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1812AQ14278London: Printed for William Darton 1812. 28pp 4. With eight copper-plates dated 1813 and two terminal advertisement leaves. Stitched in original publisher's buff paper wrappers lettered in black. Extremities dust-soiled and a trifle rubbed some loss to spine. Substantial loss to foot of title touching imprint with loss of price occasional marginal chipping and small ink spots to text tear to one plate partial naive colouring of four plates. A charming and amusing poem first printed in 1811 celebrating the vibrancy and variation of England's capital accompanied by several attractive views of the city's landmarks including Westminster Abbey Primrose Hill the Tower and St. Paul's Cathedral. COPAC records copies of this second edition at only three locations BL Bishopsgate Guildhall and only five locations for the first. Darton H987 2. Second edition corrected. 12mo. Printed for William Darton unknown
40973London: 1860. 380 x 390 cm. A magnificent wall map of London. Engraved over thirty sheets joined backed onto linen trimmed with green silk and mounted on original rollers. The whole housed within original wooden case measuring roughly 420 x 15 x 14 cm. Original wash hand colour demarcating the gas company districts the names of which have been handwritten in bold black ink. The map shows the extents from Crouch End down to Streatham and Plaistow across to Wormwood Scrubs. Scale - 12 inches to the mile. The altitudes given in feet at numerous intervals almost at every inch. Small tear within map towards upper edge. Fabric tape repair on reverse side of upper right corner. One of the finial posts missing from the lower roller. The signature of Thomas Henry Sutton Sotheron-Estcourt "Chairman of the Select Comittee House of Commons" dated 14th Aug. 1860 appears in manuscript to the lower left corner beneath the title. Sotheron-Estcourt was M.P. for North Wiltshire and briefly held the office of Home Secretary in the previous year. The title repeated in manuscript on the linen verso on the reverse side of the upper right corner. Adjacent to this a manuscript note reads: "Deposited in the Clerk of the Peace's Office on the 22nd August 1860". The Clerk of the Peace was a semi judicial position appointed to the county council one the main tasks of the position was maintenance of local legal records. In passing the Metropolis Gas Act the House of Commons regulated the rivalling gas companies operating across London: demarcating the districts that they could supply outlined on the map establishing a standard unit of measurement for energy usage candle power and setting a maximum price per unit. The Home Secretary was effectively appointed to the role of ombudsman by the Act. [London: 1860] unknown
1762AQ14205London: Printed for the Editior; and Sold by W. Owen et al. 1762. xii 118pp. Without terminal blank leaf. ESTC N32380. Bound after: HENRY David. An Historical Description of the tower of london and its curiosities. London. Printed for T. Carnan and F. Newbery 1778. iv 1 6-71pp 1. ESTC T86735. And: HENRY David. An historical description of St. paul's cathedral. London. Printed for T. Carnan and F. Newbery 1777. iv 56pp. ESTC T102526. And: HENRY David. An Historical Description of westminster abbey its monuments and curiosities. London. Printed for T. Carnan and F. Newbery 1778. iv 1 6-144pp. ESTC T194093. 12mo. Contemporary gilt-ruled calf. Without lettering-piece rubbed joints split - boards held by cords only. Very occasional light spotting overall internally clean and crisp. This rare compilation of 'above four thousand' rates for hackney coaches and certain rates for hackney chairmen watermen and carts also features 'an Accurate Measurement of the Ground' between certain locations in London. According to the prefatory advertisement it is an antidote to the 'Impositions of Hackney-Coachmen.universally complained of'. This copy is bound after three Carnan and Newbery guides to historical sites in London and Westminster; the whole forming a practical guide to both travel and destinations in the mid-eighteenth century capital. ESTC locates only three copies in the UK Kings College and two in Oxford colleges and just three elsewhere Huntington Illinois and NYPL and just a single copy of the second edition of 1770 at the BL. . First edition. Printed for the Editior; and Sold by W. Owen et al. hardcover
103511Henry G. Bohn London. N.d. c.1851. Henry G. Bohn London. No date Circa 1851. Hardback in original publisher's green blind decorated cloth. Thick 8vo. Coloured frontispiece of Kew Great Conservatory; fold-out map at rear in two portions with some closed tears illustrated throughout. Boards are a little sunned to margins very worn and rubbed. Slight damage to head of spine and cloth slightly splitting at joints. Internally some very light and occasional foxing spots o/w contents are clean and sound. hardcover
8.6 " x 14". Red cloth spine + cream boards with gilt. Profusely illus. With Black and white and colour maps. 32 pp. text + Addendum of 34 pp. + 14 fold-out maps (More maps included in the text) - No DW Very Good +++ [P-41] The basis for the holden-holford plan.
