Showing posts tagged Benslibrary.
x

Library Company of Philadelphia

Ask    Welcome to the Library Company of Philadelphia's Tumblr page! Founded by Ben Franklin in 1731, we are an independent research library specializing in American history and culture from the 17th through the 19th centuries. This page highlights materials from LCP's extensive collection of rare books, manuscripts, broadsides, ephemera, prints, photographs, and works of art.
Ever wonder why you see a ton of gold-stamped cloth bindings from the 19th century, but hardly any silver? Gilt-stamping was a popular technique for decorating leather bindings, and made an easy transition to decorating cloth bindings when bookcloth...

Ever wonder why you see a ton of gold-stamped cloth bindings from the 19th century, but hardly any silver? Gilt-stamping was a popular technique for decorating leather bindings, and made an easy transition to decorating cloth bindings when bookcloth first hit the American publishers’ binding scene in the 1830s. 

Since aluminum-stamping was not available until the late 1870s, and was most popular through the 1880s, we see fewer examples in collections today. 

Rollo in Holland. Abbott, Jacob. New York : Hurst & Co. [ca. 1880?] 10 cm x 15 cm x 2.5 cm. 

— 2 years ago with 56 notes
#ClothBindings  #1880s  #AmericanPublishersBindings  #PublishersBindingThursday  #GreenPublishersBindingThursday  #BensLibrary  #SilverandGold  #RareBooks  #SpecialCollections  #Tumblarians 
Our final #LibraryBookArt feature comes from our copy of The Roman Histories of Lucius Iulius Florus (London, 1636). A former owner added this glorious portrait to the final leaf along with the inscription: Dikus Mulberry. We’re not sure whether...

Our final #LibraryBookArt feature comes from our copy of The Roman Histories of Lucius Iulius Florus (London, 1636). A former owner added this glorious portrait to the final leaf along with the inscription: Dikus Mulberry. We’re not sure whether Dikus is the person depicted, the former owner, or perhaps both. Regardless, we’re feeling some serious #HairEnvy.

Lucius Annaeus Florus. The Roman histories of Lucius Iulius Florus. London: Printed by R. Bishop, and are to be sold by Fr. Bowman, in Oxford. 1636.           

— 2 years ago with 37 notes
#BensLibrary  #LibraryBookArt  #LCPchallenge  #LibraryChallenge  #HairEnvy  #Provenance  #RareBooks  #SpecialCollections  #1630s  #Tumblarians 
If you are in need of an electrotyped type ornament, Bruce’s New York Type Foundry probably has what you’re looking for. Beehive? Got it. Tiny chair? Absolutely. Oyster? No problem. Avocado? Sure, why not, just use the oyster.
An Abridged Specimen of...

If you are in need of an electrotyped type ornament, Bruce’s New York Type Foundry probably has what you’re looking for.  Beehive? Got it.  Tiny chair? Absolutely. Oyster? No problem.  Avocado? Sure, why not, just use the oyster.

An Abridged Specimen of Printing Types, made at Bruce’s New-York Type-Foundry. New-York: George Bruce’s Son & Co., 1869. 

— 2 years ago with 71 notes
#BensLibrary  #typographytuesday  #typeornaments  #typetuesday  #typespecimen  #specialcollections  #RareBooks  #LCPrarebooks  #19thcentury  #iglibraries  #librariesofinstagram 
Today marks the Autumnal Equinox, or the first day of fall! The leaves are changing, the air is crisp, and this 1880s trade card has reminded us that it’s officially #psl season and we could really use another cup of coffee.
Bufford’s Lith, printer....

Today marks the Autumnal Equinox, or the first day of fall! The leaves are changing, the air is crisp, and this 1880s trade card has reminded us that it’s officially #psl season and we could really use another cup of coffee.

Bufford’s Lith, printer. Union Tea Co. Boston : Bufford’s, c1880. 1 print: chromolithograph; 5 x 8.5 cm.

— 2 years ago with 39 notes
#BensLibrary  #chromolithographs  #LCPtradecards  #LCPprints  #SpecialCollections  #1880s  #FallFeels  #sweaterweather  #fallequinox  #autumndreams  #teaandcoffee 
At the time of its publication, McKenney and Hall’s History of the Indian Tribes of North America (1836-1844) was the most elaborately illustrated book ever printed in the United States. Originating as a portrait collection of Native leaders...

