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Contest Reminder

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Reminder The 10th anniversary Bookplatejunkie contest will be ending soon


The contest is very simple .

 Create a caption about the image shown above in ten words or less.
It can be serious or humorous.
Onlyone entry per person 
The entries must be received no later than Midnight (Eastern Standard Time) Saturday April First

I reserve the right to reject entries in poor taste (Highly Unlikely)
 The winner will receive a professionally bound hard  cover inscribed book  with all my blog postings for 2016.

Send your Entries to Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com



What is the significance of the acanthus leaves?
The symbolism and meaning associated with the Acanthus is that of enduring life, and the plant is traditionally displayed at funerary celebrations. In Christianity the thorny leaves represent pain, sin and punishment. Acanthus symbolizes immortality in Mediterranean countries.

Odds and Ends

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And the winner is :


I want to thank all the people who  entered the 10th anniversary contest. It was not easy selecting the best of the best.
The winner is Don Hobbs. His submission was:
How Can I Buy Books? I Can't Afford Pants

I finally started listing bookplates on Ebay after a very long pause.
My goal is to list 25 plates by the end of the day on Monday April 10th.
Right now I have about 16 items listed and you can see them by going to 
this link.
http://www.ebay.com/sch/bookplatemaven/m.html?_ipg=50&_sop=12&_rdc=1

A longer post will be sent out on Monday.


More Bookplate Odds and Ends

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Fellow collector/dealer Jeffrey Price sent me this information about a very special bookplate he recently framed in his Norwalk, Connecticut Studio.

"This is what I look for in a bookplate, and how I like to present such special pieces. .

Bookplate for Calvin Coolidge. Proof printing of the engraving by Timothy Cole. Signed by Timothy Cole and noted, 'this is the latest printed today.' Also signed by Calvin Coolidge. This print was formerly in the collection of Malcolm S. Forbes.

The 'floating' presentation within a patriotic red mat with a decorative inner frame allows the complete print to be displayed with its full margins. The 'Stars and Stripes' design of the frame echoes the flag unfurled around the vignette of George Washington which crowns the plate.

The hand-painted gold-leaf name-plate identifies the details of this fine work."
=========================================================
I am always pleased to receive emails from blog readers.
Anna Jaffe sent me this information.

"I ran into your website which caught my eye as a fellow Jaffe - who used to work at an antiquarian bookstore and designed a few bookplates for customers.
Just for fun, here's a bookplate I bought years ago (hairy guy), plus 2 of my own designs".


"As to my bookplates, I worked for over a decade at an antiquarian bookstore in The Hague (proprietor Bob Loose, now sadly deceased). We had various steady customers who collected specific subjects, as one does. I originally studied Industrial Design and like being crafty, so I'd ask if they'd be interested in a personalized bookplate or stamp, as I love making them. Animals seemed to be the most frequent. I think I've done ants, monkeys, snails, snakes, owls, "levenstrap" (life phases pictured on stairsteps), tiger and probably more. There's something about expressing yourself in a restricted space that I really enjoy."


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Many Mystery Bookplates
I purchased a large collection several weeks ago and it includes many bookplates   about which I know very little . Here are two examples.

A rebus bookplate which may be in Spanish.
Have fun with this one. I can use some help.

Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com




It would be nice if this was Fidel Castro's bookplate. I suspect it is a tribute plate made to honor him.The collector whose contact information is printed on the verso  shows up on Google at the same address with a telephone number. Unfortunately the telephone number is no longer  working.


This day in Bookplates 4/21/2017

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Fellow collector David Wilton sent the following information about his new bookplate.

"The bookplate is engraved from an original artwork, a watercolor, by Graham Redgrave Rust.


The house shown is The Firs in Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia. The Firs was built in 1922 to a design by the well known architect George Howe of Mellor, Meigs and Howe. It is a scaled-down variation on its neighbor,  Howe's own house High Hollow.


The arms at the top and the circular badge in the bottom right of the cartouche are my family's. My initials are in the circle in the base.


The bookplate was engraved and printed by Book Arts in Washington DC on acid-free pre-gummed paper. The idea was to capture the feel of the watercolor, which I think they have achieved."

Note from Lew -The bookplate has a thin blue line border which the scanner does not show properly.
=========================================================

A new contest was hatched this morning.

My Goodness - Two contests in one year. I am on a roll.
Alice L. Salzmann's bookplate was designed in 1905 by A.H.B (artist unknown)
She was an active member of the Royal Horticultural Society .

