4 181 résultats
1980122559Berlin, Dt. Landwirtschaftsvlg. 1980. M. 91 farb. Taf. 223 S. OPp.
49481Paris, Gaston Doin, 1950. 12 x 18, 341 pp., 428 figures, broché, bon état.
190483188Paris Librairie des Sciences Naturelles Paul Klincksieck. Bibliothèque de poche du Naturaliste VX, 1904, in-12, reliure éditeur toilée verte, titre en noir, toutes tranches rouges, 181 122 planches coloriées et 6 noires représentant 128 espèces. Nom de l'ancien propriétaire et fiche de culture manuscrite sur la garde, 1 passage souligné p.61. Bon exemplaire. Intérieur en bon état de fraîcheur.
74098Paris, Présenté par les Laboratoires Bellon, Dausse, Roussel., sd, in-8, en feuilles sous classeur, Bon état.
3è tome de cet "atlas des parasites" publié par Raymond POUTIERS, illustré de 55 figures et photos en noir in texte, de petits dessins en culs-de-lampe de Bernard COUTURIER, et de 12 planches de 58 vignettes couleurs in fine d'après aquarelles de Bernard COUTURIER. Français
1905R300023668CHEZ L'AUTEUR. 1905. In-4. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Quelques rousseurs. 32 pages illustrées de figures dans le texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 635-Horticulture
1980RO40103464Larousse. 1980. In-8. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 96 pages. Illustré de nombreux dessins en couleur hors texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 635-Horticulture
ISBN : 2035151015. Larousse. 1980. In-8 Carré. Relié. Bon état. Couv. convenable. Dos satisfaisant. Intérieur frais. 96 pages. Illustré de nombreux dessins en couleur hors texte. Illustrations de Peter Morter.
1980R200121702Larousse. 1980. In-8. Relié. Etat d'usage, Tâchée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 96 pages - légères rousseurs sur les tranches et pages de garde. . . . Classification Dewey : 635-Horticulture
195325751953 Paris Editions de Paris 1953 Un volume in°12 broché 259 pages + tables et publicité. Dessins en noirs in-tete LR26
10021, Stuttgart, Eugen Rentsch Verlag, 1957., Gebunden, Original - Leinen, Deckelvergoldung, Ruckentitelvergoldung, 15,5x21,5cm, Rucken vergilbt, illustriert koloriert und s/w, Bibliothekstempel.
206 pages, illustrated, glossary, index, light staining to middle page edges. eng
1982807688(Stuttgart), 1982. M. mehr. Tab. u. 30 Abb. 2 Bl., III, 167 S.
1892016586Albany New York: Weed Parsons & Company 1892. Illustrated with a frontispiece an allegorical plate and a facsimile letter from Victor Hugo small octavo pp xii 200 11 rather age-toned but otherwise very clean and tight original maroon pebble cloth slightly worn and rubbed. SCARCE. The title is about as direct as the rest of the book. The ramblings of this "crazy Frenchman at Albany" shed very little light on the actual events of his life but give an incredible sense of the energetic character of Louis Menand. There are exuberant paeans to his wife Adelaide whom he calls "Phanerogyne" meaning "remarkable woman" who died in 1890. There are rambling thoughts on the various revolutions and republics in France a scathing appraisal of his arrival in a free land "where slavery was flourishing as carnations" and tales of intrigues at flower exhibitions all told in the least linear style imaginable. He was the son of a gardener in Burgundy France. As early as he could remember he was fascinated by horticulture. "I was eight or nine years old" he later wrote "when I began to try to grow plants from cuttings. I have always been fond of cutting properly or figuratively speaking except cutting my fingers." Eventually Louis became an estate gardener in Paris and later in the Champagne region. In 1837 he came to New York and went to work at nurseries in Halett's Cove which would later become Astoria. There he met a young piano teacher from Albany named Adelaide Jackson. They fell in love and were married in her family home on Park Place in Albany and soon took up residence in what they called "the haunted house" on the Albany-Troy Road Broadway. Louis began selling plants. After a rough first year "more than modest that is to say meagre I might say miserable!!" things began to pick up. Menand had a fair collection of "hardy