Vendeur
Woodbridge Rare Books, Suffolk, Royaume-Uni
Évaluation du vendeur 5 sur 5 étoiles
Vendeur AbeBooks depuis 28 août 2013
29x20cm, 182pp. With hand-drawn initials by Graily Hewitt and his assistants in green and blue. One of 328 (353) copies on Batchelor handmade paper specially made for the press with the 'bugle' watermark, Subiaco type printed in black and red, bound in full limp orange-stained vellum signed in gilt to the rear lower turn-in 'BOUND BY W H SMITH & SON LTD.', gilt title to backstrip, four orange silk ribbon ties, in the original slipcase of orange/brown marbled paper over board, postcard to Ernest F Hill from St John Hornby in his hand dated 3 March 1933 acknowledging the order of the book laid-in. We are delighted to be able to offer this exceptional example of Private Press royalty, complete with its accompanying Hornby autograph postcard signed. At this point it is almost obligatory to roll out the two relevant quotations, surely the greatest gifts to book dealers' blurbs ever written: '. in my humble judgement it is one of the most satisfactory of the books of the Press' (St John Hornby himself) and 'Booksellers continually declare the Ashendene Ecclesiasticus to be the finest book from the private presses - and there is good ground for this opinion' (Colin Franklin). It represents a perfect balance between the mighty folios and the smaller-scale books, and is undoubtedly a jewel epitomising Hornby's other famous comment that his choice tended to fall upon books 'which gave scope for a certain gaiety of treatment in the use of coloured initials and chapter headings'. Hewitt's copious hand-drawn initials were the first to appear from the Press since the Lucretius of 1913, having after that been passed over in favour of printed reproductions of his (and Eric Gill's) calligraphy in order to reduce the enormous labour intensity of hand-lettering an entire edition. Ernest F Hill (1873 - 1960) was a Birmingham-based artist associated with the Newlyn school, and at one time Headmaster of the Bournville Art School based at Ruskin Hall, to which the postcard is addressed. In common with most stained vellum bindings, the Ecclesiasticus has a marked propensity for fading especially to the backstrip. In mild cases this is not always easy to detect due to the different angles of the light, but a giveaway is often the half-moon shape slipcase thumb notches, which usually create their own small fade-marks to the boards. No such problems with this copy however - it is beyond doubt the best we have seen to the point of feeling almost like a modern facsimile (which it certainly is not). Fine: the vellum completely even in tone with no hint of fading anywhere, minute whitening spots to the tips of the corners (quite possibly as issued), all four ties unfaded and unfrayed, no markings or imperfections whatsoever to the interior, in a Near Fine (slight spots of wear to the corners and a thin line of abrasion to the foot paper) original slipcase. Hornby XXXVIII. N° de réf. du vendeur W2337
Titre : The Wisdom of Jesus the Son of Sirach ...
Éditeur : Ashendene Press
Date d'édition : 1932
Reliure : Soft cover
Etat : Fine
Vendeur : Michael Treloar Booksellers ANZAAB/ILAB, Adelaide, SA, Australie
Hardcover. Etat : Fine. Chelsea, Ashendene Press, 1932 (first thus). Tall quarto, [ii] (title leaf, verso blank), 182 pages printed in red and black Subiaco type, with woodcut initials printed in green and blue, and a large woodcut printer's device printed in red on the colophon. Original overlapping orange vellum by W.H. Smith & Son, lettered in gilt on the spine, with silk ribbon ties; all edges uncut; vellum slightly rubbed at the edges; essentially a fine copy. A superb example of private press printing. This is one of 328 copies on Batchelor handmade paper, with a further 25 copies printed on vellum. The colophon reads in full: 'Printed by C.H. St J. Hornby at the Ashendene Press, Shelley House, Chelsea, with the help of H. Gage-Cole, Pressman, and A.J. Fisk, Compositor, and finished in July of the year 1932. The initial letters in colour are by the hands of Graily Hewitt & his assistants Ida D. Henstock and Helen E. Hinkley'. Ecclesiasticus, a collection of ethical teachings attributed to Joshua ben Sirach, is one of the biblical apocrypha. The text of this edition was collated by A.D. Power using the Authorised and Revised versions, with reference to versions in Greek, Syriac, Latin and the original Hebrew. N° de réf. du vendeur 123831
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Vendeur : Peruse the Stacks, ABAA, Gig Harbor, WA, Etats-Unis
Limited to 250 copies. Exemplary copy of one of the more beautifully designed books from Ashendene, printing an English translation of the Book of Sirach. The text is part of the Biblical apocrypha, and consists of a set of ethical teachings by Yeshua ben Eleazar ben Sira. The founder of Ashendene himself, Charles St. John Hornby, called this printing "one of the most satisfactory of the books of the Press." . 28.5x19cm, [2], 182pp. Printed in Subiaco type, with chapter-headings and shoulder-notes in red. Initials hand colored in red, blue, and green. Ashendene device at colophon also in red. In the original binding by Douglas Cockerell at W.H. Smith Bindery, of orange vellum with gilt lettering on spine, silk ties. Housed in a Cokerell marbled paper covered slipcase. Touch of light rubbing at spine ends and corner tips else a bright, about fine copy in slipcase with some edge rubbing. N° de réf. du vendeur 8561
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Vendeur : Nudelman Rare Books, Seattle, WA, Etats-Unis