202206106Grenoble, Glénat, 2005 ; in-4, 48 pp., cartonnage de l'éditeur. EO tome 1.
60804c.1860s. . Albumen print. Tears on top and bottom right corners. Mounted on card.<br /> The London Stereoscopic and Photographic Company was begun in 1854 by George Swan Nottage. It specialised in the mass production of stereoscopic photographs where two almost identical photographs merged to form a three dimensional picture. The Company published many thousands of views during the 1850s and 1860s and became one of the largest photographic publishing companies in the world.<br /> [c.1860s]. unknown
60794c.1860s. . Albumen print. Small rip in top left corner. Mounted on card.<br /> The London Stereoscopic Company was begun in 1854 by George Swan Nottage. It specialised in the mass production of stereoscopic photographs where two almost identical photographs merged to form a three dimensional picture. The Company published many thousands of views during the 1850s and 1860s and became one of the largest photographic publishing companies in the world.<br /> [c.1860s]. unknown
66532295 x 445 mm Etching/engraving/watercolour written in pencil on the verso St. Paul te London.The print is Pasted on cardboard and fixed to a carton passe-partout reinforced with parchment corners. In good state.Hand coloured optical print of London. In the foreground the church of St Mary-le-Bow. In the distance St. Pauls Cathedral towering above the houses. The light sources and accents of the buildings and stars are perforated. On the verso of the print the holes are covered with translucent paper. Some of the holes are coated with green and red paint. This gives the illusion of coloured lights when the print is held in front of a light source. Blind stamped illustrations on the parchment corners which are used for reinforcement. This could be a recycled parchment from a book cover. OPT132 unknown
60796c.1860s. . Albumen print. Mounted on card.<br /> The London Stereoscopic Company was begun in 1854 by George Swan Nottage. It specialised in the mass production of stereoscopic photographs where two almost identical photographs merged to form a three dimensional picture. The Company published many thousands of views during the 1850s and 1860s and became one of the largest photographic publishing companies in the world.<br /> [c.1860s]. unknown
60802. Albumen print. Mounted on card.<br /> The London Stereoscopic and Photographic Company was begun in 1854 by George Swan Nottage. It specialised in the mass production of stereoscopic photographs where two almost identical photographs merged to form a three dimensional picture. The Company published many thousands of views during the 1850s and 1860s and became one of the largest photographic publishing companies in the world.<br /> unknown
60801c.1860s. . Albumen print. Mounted on card.<br /> The London Stereoscopic and Photographic Company was begun in 1854 by George Swan Nottage. It specialised in the mass production of stereoscopic photographs where two almost identical photographs merged to form a three dimensional picture. The Company published many thousands of views during the 1850s and 1860s and became one of the largest photographic publishing companies in the world.<br /> [c.1860s]. unknown
60800c.1880s. . Albumen print. Mounted on card.<br /> The London Stereoscopic and Photographic Company was begun in 1854 by George Swan Nottage. It specialised in the mass production of stereoscopic photographs where two almost identical photographs merged to form a three dimensional picture. The Company published many thousands of views during the 1850s and 1860s and became one of the largest photographic publishing companies in the world.<br /> [c.1880s]. unknown
60803c.1860s. . Albumen print. Mounted on card.<br /> The London Stereoscopic and Photographic Company was begun in 1854 by George Swan Nottage. It specialised in the mass production of stereoscopic photographs where two almost identical photographs merged to form a three dimensional picture. The Company published many thousands of views during the 1850s and 1860s and became one of the largest photographic publishing companies in the world.<br /> [c.1860s]. unknown
