Skip to main content
409 results from Collation on

Folger Collections

View 468 results across all blogs
Imagining a lost set of commonplace books
Collation

Imagining a lost set of commonplace books

Posted
Author
Heather Wolfe

As observed by one of our respondents, last week’s Crocodile was a detail from a blank leaf bisected by a vertical line in graphite, with a column of handwritten letters consisting of the Roman alphabet followed by the Greek alphabet. Folger…

Happy Birthday, Elias Ashmole!
Collation

Happy Birthday, Elias Ashmole!

Posted
Author
Abbie Weinberg

Today is the 400th anniversary of the birth of Elias Ashmole. Perhaps best known today for giving his name (and the founding collection of antiquities and “curiosities”) to the Ashmolean Museum at the University of Oxford, this 17th-century antiquarian had…

The Reformation at Folger
Collation

The Reformation at Folger

Posted
Author
Caroline Duroselle-Melish

As this year marks the 500th anniversary of Luther’s 95 theses and along with it, the beginning of the Reformation, a blog post on the Folger Shakespeare Library’s Reformation collection is in order.See also the blog post “Folger as a…

New resources, old plays: expanding A Digital Anthology of Early Modern Drama
Collation

New resources, old plays: expanding A Digital Anthology of Early Modern Drama

Posted
Author
Elizabeth Williamson Meaghan J. Brown

The Folger’s Digital Anthology of Early Modern English Drama (EMED) is delighted to announce the release of twenty early modern plays, freely available to read and download. EMED offers you the chance to explore the vibrant scene of professional theater…

Okay, but what does it mean, or how do you regularize an early modern transcription?
Collation

Okay, but what does it mean, or how do you regularize an early modern transcription?

Posted
Author
Paul Dingman

As one reader guessed, the phrase shown in last week’s Crocodile mystery image is in secretary hand, i.e., a type of handwritten script widely used in the British Isles (and elsewhere in Europe) during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. As transcribed…

"What manner o'thing is your crocodile?": May 2017
Collation

"What manner o'thing is your crocodile?": May 2017

Posted
Author
The Collation

For the Crocodile Mystery this month, peer into the handwriting of this manuscript and let us know what word or words you see and/or what they mean. Leave your thoughts and guesses as a reply in the Comments section. Check…

New Vault Material Walks Into a Library...
Collation

New Vault Material Walks Into a Library...

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

New staff members (and researchers!) are sometimes surprised to find that on-order and newly received collection materials show up in Hamnet searches. Many special collections libraries keep that information staff-only until the material has arrived, been processed, and sent to the…

Pietro Mattioli and the Everlasting Woodblocks
left: detail of woodcut, right: same detail of print
Collation

Pietro Mattioli and the Everlasting Woodblocks

Posted
Author
Abbie Weinberg

Yes, last week’s Crocodile Mystery was a close-up image of a woodblock. This woodblock, in particular: Folger 245- 324f woodblock 1 And in fact, it is the woodblock that was used to print this image: “Lactuca florescens,” a variety of…

Sign Here Please: ______ Blank forms from the Folger Collection
Collation

Sign Here Please: ______ Blank forms from the Folger Collection

Posted
Author
Derek Dunne

A guest post by Derek Dunne For anyone who has worked in the Reading Room of the Folger Shakespeare Library, you’ll know that a certain amount of paperwork is part of the daily routine: sign-in sheets, call slips, and of…

Histories and Communities of Books
Collation

Histories and Communities of Books

Posted
Author
Megan Heffernan

A guest post by Megan Heffernan Working in the Folger Shakespeare Library this year has opened my eyes to the important role that research centers play in shaping knowledge. If this sounds like a truism, bear with me for a…

The Guild of Women-Binders and the "bindings of tomorrow"
Collation

The Guild of Women-Binders and the "bindings of tomorrow"

Posted
Author
Sarah Hovde

It’s not uncommon for me to encounter small presses, publishers, and binderies with which I’m unfamiliar in the course of my regular work at the Folger. However, few of them have as intriguing a story as the Guild of Women-Binders,…

From the Archives: Shakespeare in the USSR
Collation

From the Archives: Shakespeare in the USSR

Posted
Author
Elizabeth DeBold

Since (and even before) our founding in 1932, Folger Shakespeare Library staff has come together with a wide variety of arts and humanities organizations to celebrate the powerful nature of Shakespeare’s plays and poems. Shakespeare’s works represent a literary place…

1 17 18 19 20 21 43