Showing posts tagged Bookcloth.
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.

Happy #publishersbindingThursday, #feathursday edition! We love the gold stamping almost as much as we love the marbled cloth! Swoon!

C.W. Webber. Wild Scenes and Song-Birds. New York: George P. Putnam & Co., 1854. 

— 1 year ago with 155 notes
#BensLibrary  #LCPrarebooks  #specialcollections  #PublishersBindings  #bookcloth  #bookcovers  #bookbinding  #PublishersBindingThursday  #Feathursday  #songbirds 

We’re joining @rutgers_scua and @rarebkcat for the July #JoyofGLAM challenge! We will be posting joy-inspiring images from our collection each Wednesday for the rest of the month.

To kick things off we’re sharing this video of a small portion of a recently acquired collection of publishers’ bindings featuring printed pattern book cloth. If you’ve been following us for awhile then you know that we love publishers’ bindings here at the Library Company, and seeing this new collection in the stacks every day always makes us smile.

— 3 years ago with 130 notes
#BensLibrary  #JoyofGLAM  #LCPChallenge  #PublishersBindings  #PrintedPatternCloth  #BookCloth  #LibraryShelfie  #Tumblarians  #AmericanPublishersBindings 
We love the subtle floral ribbon-embossed cloth on our copy of Hamilton’s Practical Catechism on Singing (New York, 1839).
Ribbon-embossed grain got its name from its original intention: as decoration for cloth ribbons. However, the rising popularity...

We love the subtle floral ribbon-embossed cloth on our copy of Hamilton’s Practical Catechism on Singing (New York, 1839). 

Ribbon-embossed grain got its name from its original intention: as decoration for cloth ribbons. However, the rising popularity of grained and decorated book-cloth in the 1830s and 1840s led to the production of ribbon-embossed cloth for use as a book covering.

Browse the Library Company’s database of 19th-Century Cloth Bindings to see more!

Hamilton, James Alexander. Hamilton’s practical catechism on singing. New York : Hewitt & Jaques. 1839. 10 cm x 15 cm x 1.5 cm

— 4 years ago with 13 notes
#BensLibrary  #LCPbindings  #PublishersBindingThursday  #AmericanPublishersBindings  #1830s  #BookCloth  #RibbonEmbossedCloth  #RareBooks  #19thCenturyBooks  #SpecialCollections  #Tumblarians 
Our copy of David Gould’s Life of Robert Morris (Boston, 1834) is bound in a rare and gorgeous pale pink ribbon-embossed cloth. Ribbon-embossed grain got its name from its original intention: as decoration for cloth ribbons. However, the rising...

Our copy of David Gould’s Life of Robert Morris (Boston, 1834) is bound in a rare and gorgeous pale pink ribbon-embossed cloth. Ribbon-embossed grain got its name from its original intention: as decoration for cloth ribbons. However, the rising popularity of grained and decorated book-cloth in the 1830s and 1840s led to the production of ribbon-embossed cloth for use as a book covering. 

This is the only example of this specific ribbon-embossed pattern we have in our collection – we hope this post inspires others to look through their collections to see if there are more examples to share!

Browse the Library Company’s database of 19th-Century Cloth Bindings to see more bindings in our collection!

Gould, David. Life of Robert Morris. Boston : Leonard W. Kimball. 1834

— 4 years ago with 20 notes
#BensLibrary  #LCPprints  #PublishersBindingThursday  #PublishersBindings  #AmericanClothBindings  #AmericanPublishersBindings  #19thCenturyPublishersBindings  #1830s  #RareBooks  #SpecialCollections  #RibbonsEmbossedBindings  #BookCloth  #Tumblarians 
We present this gorgeous and well-defined ribbon-embossed cloth for #PublishersBindingThursday, found on our copy of Samuel Knapp’s Life of Timothy Dexter (1838).
Ribbon-embossed grain got its name from its original intention: as decoration for cloth...

We present this gorgeous and well-defined ribbon-embossed cloth for #PublishersBindingThursday, found on our copy of Samuel Knapp’s Life of Timothy Dexter (1838).

Ribbon-embossed grain got its name from its original intention: as decoration for cloth ribbons. However, the rising popularity of grained and decorated book-cloth in the 1830s and 1840s led to the production of ribbon-embossed cloth for use as a book covering.

Browse the Library Company’s database of 19th-Century Cloth Bindings to see more! 

Knapp, Samuel L. 1838, Life of Timothy Dexter Boston : G. N. Thomson 1838 9 cm x 16 cm x 1 cm

— 4 years ago with 188 notes
#BensLibrary  #Ribbonembossedcloth  #ClothBindings  #EmbossedClothBindings  #PublishersBindingsThursday  #PublishersbindingThursday  #AmericanPublishersBindings  #19thCenturyBooks  #PublishersClothBindings  #BookCloth  #1830s  #greenpublishersbindingthursday  #RareBooks  #SpecialCollections  #Tumblarians 
The floral motif of this printed-pattern bookcloth nearly obscures the blind and gilt stamping on the front cover of our copy of A Description of the City of New York, published in 1847.
Decorated bookcloth, including printed-pattern and...

The floral motif of this printed-pattern bookcloth nearly obscures the blind and gilt stamping on the front cover of our copy of A Description of the City of New York, published in 1847.

Decorated bookcloth, including printed-pattern and ribbon-embossed cloth, peaked in popularity in the late 1830s into the 1840s. The trend became less popular beginning in the 1850s, when heavy gilt-stamped designs on ungrained bookcloth dominated the market.

Browse the Library Company’s database of 19th-Century Cloth Bindings to see more!

Holley, O. L. 1847, A description of the city of New York New York : J. Disturnell 1847. 10 cm x 15 cm x 1 cm

— 4 years ago with 104 notes
#BensLibrary  #PublishersBindingThursday  #PrintedPatternCloth  #BookCloth  #FloralPatterns  #BookCovers  #1840s  #NewYorkNewYork  #RareBooks  #SpecialCollections  #AmericanPublishersBindings  #americanpublishersclothbindings  #Tumblarians 
For Publishers’ Binding Thursday, we present this ribbon-embossed cloth bound book from 1840. This style of decorative cloth typically featured a floral or botanical pattern, though more abstract designs have been documented. Ribbon-embossed grain...

For Publishers’ Binding Thursday, we present this ribbon-embossed cloth bound book from 1840. This style of decorative cloth typically featured a floral or botanical pattern, though more abstract designs have been documented. Ribbon-embossed grain got its name from its original intention: as decoration for cloth ribbons. However, the rising popularity of grained and decorated book-cloth in the 1830s and 1840s led to the production of ribbon-embossed cloth for use as a book covering.

Browse the Library Company’s database of 19th-Century Cloth Bindings to see more! 

Stephens, John Lloyd.  1840, Incidents of travel in Greece, Turkey, Russia, and Poland.  New York : Harper & Brothers. 1840

— 5 years ago with 36 notes
#BensLibrary  #RibbonEmbossedCloth  #ClothBindings  #EmbossedClothBindings  #PublishersBindingsThursday  #PublishersBindings  #AmericanPublishersBindings  #19thCenturyBooks  #PublishersClothBindings  #BookCloth  #1840s  #RareBooks  #SpecialCollections  #Tumblarians  #PublishersBindingTHursday