perennial plants" which had become pretty popular in the Albany/Troy area. Later he sold Norway spruces balsam firs and other popular trees and shrubs. In 1847 he was able to buy several acres of land on what is now Menand Road where Ganser-Smith Park is now located for his greenhouses and nursery. He cultivated plants that no doubt had never before been seen in this old Dutch town -- camellias palm ferns cacti and orchids among others. He was noted for importing exotic plants from Europe and commanded an impressive price for his best camellias: "a little plant four inches high would sell for $25." Menand won significant awards for his plants through the years and continued to grow. He bought 31 acres near the entrance to Albany Rural Cemetery where he set up his son with a half dozen hot houses devoted to growing cut flowers roses carnations pansies geraniums and "an almost endless variety of other species suitable for cemetery decoration." These included all manner of shrubs which no doubt still influence the scenery in the cemetery. His greenhouses were so popular that the Albany and Northern Railroad added a stop there in 1856 named "Menand's Crossing" which the succeeding Delaware and Hudson Railroad renamed "Menand's Station." . First Edition. Cloth. Good. Weed, Parsons & Company Hardcover
1977RO20231854Sélection du Reader's Digest. 1977. In-18. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 48 pages. Quelques illustrations monochromes dans le texte. Relié par deux agrafes.. . . . Classification Dewey : 635-Horticulture
pp. x, 199 + Plus color frontis and numerous color photographs. Illustrated with full plate black and white photographs. 8vo. Original full cloth binding. Original dust jacket, worn with some loss. Hardbound. First printing. Nice copy. PLANTS W132 rear
pp. x, 199 + Plus color frontis and numerous color photographs. Illustrated with full plate black and white photographs. 8vo. Original full cloth binding. Original dust jacket, worn with some loss. Hardbound. Fourth printing. Nice copy. ** This copy from McFarland's cut room, May 17, 1960. Inked instructions "New Printed 1960, Cover 2 up on shelf above office drawers. B. Box in cellar". This copy was used in the printing office of J. Horace McFarland (1859-1948). McFarland was ne 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 W132
384p. + Color Frontis. Illustrated with numerous color photographs. 8vo. Original full glossy purple paper binding. Front cover decorated with color photographs. Hardbound. Limited edition designed and bound by National Publishing Company, Philadelphia. A very nice copy. Excellent guide to all forms of gardening and landscaping. This Limited Edition would make a great gift for the avid gardener. PLANTS W132 x2r
1966RO30020419LA MAISON RUSTIQUE 2ème édition. 1966. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 47 pages illustrées de nombreuses photographies en noir et blanc hors texte.. . . . Classification Dewey : 635-Horticulture
1925036698NY: The Macmillan Company 1925. Hardcover. Good. 3 volume set. The covers show some edgewear with rubbing and nicks. The bindings are sound. <br/> <br/> The Macmillan Company hardcover
R300023900BAKKER. NON DATE. In-8. Relié. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 50 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 635-Horticulture
1932021306London & New York: Ernest Benn Ltd & Charles Scribner's Sons 1932. Folio illustrated with 40 plates pp 44 a little age-toned internally original blue buckram and brown cloth slightly worn the spine age-toned and bit marked. A heavy book - extra postage will be needed. First Edition. Cloth. Good. Ernest Benn Ltd & Charles Scribner's Sons Hardcover
1942623200New York, The MacMillan Comp. 1942. M. 180 Abb. X, 441 S. OLwd. St. a. Tit.
1961RO20004214bauchery& fils. 1960-1961. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Papier jauni. 13 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 635-Horticulture
1992R160200896BAUMAUX. 1992. In-4. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 104 pages - Nombreuses photographies en couleurs dans et hors texte. . . . Classification Dewey : 635-Horticulture