confusion with the originals. In 1864 the factory was moved to Montreuil by Samson's son Emile Samson 1837-1913. The range of wares included copies of 18th-century porcelain from such factories as Sèvres Chelsea Meissen and Derby Chinese export-wares especially armorial wares decorated with famille rose colours and mugs decorated with the Fitzhugh pattern Delftware Iznikware maiolica and faience." Grove Dictionary of Art. unknown
184510200Paris 1845. Pen ink and watercolour. Good condition apart from some overall light soiling minor foxing and mild creasing. A rare example of an original watercolour design for porcelain by the Samson factory of Paris.<br/> <br/> This finished design was intended as a reference source from which the porcelain painters could work using the design as a guide for the colours and image to be transformed from paper into fine porcelain. The French porcelain manufactory of Samson & Cie. was established by "Edmé Samson b. Paris 1810; d. Paris 1891 at 7 Rue Vendôme later Rue Béranger in Paris. The intention of the firm was to reproduce ceramics from museums and private collections and it claimed that all such reproductions would be distinctly marked to avoid confusion with the originals. In 1864 the factory was moved to Montreuil by Samson's son Emile Samson 1837-1913. The range of wares included copies of 18th-century porcelain from such factories as Sèvres Chelsea Meissen and Derby Chinese export-wares especially armorial wares decorated with famille rose colours and mugs decorated with the Fitzhugh pattern Delftware Iznikware maiolica and faience." Grove Dictionary of Art. unknown
184510207Paris 1845. Pen ink and watercolour. Very good condition apart from some very minor foxing. A rare example of an original watercolour design for porcelain by the Samson factory of Paris.<br/> <br/> This finished design was intended as a reference source from which the porcelain painters could work using the design as a guide for the colours and image to be transformed from paper into fine porcelain. The French porcelain manufactory of Samson & Cie. was established by "Edmé Samson b. Paris 1810; d. Paris 1891 at 7 Rue Vendôme later Rue Béranger in Paris. The intention of the firm was to reproduce ceramics from museums and private collections and it claimed that all such reproductions would be distinctly marked to avoid confusion with the originals. In 1864 the factory was moved to Montreuil by Samson's son Emile Samson 1837-1913. The range of wares included copies of 18th-century porcelain from such factories as Sèvres Chelsea Meissen and Derby Chinese export-wares especially armorial wares decorated with famille rose colours and mugs decorated with the Fitzhugh pattern Delftware Iznikware maiolica and faience." Grove Dictionary of Art. unknown
184514075Paris 1845. Pen ink and watercolour. Good condition apart from some overall light foxing and slight discolouration of the paper due to age. A rare example of an original watercolour design for porcelain by the Samson factory of Paris.<br/> <br/> This finished design was intended as a reference source from which the porcelain painters could work using the design as a guide for the colours and image to be transformed from paper into fine porcelain. The French porcelain manufactory of Samson & Cie. was established by "Edmé Samson b. Paris 1810; d. Paris 1891 at 7 Rue Vendôme later Rue Béranger in Paris. The intention of the firm was to reproduce ceramics from museums and private collections and it claimed that all such reproductions would be distinctly marked to avoid confusion with the originals. In 1864 the factory was moved to Montreuil by Samson's son Emile Samson 1837-1913. The range of wares included copies of 18th-century porcelain from such factories as Sèvres Chelsea Meissen and Derby Chinese export-wares especially armorial wares decorated with famille rose colours and mugs decorated with the Fitzhugh pattern Delftware Iznikware maiolica and faience." Grove Dictionary of Art. unknown
20192-170813008XIndependently published 2019. Paperback. New. 143 pages. 11.00x8.50x0.33 inches. Independently published paperback
2015__0415711312Routledge 2015. Hardcover. New. 1st edition. 324 pages. 9.75x7.00x1.00 inches. Routledge hardcover
1678200041AG1678. Paris Sanson d'Abbeville 1678. Original hand-coloured engraving. Plate Size: 53.6 cm x 41.7 cm. Sheet Size: 61.8 cm x 46.5 cm. Original map. In very good condition. Faint signs of browning to map. Minor paper imperfections to the outer margins. Small stain to map near centre-fold. A richly detailed map showing the northern part of Portugal. Relief on map depicted pictorially and border inlaid with longitudinal and latitudinal details The map is dominated by three rivers: the Tajo Tagus in the south the Douro and the Minho further north. The Spanish kingdom and regions such as Leon are included and the great city of Salamanca can be seen. The lower part of the map runs out before the Tagus estuary empties into the Atlantic at Lisbon. The ornamental title cartouche is in the lower right corner of the map. Off the coast is a large warship flying the coat-of-arms Kingdom of Portugal and the Algarves. The sails of the boat carry Latin text commemorates the commercial and maritime exploits of King John IV in Africa Arabia Ethiopia Persia India and Brazil. Nicolas Sanson 20 December 1600 7 July 1667 was a French cartographer termed by some the creator of French geography in which he's been called the "father of French cartography." The French school of Geography was unprecedented in its attention to precision and scientific detail and discarded much of the decorative embellishments of previous maps as irrelevant. From Sanson's time in the second half of the seventeenth century until the latter part of the eighteenth century French geographical conceptions were more influential than those put forward by any other nation. He was tutor to Louis XIII and Louis XIV. Sanson published over 300 maps. In 1692 Hubert Jaillot collected Sanson's maps in an Atlas nouveau. Wikipedia unknown
1700M11022Paris c.1700. Very Good. Notes: French map of Africa as a continent. Size : 462x645 mm 18.19x25.39 Inches Coloring: Hand Colored Category: Maps Africa Continent; unknown
2006DBS-9780387283852Springer 2006. 1st. Hardcover. New. Springer hardcover
2006DBS-9780387283852Springer 2006. 1st. Hardcover. New. Springer hardcover
2024Adhya-9780357976876CENGAGE 2024. Paperback. New. CENGAGE paperback
2024Adhya-9780357976876CENGAGE 2024. Paperback. New. CENGAGE paperback