615 résultats
VG/VG DJ shows slight creasing at the top. Octavo 240pp with photographs. Handbook on integrating biological and chemical methods of pest control.
français De 1889 à 1891. 3 tomes en 3 volumes in-8 de VII-580, 603 et 628 pp.; demi-basane brune, dos à cinq nerfs orné (reliure lég. postérieure).
P., Lib. J.- B. Baillère et Fils, 1925. Fort in-8 (16 x 25.5 cm) broché, 576 pp. Orné de 235 figures et de 40 planches hors texte. fentes du papier du dos, coutures un peu laches, exemplaire correct.
Octave Doin - Librairie Agricole. 1897. In-12 Carré. Relié. Bon état. Couv. convenable. Dos satisfaisant. Quelques rousseurs. 362 pages. Illustré de nombreuses gravures en noir et blanc dans le texte. Dos légèrement taché. 2e édition revue. Avec 317 figures. Couronné du Prix Joubert de L'Hyberderie par la SNHF. Création et entretien d'un petit jardin. Culture et multiplication des végétaux. Plantes potagères. Arbres fruitiers...
pp. xxi, 393 + Photographs. 8vo. Original full cloth binding. Original dust jacket. Hardbound. Very crisp copy. like new. PA 47
xx + 364pp.+ 24 planches coloriées hors-texte (dont qqs.unes dépliantes) & 8 planches et figures xylographiées & 1 portrait (de Scheidweiler), 24cm., reliure cart. (plats marbrés, dos en cuir avec titre et faux-nerfs dorés), feuilles de garde marbrées, peu de rousseurs, bon état, W61936
368pp.+ 18 planches coloriées hors-texte (dont qqs.unes dépliantes) & 1 gravure noire & 1 potrait (de P.Coudenberg), 24cm., reliure cart. (plats marbrés, dos en cuir avec titre et faux-nerfs dorés), feuilles de garde marbrées, qqs.rousseurs, bon état
Foxing to textblock; Collins Gems; 32mo 4" - 5" tall; 239 pages
français Lyon, 1910. In-8 de VII-313 pp.; demi-toile noire, plats de papier imprimés. Deuxième édition. Avec figures. Bon état. Salissures dans les premiers feuillets, manque de papier en surface du second plat.
Dustjacket is protected in mylar. ; 8.7 X 6.1 X 1.2 inches; 368 pages
français In-4 de 137-XVI pp. et 42 pp. de photographies ; broché.
VG/VG. no significant fault with book, some wear to DJ. Quarto. pp144. Guide to the many different varieties of lily including instruction on their cultivation and history.
pp. vi, 246 + photographs. Bookplate of Sarah Elizabeth Freeman. 8vo. Original full cloth binding. Spine darkened. Hardbound. First published 1943. Nice copy. PLANTS W133
302p. Illustrated with drawings. Damp staining. 4to. Original printed wraps. Paperback. PLANTS W131
8vo., First Edition, with plates and illustrations in the text; green cloth, gilt back, a very good, bright, clean copy in the dustwrapper
192p. + color Frontis. Illustrated with numerous full page color photographs, some in black and white. Numerous text drawings. ** J. Horace McFarland Company's copy with numerous penciled notations and text changes for the 1968 edition. 8vo. Original full cloth binding, decorated and lettered in black. This copy was used in the printing office of J. Horace McFarland (1859-1948). McFarland was one of the first Americans to sound the call for environmental and scenic protection. In 1878, at age nineteen, McFarland opened his printing business and began to publish gardening and seed catalogs. Realizing that woodcuts did not adequately represent the plants, he started to explore the use of photography. By 1894, he was experimenting with color photography and his company had become America's premier publisher of gardening catalogs, with what may have been the first color photographs produced in the US. The success of his publishing business provided McFarland with wealth and security, and freed him to engage extensively in the philanthropy and civic activism he loved. He was recognized as a master gardener whose books and photographs on roses, trees and other subjects were famous across the United States. He wrote more than a dozen books on roses and made the American Rose Society a world-renowned institution. As president, he established a method of rose identification and registration that is still in use today. He was widely known as "Mr. Rose" and was a founder and president of the American Rose Society, which had an international impact on the propagation of roses. His home and garden in the Bellevue Park section of Harrisburg was an internationally famous testing ground for hundreds of new plant species. It contained 5,000 plants including varieties of roses. Hardbound. Nice copy. Unique copy of showing numerous changes. **PRICE JUST REDUCED! PLANTS W135
