Skip to main content
The Collation

The Collation

Research and Exploration at the Folger

The Collation is a gathering of useful information and observations from Folger staff and researchers. Read more about this blog

A Pictorial Table of Contents
Collation

A Pictorial Table of Contents

Posted
Author
Heather Wolfe

Last week’s Crocodile was a jumble of household instruments with numbers next to them. As our first commenter, Katie Will, correctly guessed, the detail was from the table of contents of a type of heraldic manuscript known as an Ordinary.…

“What manner o’ thing is your crocodile?”: June 2016
Collation

“What manner o’ thing is your crocodile?”: June 2016

Posted
Author
The Collation

It’s the last day of the month, and our intrepid readers know what that means: mystery time! So for this month, we ask: why on earth would someone make a jumble of pictures of everyday items like this? And why…

What’s in a genre? Metadata, Controlled Vocabularies, and the Folger’s Digital Anthology
Collation

What’s in a genre? Metadata, Controlled Vocabularies, and the Folger’s Digital Anthology

Posted
Author
Meaghan J. Brown

  Shakespeare’s plays are organized in the First Folio into three now familiar genre categories: Comedies, Tragedies, and Histories. Later scholars added a fourth, describing certain late plays like The Tempest and The Winter’s Tale that contain elements of both…

Early Modern Edit-a-Thon
Collation

Early Modern Edit-a-Thon

Posted
Author
Sarah Hovde

Have you noticed any new articles on Wikipedia lately? An average of 700-800 are added to the English-language Wikipedia each day. This is a rough average based on Wikipedia’s own calculations; you can read more about them on their Size…

Signature statements in book cataloging
Collation

Signature statements in book cataloging

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

Today’s post returns to the cliffhanger at the end of Tuesday’s Physical description in book cataloging overview: if , CXXII leaves : ill. ; 31 cm (fol.) forms a complete physical description in a library catalog, then what’s up with a4 A-O8 P10 and where does it fit…

Physical description in book cataloging
Collation

Physical description in book cataloging

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

Does a4 A-O8 P10 make perfect sense to you? If so, please read on anyway. This isn’t a post on how to decode a collational formula. It’s a post about what to expect (and what not to expect) in the “physical description”…

Unlocking An Early Modern Account Book
Collation

Unlocking An Early Modern Account Book

Posted
Author
Paul Dingman

The answer to last week’s Crocodile mystery is, as some of you guessed, £135 15s 0d (or 135 pounds, 15 shillings). This amount is a snippet of one entry made on a page in Folger MS V.b.308, the account book of…

Building a Replica of the John Wilkes Booth Diary
Collation

Building a Replica of the John Wilkes Booth Diary

Posted
Author
Austin Plann Curley

Guest Post by Folger conservator Austin Plann Curley “You can’t always get what you want.” So said the Rolling Stones in 1969. Such was the case for the Folger Shakespeare Library in our recent request to borrow the Diary of…

“What manner o’ thing is your crocodile?”: May 2016
Collation

“What manner o’ thing is your crocodile?”: May 2016

Posted
Author
The Collation

Here’s a mystery of the Crocodile manner for May. The text shown in this image is one piece of a larger whole, but the question is what is it and how does it relate to the whole? As always, post…

In Defense of the Card Catalog
Collation

In Defense of the Card Catalog

Posted
Author
Abbie Weinberg

Whenever I am giving a tour of our Reading Rooms, or introducing a new Reader to our collection, I always make it a point to mention that we still have a card catalog room (two, in fact—one primarily for our…

How to plan a Shakespeare tercentenary
Collation

How to plan a Shakespeare tercentenary

Posted
Author
Sarah Hovde

The Folger has a wide assortment of commemorative material relating to Shakespearean celebrations—from David Garrick’s 1769 Shakespeare Jubilee, to tercentaries and quatercentenaries of Shakespeare’s birth (although no materials from the quatercentenary of his death quite yet)—but we hold very few…

Letter Scraps
Collation

Letter Scraps

Posted
Author
Abbie Weinberg

Yes, indeed. As several readers astutely figured out, this scrap of paper most likely bears the tail-end of the phrase “Sotheby sale.” As for why it’s in our collection? Well, part of that answer comes with one more piece of…

1 39 40 41 42 43 70