At the time of its publication, McKenney and Hall’s History of the Indian Tribes of North America (1836-1844) was the most elaborately illustrated book ever printed in the United States. Originating as a portrait collection of Native leaders assembled by the U. S. War Department in the midst of efforts toward indigenous removal, History signaled an emerging relationship between the state-sanctioned and commercial production of images in the antebellum United States. 

 On Thursday, October 3, 2018-2019 Visual Culture Fellow Julia Grummit will discuss the social, political and material histories of the book, focusing on its production from treaty signings that took place in Anishinaabe and Dakota lands in the 1820s, its printing at Philadelphia lithography studios, and its distribution into the hands of subscribers. Grummitt will draw attention to connections between an expanding republic of print production and circulation and the expansion of the United States’ continental empire. 

https://www.eventbrite.com/e/mckenney-and-halls-great-national-work-with-julia-grummit-tickets-72072527871

— 2 years ago with 16 notes
#BensLibrary  #LCPevents  #LCPinsider 
These two were just begging to be featured for #PublishersBindingThursday and really, who can say no to that face! Either of those faces!

These two were just begging to be featured for #PublishersBindingThursday and really, who can say no to that face! Either of those faces!

— 2 years ago with 120 notes
#BensLibrary  #GreenPublishersBindingThursday  #LCPRareBooks  #lcpbindings  #SpecialCollections  #1870s  #Dogs  #DogsDoingThings  #CatsandDogs 

We’re shining a light on this week’s #LibraryBookArt situation! Our Chief of Conservation, Jennifer Rosner, found this gorgeous geometric watermark while going through our copy of T.H. Saunders’ Illustrations of the British Paper Manufacture (London, 1855). We love how a seemingly plain piece of paper can come alive with just a little light.

T. H. Saunders. Illustrations of the British paper manufacture. London, Waterlow and Sons, 1855.    

— 2 years ago with 34 notes
#BensLibrary  #Watermarks  #WatermarkWednesday  #LibraryBookArt  #LCPchallenge  #LibraryChallenge  #1850s  #Paper  #Papermaking  #ShineALight  #rarebooks  #SpecialCollections  #Tumblarians 

#OnThisDay 399 years ago, the Mayflower set sail from England with 102 passengers and 30-odd crew members on board. Less than two months later they arrived at Provincetown Harbor in Cape Cod. Before disembarking, the first governing document – the Mayflower Compact – was drafted and signed by the colonists to outline how the new settlement would be governed. The original document has long since been lost, but pictured here is the version from “Mourt’s Relation,” printed in 1622. 

William Bradford. Relation or journall of the beginning and proceedings of the English plantation setled at Plimoth in New England, by certaine English adventurers both merchants and others.  London: Printed [by J. Dawson] for Iohn Bellamie, and are to be sold at his shop at the two Greyhounds in Cornhill neere the Royall Exchange, 1622.

— 2 years ago with 18 notes
#BensLibrary  #SpecialCollections  #RareBooks  #OTD  #SeventeenthCentury  #Mayflower 
On Wednesday we shared some #LibraryBookArt from our copy of Johann Heck’s Iconographic Encyclopædia of Science, Literature, and Art (New York, 1851-1852). Today we’re returning to the same copy to show off these gorgeous endpapers that are featured...

On Wednesday we shared some #LibraryBookArt from our copy of Johann Heck’s Iconographic Encyclopædia of Science, Literature, and Art (New York, 1851-1852). Today we’re returning to the same copy to show off these gorgeous endpapers that are featured in all six volumes of the work. We can’t be sure, but our conservation team thinks these decorated papers may have originally been intended as wallpaper! Regardless, they make for some lovely #EndOfTheWeekEndpapers

(Also, take a look at that relic from our days as a lending library! Looks like the last time this book was checked out was in 1902, a few decades before we stopped lending books.)

Johann Georg Heck. Iconographic encyclopædia of science, literature, and art. New York: Rudolph Garrigue, [1851-52].  

— 2 years ago with 33 notes
#BensLibrary  #EndoftheWeekEndpapers  #LibraryBookArt  #DecoratedPapers  #Wallpaper  #GiltyPleasures  #FloralFriday  #Endpapers  #RareBooks  #SpecialCollections  #1850s  #Tumblarians