Showing posts tagged MacroMonday.
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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.

Our copy of Clarence Cook’s The House Beautiful (New York, 1878) includes this gold-stamped illustration of a young woman reading on a chaise longue by a fireplace… #goals 

#MacroMonday

Cook, Clarence. The house beautiful : essays on beds and tables, stools and candlesticks. New York : Scribner, Armstrong and Co. 1878.

— 3 years ago with 51 notes
#BensLibrary  #Goals  #MacroMonday  #AmericanPublishersBindings  #ClothBindings  #1870s  #RareBooks  #SpecialCollections  #Tumblarians 

Queen B! We found this royal insect in our copy of Charles Butler’s The Femininʻ Monarchiʻ, or The Histori of Beeʻs (Oxford, 1634), which was likely previously owned by Benjamin Franklin. #MacroMonday

Butler, Charles. The femininʻ monarchiʻ, or the histori of beeʻs. Oxford [England], Printed by William Turner, for đe author. M.DC.XXXIV. [1634]

— 3 years ago with 1106 notes
#BensLibrary  #MacroMonday  #MacroMondays  #Bees  #QueenBee  #QueenB  #1630s  #Insects  #RareBooks  #SpecialCollections  #Tumblarians 

Although this is a lecture admission ticket for anatomy and physiology, we choose to believe it is less about medicine and more about the love of bread. Exhibit A (image detail): heart meets bread. It’s a baguette right? Right?? 

Columbia College (New York, N.Y.). College of Physicians and Surgeons: admission to lectures on anatomy and physiology … Nov. 21, 1807; illustrated card engraved by Francis Kearny. 

— 4 years ago with 21 notes
#MacroMonday  #LCPephemera  #1800s  #PopularMedicine  #ephemera  #belovedbread  #SpecialCollections  #Tumblarians  #LCPprints 

It is a beautiful harbor, with billowy clouds, soft setting light, a ship on what looks to be a sandbar, and probably most importantly, a fluffy dog looking into your soul. What is this dog trying to tell us? 

Du Simitière, Pierre Eugène, ca. 1736-1784 artist.  [Unidentified West Indian harbor at sunset with dog] [graphic], ca. 1763. 1 drawing: watercolor; overall 26 x 40 cm.(10 x 15.75 in.)

— 4 years ago with 21 notes
#MacroMonday  #LCPwatercolors  #LCPdrawings  #LCPprints  #staringcontest  #SpecialCollections  #1760s  #Tumblarians