First Edition. First Edition. 4to (11.5 x 8 inches). 182pp. Original overlapping full orange vellum by W. H. Smith & Son under the direction of Douglas Cockerell, with matching colored ties (four in total, two on each cover), gilt spine. 328 copies printed. Manuscript initial letters in red, blue and green by Graily Hewitt and his assistants, Ida D. Henstock and Helen E. Ecclesiasticus, a collection of ethical teachings attributed to Joshua ben Sirach, is one of the biblical apocrypha. The text of this edition was collated by A.D. Power using the Authorised and Revised versions, with reference to versions in Greek, Syriac, Latin and the original Hebrew. "In my humble judgement it is one of the most satisfactory of the books of the Press." (Hornby 38). A fine copy. N° de réf. du vendeur 6359
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Vendeur : Temple Rare Books, Oxford, Royaume-Uni
Hardback. Etat : Very Good. First Thus. [2], 182pp. Publisher's original orange vellum, bound by W. H. Smith with their pallet to lower turn in, title, publisher, and date in gilt to spine, silk ties. Hint of fading to spine, but otherwise bright and clean. Housed in a Cockerell paper covered card slipcase. One of three hundred and twenty-eight copies on paper, with twenty-five on vellum. "Printed in Subiaco type, with chapter-headings and shoulder-notes in red. All the coloured initials are filled in by hand in red, blue, or green by Graily Hewitt & his two assistants" (Hornby, 'A Descriptive Bibliography of the Books Printed at The Ashendene Press MDCCCCV-MCMXXXV', page 90). Hornby himself thought it was "one of the most satisfactory of the books of the Press" (ibid, page 92). Ashendene XXXVIII Size: 4to. N° de réf. du vendeur 001590
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Vendeur : Jonkers Rare Books, Henley on Thames, OXON, Royaume-Uni
One of 328 copies on paper. 4to. Printed in red and black with hand-painted initials in blue and green by Graily Hewitt, Ida D. Henstock and Helen E. Hinkley. In the original orange-vellum, bound by Douglas Cockerell at the W. H. Smith Bindery. Four silk ties. Housed in custom-slipcase. An uncommonly fine copy, the orange-stained vellum still vibrant, especially to the spine which is prone to fade. Internally fine, the pages clean and crisp. 'In my humble judgement it is one of the most satisfactory of the books of the Press' (Hornby 38). N° de réf. du vendeur 41540
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Vendeur : Oak Knoll Books, ABAA, ILAB, NEW CASTLE, DE, Etats-Unis
Ashendene Press (illustrateur). tall 4to. original full limp orange vellum with matching silk ties, spine lettered in gilt, original slipcase covered in marbled paper executed by Douglas Cockerell. (iv), 182 pages. Finely printed in an edition limited to 271 copies of which this is one of 250 copies printed on specially made paper by Batchelor & Sons (Bibliography no.XXXVIII; Franklin pp.186-197,242). An especially fine copy with only minor rubbing to the publisher's slipcase (note: the Bibliography does not mention the slipcase). Entirely bright and clean, inside and out. All four ties present in the original condition. There were a further 21 copies printed on vellum. Printed in Subiaco type. This was one of the last items to be issued by the press, and the last to bear the hand colored initials of Graily Hewitt and his assistants Ida D. Henstock and Helen E. Hinckley. These initials appear throughout in green and blue and are an attractive compliment to the text which is printed in red and black throughout. Two colors of hand colored initials were only used on one other occasion by the press in 1902 for Dante's Inferno. The work is often called the most beautiful of all the Ashendenes. The bookseller James Bain found this book "one of the most beautiful books that has ever come from the Ashendene Press; it is quite perfect in every way" (Franklin p.195). St. John Hornby wrote in the Bibliography that "The printing of this book was due to the fact that my friend and partner, A.D. Power, had with the help of one or two Hebrew scholars compiled from the various versions of 'Ecclesiasticus' a text which he subsequently caused to be written out on vellum and illuminated by A.J. Fairbank and Louise Powell respectively in a volume of great beauty. One day he happened to tell me that he thought of having the version printed, as many of his friends wished to possess it. The temptation to add yet one more book to my list was too strong for me to resist and I there and then offered to print a small edition. I have never regretted having done so, as in my humble judgment it is one of the most satisfactory of the books of the Press." Founded by Charles Harry St. John Hornby (1867-1946), the Ashendene Press issued 40 books, plus additional minor pieces, from 1895-1935. Less elaborate in appearance and design than William Morris' Kelmscott volumes, but more ornamental than the products of Cobden-Sanderson's Doves press, the Ashendene volumes have long been considered the most satisfying of English private press books. original full limp orange vellum with matching silk ties, spine lettered in gilt, original slipcase covered in marbled paper executed by Douglas Cockerell. N° de réf. du vendeur 59350
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Vendeur : Thorn Books, ABAA, Tucson, AZ, Etats-Unis
Limp Vellum. Etat : Fine. Limited edition. 4to. 182 pp. Hand-illuminated initial letters in red, blue and green by Graily Hewitt and his assistants, Ida D. Henstock and Helen E. Hinkley. (4to), original orange vellum with orange ties, gilt spine title; printed in black and red; in publisher's marbled paper slipcase. Finely printed at the press of St. John Hornby in 'Subiaco' type. One of 328 copies on paper of which 250 were for sale. This is a fine, bright copy, without the sunning of the spine usually found. Ashendene Bibliography, No. 90. . N° de réf. du vendeur 23785
Quantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)