pp. xxiv, 296 + color Frontis. Profusely illustrated with color photographs. 8vo. Original full cloth binding with some soiling and wear. Very worn dust jacket. Pencil ownership of Mary Lacy (who may have worked for McFarland). Hardbound. First edition. This copy was used in the printing office of J. Horace McFarland (1859-1948). McFarland was one of the first Americans to sound the call for environmental and scenic protection. In 1878, at age nineteen, McFarland opened his printing business and began to publish gardening and seed catalogs. Realizing that woodcuts did not adequately represent the plants, he started to explore the use of photography. By 1894, he was experimenting with color photography and his company had become America's premier publisher of gardening catalogs, with what may have been the first color photographs produced in the US. The success of his publishing business provided McFarland with wealth and security, and freed him to engage extensively in the philanthropy and civic activism he loved. He was recognized as a master gardener whose books and photographs on roses, trees and other subjects were famous across the United States. He wrote more than a dozen books on roses and made the American Rose Society a world-renowned institution. As president, he established a method of rose identification and registration that is still in use today. He was widely known as "Mr. Rose" and was a founder and president of the American Rose Society, which had an international impact on the propagation of roses. His home and garden in the Bellevue Park section of Harrisburg was an internationally famous testing ground for hundreds of new plant species. It contained 5,000 plants including varieties of roses. Nice copy. PLANTS W132 rear x2
pp. xi, 361 + Plus color portrait Frontis of J. Horace McFarland and full page color photographs, some photographs in black and white. Pictorial endpapers. 8vo. Original full cloth binding, gold lettered. Original dust jacket, some loss. Hardbound. Fourth edition. ** Very nice copy from the J. Horace McFarland Company proof room. This copy was used in the printing office of J. Horace McFarland (1859-1948). McFarland was one of the first Americans to sound the call for environmental and scenic protection. In 1878, at age nineteen, McFarland opened his printing business and began to publish gardening and seed catalogs. Realizing that woodcuts did not adequately represent the plants, he started to explore the use of photography. By 1894, he was experimenting with color photography and his company had become America's premier publisher of gardening catalogs, with what may have been the first color photographs produced in the US. The success of his publishing business provided McFarland with wealth and security, and freed him to engage extensively in the philanthropy and civic activism he loved. He was recognized as a master gardener whose books and photographs on roses, trees and other subjects were famous across the United States. He wrote more than a dozen books on roses and made the American Rose Society a world-renowned institution. As president, he established a method of rose identification and registration that is still in use today. He was widely known as "Mr. Rose" and was a founder and president of the American Rose Society, which had an international impact on the propagation of roses. His home and garden in the Bellevue Park section of Harrisburg was an internationally famous testing ground for hundreds of new plant species. It contained 5,000 plants including varieties of roses. PLANTS W135 x2
12mo., Sixth Edition, on laid paper, with engraved frontispiece, some light offsetting to title; attractively bound in twentieth-century full polished calf, back with gilt bands, second compartment with red leather label lettered and ruled in gilt, a remarkably well-preserved, bright, crisp copy. Although attributed on title to Thomas Mawe, Gardener to the Duke of Leeds, this extraordinarily popular and influential work was actually written by the diffident John Abercrombie (1726-1806). The manuscript was duly submitted to Griffin, who asked his friend Mawe to read it. 'Mr. Mawes [sic] bore testimony to the merit of the production, and prefixed his name to the publication in order to give it that celebrity to which it was so justly entitled, for which he received a gratuity of twenty guineas' (Henrey p.363). The work was a tremendous success, continuing to be republished for over fifty years after the author's death, although his name did not appear on title until the seventh edition. It was heavily plagiarised, perhaps most notoriously as 'The Modern Gardener' (1771) by James Meader, who was subsequently sued, convicted and prevented from republication. Curiously, despite its immense popularity, EARLY EDITIONS ARE VERY SCARCE, ESPECIALLY IN THIS CONDITION. See Henrey II, 358 et seq.
in-12, 900 pages, orne de 275 figures dans le texte, reliure demi-toile bleur, plats marbrés. Bon etat (mors légèrement fendus). [RE-3]
français In-8 de 112 pp.; broché. Ecole Nationale d'Agriculture de Montpellier. Un nom d'ancien propriétaire.