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Sizing books up
Collation

Sizing books up

Posted
Author
Sarah Werner

A couple of weeks back I posted some images with the aim of destabilizing some of our assumptions about what early modern texts look like. In the mix was an image of a “big” book followed by a “tiny” one.…

It's the details thnt matter
Collation

It's the details thnt matter

Posted
Author
Sarah Werner

There were two odd things happening in last week’s crocodile mystery, which featured an opening from the first English edition of Nicolàs Monardes’s Joyfull newes out of the newe founde worlde (STC 18005). The first was the easier to spot, assuming you…

Noticing the weirdness of texts
Collation

Noticing the weirdness of texts

Posted
Author
Sarah Werner

Sometimes it’s fun just to look at books without worrying what they are and who printed them and what the text says. And sometimes, when you do that, you notice all sorts of ways in which they’re weird—they mix manuscript…

Proof prints, part two; or, Proofs and proofiness
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Proof prints, part two; or, Proofs and proofiness

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

Last month’s post from me (your friendly neighborhood art historian) looked at trial proofs and progressive proofs (see Proof prints, part one). As promised, here’s a look at a third kind of proof in printmaking: proofs that aren’t really “proofs” as…

The Single Vine Leaf, aka the "Aldine Leaf"
Collation

The Single Vine Leaf, aka the "Aldine Leaf"

Posted
Author
Goran Proot

I have always been a devotee of the “Aldine leaf”, even long before I knew its exact name or where it actually came from, and I am still delighted spotting it in early modern typography or when it is expertly…

Shakespeare's personal library, as curated by William Henry Ireland
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Shakespeare's personal library, as curated by William Henry Ireland

Posted
Author
Arnold Hunt Heather Wolfe

Co-written by Heather Wolfe and Arnold Hunt It’s every bibliophile’s dream. You’re in a bookshop, or maybe at a local auction, browsing idly along the shelves. It’s late in the afternoon and you’re just preparing to leave, when you spot a…

An alter'd case: An annotated copy of The Roaring Girl
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An alter'd case: An annotated copy of The Roaring Girl

Posted
Author
Victoria Myers

A guest post by Victoria Myers The marks in the book The reason that I found the Folger Shakespeare Library’s copy of The Roaring Girl especially interesting is because it is completely marked up. Most of these marks are corrections…

Annotating and collaborating
Collation

Annotating and collaborating

Posted
Author
Sarah Werner

This month’s crocodile mystery was, as Andrew Keener quickly identified, an image from Gabriel Harvey’s copy of Lodovico Domenichi’s Facetie and (Folger H.a.2): Gabriel Harvey’s heavily annotated copy of Facetie (fol. 1v-2r) There is a lot that could be said about Gabriel…

Proof prints, part one
Collation

Proof prints, part one

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

Last time I posted on The Collation (Two disciplines separated by a common language, 30 April 2013), I went off on a bit of a rant about vocabulary barriers between printed pictures and printed words. Guess what? There’s more! That…

Ten copies of the “bad” 1640 Sonnets in good and bad shape
Collation

Ten copies of the “bad” 1640 Sonnets in good and bad shape

Posted
Author
Goran Proot

The Folger Shakespeare Library has ten copies of the second edition of Shakespeare’s sonnets (STC 22344). All ten copies of STC 22344 in a row Engraved portrait (fol. p1v) and the first title page (fol. *1r) from copy 1 The…

Looking like a book
Collation

Looking like a book

Posted
Author
Sarah Werner

Last month I wrote about a book—nay, a leaf of a book—and the secret histories it reveals about how it was made, from the growth of the tree that became the woodblock to the valleys and hills that formed during…

Learning to write the alphabet
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Learning to write the alphabet

Posted
Author
Heather Wolfe

Learning to write the alphabet is one of the first stages of writing literacy. For early modern English children, this meant first learning to read the letters of the alphabet (printed in black letter) from a hornbook. Hornbook. Folger Shakespeare Library…

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