Edité par At the Office of The Fleuron [later] The University Press, London & Cambridge, 1923
Vendeur : S.P.Tuohy, Oxford, OXF, Royaume-Uni
EUR 769,10
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierHardcover. Etat : Very Good. 7 vols. 4to. 28 cm. Insets. Plates. Illusts. Vol. 1 qtr. cloth, otherwise full cloth. Vol. 1 boards foxed, some spotting elsewhere, but generally a nice, crisp set, vols 2 & 3 in the orig. d.w. (vols. 2 chipped). Additional postage required, charged at cost. 'For me, collecting volume VII of The Fleuron from Zwemmer's in the Charing Cross Road was as heady an aesthetic experience as my first sight of Venice. For others, too. That notable wood engraver, Reynolds Stone, told me.of a similar experience. Entering the Cambridge University Press as a trainee.he discovered that one of the printers there.Mr Nobbs, had a complete set of The Fleuron. That journal of typography changed Stone's life, as it changed mine.' Robert Harling, from the Foreword to Grant Shipcott, Typographical periodicals between the wars, Oxford, 1980.
Edité par The Fleuron; At the University Press 1923-1930, London; Cambridge, 1923
Vendeur : George Ong Books, New York, NY, Etats-Unis
EUR 812
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierHardcover. Etat : Good. 4to, illustrated, quarter cloth with paper sides (nos. 1 and 2) and full cloth (nos. 3 to 7); original dustjacket for no. 3 only, all other dustjackets are later-made with title and volume number printed on the spine panel (presumably by a previous owner). With numerous color and black-and-white illustrations, tip-ins, and specimens, some fold-out. Printer and typographer Bernard Newdigate (1869-1944) positively gushes over the first volume in his "Book Production Notes" for The London Mercury: "The first number of The Fleuron is a brilliant piece of book-production. The book itself is a sumptuous production of the Curwen Press and shows, both in its general appearance and in nearly every detail, the care and skill and good taste which have conspired to the splendid achievement" (quoted by Ruari McLean in "The Most Underrated of Typographers," Matrix 6, pp. 172-3). "The Fleuron was an occasional journal of the arts of the book, in hardback form; it was a sumptuous publication which included the writings of many contemporary scholars as well as original work by artists, and specially composed type specimens of many types as they appeared. It had sprung from conversations between [Stanley] Morison and Oliver Simon, designer at the Curwen Press" (Sebastian Carter, in "Stanley Morison and Jan van Krimpen," Matrix 8, p. 117). Volume 5 with the booklabel of Charles Antin, proprietor of the Serendipity Press, on rear pastedown; prior owner signature on vol. 6 pastedown. Contents generally very good to near fine. Most condition issues are with the covers: some wear to head and/or foot of spine of all volumes except vol. 3 (most heavily in vol. 5); vols. 1 and 5 rear hinge has short or partial split; vol. 2 has horizontal inch-length heavy crease along top of both boards and one-inch split at the hinge; light cover edge wear to vols. 1, 2 and 4; some light soiling to covers, except vol. 5, which is heavily soiled; spines to vols. 2 and 4 a bit faded. Pastedowns and first and last few leaves foxed. Dustjackets show some chipping; vol. 1 spine jacket panel partially repaired.
Edité par The Fleuron, London, 1923
Edition originale
EUR 1 064,91
Autre deviseQuantité disponible : 1 disponible(s)
Ajouter au panierHard Cover. Etat : Very Good. First Edition. 7 volume set, all issued. Volumes 1 & 2, quarter cloth with paper covers boards, volumes 3 to 7 full cloth. Volumes 1 to 4: 28 x 22cm, volume 5 to 7: 28.5 x 22.5cm. Numerous colour and monochrome illustrations, tipped-in specimens, papers, facsimiles, some folding. All with a little wear to extremities. Volume 4 a little stained to base of spine, volume 5, small abrasion to rear boards. Bookplate to front pastedown in volume 2.