Albert Wainwright and Theatre
Fans of Albert Wainwright, the early 20th century painter from Yorkshire will know that this blog often features his painting. It is slightly less well known however, what a passion he had for the...
View ArticleShort Lists
It has actually been a few weeks now since the release of my latest Short List. It seems amazing that it could be number 25! For those of you who don't know, these lists are irregular short catalogues...
View ArticleRalph Chubb Ephemera
Had the opportunity to look at a collection of Ralph Chubb books the other day. Among all the amazing printing, calligraphy, mysticism and art work, what was it that made me stop and look? An order...
View ArticleGleeson White and Kains-Jackson at Auction
If you have a lot of money and collect obscure (and otherwise) turn of the last century literature, you should probably look away now: unless you are the lucky new owner of this little beauty. This was...
View ArticleGeoffrey Whittam illustrates The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
It's always fun to see how different illustrators approach classic texts that have already been illustrated many times before. This edition of Twain's The Adventures of Tom Sawyer is illustrated by...
View ArticleBernard Bowerman illustrates Jane's Country Year
There is something almost as satisfying about a 'through the year' book as there is in an alphabet book, a sense of rounded completion about the whole. The internet tells me that Jane's Country Year...
View ArticleMr Anon and Mr Anonymous
I am mildly annoyed with myself that this post is more anonymous than perhaps it needed to be. I just found these fabulous images from a early 20th Century photo album in my "to blog" folder and I...
View ArticleRockwell Kent illustrates Walt Whitman's "Song of Myself"
Rockwell Kent (1882-1971), hardly needs an introduction from me, as Wikipedia has it he was an "American painter, printmaker, illustrator, writer, sailor and adventurer", which seems appropriate for...
View ArticleRescued a Young Victorian Chap
Well, the photograph itself is in fairly poor condition but I could hardly leave such a handsome chap in the shop to deteriorate further now, could I?
View ArticleRalph Chubb: The Book of Rapha
Ralph Chubb's books were things which combined word, image and physicality in an extraordinary way. He wrote that, in his search for the perfect book "I always visualized a method which would combine...
View ArticleClare Leighton illustrates Perkin the Pedlar by Eleanor Farjeon
Quite often a book is illustrated in both black and white and colour and I make a decision about whether I prefer the artists offering of one or the other and then only blog those images. Clare...
View ArticleClare Leighton illustrates Perkin the Pedlar in colour...
As promised, these are the images from Perkin the Pedlar in colour. Each of these is a full page and the black with strong flat colour is remarkably effective.
View ArticleA Bio-Gem from the Biograph Studio
This was a a delightful and unusual find today. The Biograph Studio was quite influential in the beginning of cinema and as well as offering moving portraits from their studio in Regents Street in...
View ArticleRobin Jaques Illustrates The Hand of Apollo by Elizabeth Coatsworth
Robin Jacques is a big name little known. He was an illustrator for more than 100 books in the heart of the twentieth century and he ploughed his own course. While his contemporaries started covering...
View ArticleClaes Bäckström illustrates The Runaway by Harry Kullman
Sometimes is it the most modest books which can contain the most lovely things, be that the story or the illustrations. This is a hardback edition by Methuen of a novel for children by Harry Kullman,...
View ArticleAll Good Things...
Hi,As some of you are aware, in the past 12 months I have had to face some reasonably serious health issues - I'm fine now - but that kind of thing does make you take a good look at life and I've...
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