68305c.1890s. . Albumen print. Good tonal range and in good condition pasted on original card.<br /> <br /> [c.1890s]. unknown
62699c.1880s. . Albumen print loose. Good tonal range and in good condition number in negative.<br /> <br /> [c.1880s]. unknown
64809c.1890s. . <br /> <br /> [c.1890s]. unknown
119862London John Seller c.1690. . Small oblong 8vo 18.5 x 27 cm; etched title and 29 etched and engraved views of London paper flaw to margin of Thanet House plate else clean and bright; eighteenth-century limp marbled paper boards gilt stamped lettering piece to upper board a little rubbed a very good copy.<br /> The scarce Seller issue of this illusive series of evocative plates of Stuart London.<br /><br />John Seller fl. 1664 d. 1697 was hydrographer to Charles II and James II publisher surveyor and compass-maker. The present series of plates were also published by Robert Morden and Philip Lea sometime between 1687 and 1692. A total of 31 plates have been identified by B. Adams London Illustrated 1604-1851 but the 31st plate of Clarendon House only exists in the GLC History library copy Adams and this copy is not considered incomplete without it. The plate of the Custom House bears the name of John Dunstall who could be the drawer of the originals of the etchings. He was aa drawing-master in Blackfriars who was mostly a follower of Hollar whose work provides the model for eight further plates of the series.<br /><br />The Seller issue has only appeared once at auction with the title page in a different state. Nathan Coll. Sotheby's 5 June 1962 lot 226. There is only one Seller issue in institutions National Trust Libraries which has only 13 plates. Not in BL.<br /> London, John Seller, [c.1690]. hardcover
1835000014144London: Cha. F. Cheffins 1835. Map. Ex-Library. 29 3/8" x 61.5". Linen-backed map done on two sheets. Map printed in black pink yellow and green hand-colored. Housed in a 8" x 5.5" green case with gilt lettering and a gilt device on the front board the front of the case states "London & Birmingham Railway. Map of the Line. above the device Incorporated 6th May 1833". A portion of the map backed with green goat in order to have it enter and exit the case more smoothly. A large and beautiful representation of the London to Birmingham railway line with the stops outlined at the bottom edge of the map. With two engraved vignettes showing the depots in Birmingham and in London. An early example of this captivating map. A bookplate and one stamp on the verso of the map otherwise no markings. The bookplate states that the map was a gift donated by James J. Hill a wealthy bibliophile from St. Paul to the University of Wisconsin Library. The map has three small spots of loss to its folds. The case has wear and light discoloration. Cha. F. Cheffins unknown
568970Paris, Prevost-Crocius, [1835]. In-8, pleine basane marbrée, dos lisse orné de roulettes et d’un fer doré, pièce de titre noire, roulette dorée d’encadrement aux plats, tranches marbrées (rel. de l’époque), [2]ff.-420 pp., titre-frontispice orné d’une vignette de W. Ozelli. Manquent les pages I-V (dédicace au roi) et le plan dépliant. imprimé par Erasme Klefer.
8844P., chez Daumont, (fin du XVIIIème).
182618428Bossange 1826 In-12 demi-basane, dos lisse, filets, fleurons et roulettes à froid et dorés, 348 pp. Portrait frontispice George IV & 4 gravures hors-texte in-fine. Petits frottements, rares rousseurs. Bon exemplaire.
In-8, 383p. Edition numérotée 1/3000 exemplaires. Préface de Cyril Connolly. Rassemble des textes de Mallarmé, Dickens, Verlaine, Wilde, etc... Nombreuses reproductions en noir de peintures de Dufy, Pissarro, Daumier, Toulouse-Lautrec, etc...
19009576slnd 1900 Album in-12 toile éditeur richement décorée, 24 gravures légendées et pliées en accordéon figurants les principaux monuments de la capitale anglaise.
88431760.