8 résultats
1798BF076781798 16 p., 1 engraved plate, disbound (no covers). Published in Transactions of the Linnean Society.
1796M124641796. Hall Robert Disbound pamphlet unknown
1794121657LONDON: T.CADELL 1794 LEATHER binding.Full Brown Calf boards with 5 raised bands Paper title labels. 185 x 105 mm approx. Applied head and tail bands. 2 Vols Complete. Collection of 45 sermons by Laurence Sterne Prebendary of York published following the success of a Sermon of Yorick's in Tristram Shandy. The sermons turn chiefly upon Philanthropy and kindred virtues and proceeding more from the heart than the head - per author's preface. Vol I. 300pp Sermons I to XXI Vol II. 312pp Sermons XXII -XLV. VG The work has recently undergone significant restoration by us. It was bought in dis-bound as two vols sewn up as one without the original printers plain boards.There was significant browning and water staining to some signatures. The book was pulled the worst signatures washed and the pages re-sized and the signatures re-sewn on three cords as two vols. The book blocks were then cased in new book boards in full leather as above. The washed signatures are therefor brighter. It woulds perhaps have been desirable to wash all of the signatures but the process is so time consuming it would not have been commercially viable. However the work done has at least given them a new lease of life. Please see our images of the set now offered for sale. T.CADELL hardcover
1757015084London: Printed for J. Brindley 1757. LACKING FOLDING PLATE. Book measures 20.5x13.5.cm. viii 120pp. Bound in modern half calf calf corners marble boards raised bands gilt tooling leather label. Binding in very good clean firm condition. Internally light staining to margins. Pages in good condition. A good well bound copy.F. Third Edition. Half Calf. Near Very Good. 8vo. Printed for J. Brindley Hardcover
1725557731725. Image of Furnival's Inn by Noted Engraver Sutton Nicholas. Furnival's Inn c. 1725. 13" x 18" copperplate engraving handsomely matted and glazed. Image notably fresh. $400. This engraving which has a caption near the top margin offers a bird's eye view of the courtyard of Furnival's Inn its buildings and the surrounding neighborhood. The appearance of the Inn and the clothing and vehicles of the figures places the date of this image in the early decades of the eighteenth century. Sutton was highly regarded for his topographical engravings. Many were created for later editions of John Stow's Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster which is probably the source of this plate. Furnival's Inn was an Inn of Chancery attached to Lincoln's Inn that was founded in 1383. Sir Thomas More was a reader at this Inn; Dickens rented rooms there in 1834 to 1837 the time when he was writing the Pickwick Papers. unknown books
172012436London: Sold by John Bowles Print & Map-Seller over against Stocks Market 1720-30. Image: 346 by 470mm 13.5 by 18.5 inches. Sheet: 390 by 557mm. 15.25 by 22 inches. Engraved print. A view of Covent Garden showing the market. From 'London Described' a collection of 46 topographic prints of the city published by John and Thomas Bowles in 1731. BM 18801113.3043. Sold by John Bowles, Print & Map-Seller over against Stocks Market, unknown
172012337London: Sold by John Bowles Print & Map-Seller over against Stocks Market c.1720. Image: 345 by 465mm 13.5 by 18.25 inches. Sheet: 420 by 550mm 16.5 by 21.75 inches. Engraved print. A view of the equestrian statue of Charles II donated by Sir Robert Vyner. Sir Robert Vyner 1631-88 was a goldsmith and banker. He made the crown and orb for Charles II's coronation in 1661 after the original Crown Jewels had been lost while his father Charles I was fleeing the country. Vyner was made goldsmith to the King and knighted as a reward and became Lord Mayor of London in 1674. In 1668 St Mary Woolchurch was demolished to make way for the construction of a new market rebuilt as a fruit and vegetable market. The years after Vyner became Mayor he erected the statue in the centre. The statue had in fact been bought from Europe as an unfinished statue of John Sobieski King of Poland trampling on a Turk. Vyner had the statue altered so that Sobieski's head was replaced by Charles's and the Turk turned into Oliver Cromwell. The figure trampled under the horse's hooves is dressed in flowing Eastern robes. The statue was moved to make way for the construction of Mansion House. BM 18801113.3609. Sold by John Bowles, Print & Map-Seller over against Stocks Market, unknown