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Winning the lottery
Collation

Winning the lottery

Posted
Author
Goran Proot

On Saturday 4 November 1617, the archdukes of the Southern Netherlands, Albert and Isabella, granted permission to the “gentil homme Lucquois” Matthias Micheli to organize a lottery for the foundation of the “Bergen van Barmhartigheid” or “Monts de piété.” First…

Cataloging at the Folger: a Primer
Collation

Cataloging at the Folger: a Primer

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Author
Deborah J. Leslie

When I meet people for the first time and they hear that I am a rare book cataloger, I can expect one or both of these questions: “What’s a rare book,” and “What is cataloging?” This crowd doesn’t need my…

Such a lucky pretty little library...
Collation

Such a lucky pretty little library...

Posted
Author
Heather Wolfe

First leaf of Visus Libelli (a little book of advices) We thought we’d kick off your weekend with an amusing and fascinating hybrid book that is ripe for research. The as-yet unidentified compiler of this late seventeenth-century, ca. 800-leaf volume,…

Itty-bitty tab dividers
Collation

Itty-bitty tab dividers

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

The main trick with November’s “crocodile” was having to figure out the scale. It looks at first glance like a woolly button on a pin-striped shirt: The November ‘Crocodile’ But when a ruler is included in the shot, you can…

A new copy of Foxe's Actes and Monuments
Collation

A new copy of Foxe's Actes and Monuments

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Author
Georgianna Ziegler

The Folger Shakespeare Library already has two copies of John Foxe’s Actes and Monuments, published in 1570, so why would we want another, especially as it is only volume 1, of a two-volume set? The answer provides a good example…

The Return of the Prodigal Painting(s)
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The Return of the Prodigal Painting(s)

Posted
Author
Erin Blake

I’d guess that few people look at Appendix III in the back of William L. Pressly, Catalogue of Paintings in the Folger Shakespeare Library (Yale University Press, 1993). Appendix III is unillustrated, not very detailed, and rather depressing: it’s the list…

Second Thoughts on Second Editions. The Dutch Fingerprint (Part II)
Collation

Second Thoughts on Second Editions. The Dutch Fingerprint (Part II)

Posted
Author
Goran Proot

In my previous Collation post I explained what a bibliographic fingerprint is and how it works. The examples I will discuss in this post will demonstrate how useful the fingerprint is to compare copies remotely and to identify title editions…

An exercise in collaborative editing: Anthony Bagot's letters and Nathaniel Bacon's pirate depositions
Collation

An exercise in collaborative editing: Anthony Bagot's letters and Nathaniel Bacon's pirate depositions

Posted
Author
Heather Wolfe

As part of their paleography training, my paleography students always spend a bit of each afternoon working in pairs on transcriptions. It gives them a break from being in the “spotlight” as we go around the room reading manuscripts line…

embroidered bindings
Collation

embroidered bindings

Posted
Author
Sarah Werner

So last week’s crocodile mystery was nailed by Aaron Pratt within a half-hour of my posting: what you see below is, as he notes, an embroidered binding depicting David and Goliath and covering a Book of Psalms, in this instance,…

Elizabeth goes to New York
Collation

Elizabeth goes to New York

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Author
Erin Blake

On September 5, two professional art handlers from Artex Fine Art Services loaded a great big wooden crate onto their climate-controlled box truck, strapped it securely into the rear cargo area, then strapped my little suitcase next to it. The…

Detective Work: The Dutch Fingerprint (Part I)
Collation

Detective Work: The Dutch Fingerprint (Part I)

Posted
Author
Goran Proot

Previous Collation posts may convince even the most skeptical reader that bibliographic work often requires detective work. In some cases, this may involve bibliographers to take fingerprints. Fingerprints are regularly used by bibliographers to find out whether or not two…

Printer's waste or endleaf?
Collation

Printer's waste or endleaf?

Posted
Author
Heather Wolfe

Last week’s crocodile mystery concerned the nature of a fragment of paper used to repair a letter from Thomas Cromwell to Nicholas Wotton written in 1539. This mystery is probably not the first, or the last, time that our answers…

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