The contest is easy.
 Just create a caption for her bookplate ,shown below.

The rules are simple .
Only one submission per person
The judges (Lew and Mary Jaffe) will delete any submissions in poor taste.
All submissions must be received by Midnight (E.S.T) May 30,2017 

The winner will receive a copy of John Grisham's upcoming new thriller about the antiquarian book trade , Camino Island
http://www.jgrisham.com/heist-thriller-camino-island-to-publish-june-6/

Send your submissions to
 Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com



This Week in Bookplates 5/17/2017

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The Birth of a Rabbit Bookplate
I have always wanted a rabbit bookplate so I asked Daniel Mitsui to
 create one for me  and track its progress from start to finish.







I am very pleased with this project and will get the bookplates printed as soon as I receive the completed art work

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Notes From Lew

A group of rabbits is known as a colony, or nest (and occasionally a warren, though this more commonly refers to where the rabbits live). A group of young rabbits with the same parentage is referred to as a litter, and a group of domestic rabbits is sometimes called a herd.

Rabbit - Wikipedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rabbit
In 2011 I ran a three part series of blogs about Rabbit Bookplates
They still make me smile.


http://bookplatejunkie.blogspot.com/2012/10/a-herd-of-rabbits-part-one.html

http://bookplatejunkie.blogspot.com/2012/10/a-herd-of-rabbits-part-2.html

http://bookplatejunkie.blogspot.com/2012/11/a-herd-of-rabbits-part-three.html

5/18/2017
Rabbit Owner Nancy McClelland sent this additional information.

Cool.  I was told that a conglomeration of bunnies like the "Rabbit Island" pic can be called a Fluffle--sounded strange but appropriate to me.
Here are a few recent additions to my rabbit collection.
If you would like your rabbit bookplate added to this posting send a scan to
Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com



The Clock is Ticking.



My Goodness - Two contests in one year. I am on a roll.
Alice L. Salzmann's bookplate was designed in 1905 by A.H.B (artist unknown)
She was an active member of the Royal Horticultural Society .

The contest is easy.
 Just create a caption for her bookplate ,shown below.

The rules are simple .
Only one submission per person
The judges (Lew and Mary Jaffe) will delete any submissions in poor taste.



All submissions must be received by Midnight (E.S.T) May 30,2017 



The winner will receive a copy of John Grisham's upcoming new thriller about the antiquarian book trade , Camino Island


http://www.jgrisham.com/heist-thriller-camino-island-to-publish-june-6/
Send your submissions to
 Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com









This week in bookplates 5/24/2017

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Sometimes it is difficult to come up with new blog postings each week which is why I am  always pleased to publish submissions from friends.
Fellow collector Jeffrey Price sent me this breaking news about a recent sale of an unpublished bookplate  by Robert Crumb.
Note From Lew
Personally, if I wanted to spend $7000.00 + for a bookplate  I would look for one from George Washington's library.
Here is a universal bookplate by Crumb which shows up on Ebay from time to time.
=================================================

Over at Bookplate Ink Karen Gardner has been writing a fascinating blog focusing on bookplates ordered by notable people , bookplates for special events and trips to exotic places.
http://shop.bookplateink.com/blog/
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If you wish to see the finest selection of 18th century American bookplates, documents and ephemera  a trip to the American Antiquarian should be on your bucket list.
In any event bookmark this link. It will take three lifetimes to carefully read all the bookplate articles. In the interest of full disclosure I have barely scratched the surface .
http://www.americanantiquarian.org/search/gss/bookplates
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California bookplates are one of the many areas I focus on.
It is particularly gratifying to find a California artist not mentioned in the
standard reference books.

Walter Barron Currier (1874-1934)

"Walter Barron Currier, a painter, craftsman, bookbinder ,illustrator, printmaker, and etcher, was born in Springville, Massachusetts on May 3, 1879. After his education at Brown and Cornell universities, he studied art with Arthur Dow, Eben Comins, and Kenyon Cox. By 1913 he had settled in Los Angeles. He was at one time the head of the art department of Lincoln High School there and in 1926 established the Currier Creative Art School in Santa Monica. He died there on January 11, 1934. Member: Laguna Beach Art Ass'n; California Art Club; California  Society; Santa Monica Art Ass'n; Painters & Sculptors of Los Angeles. Exhibited: Printmakers of Los Angeles, 1916; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1920; San Diego FA Gallery, 1920; Berkeley League of Fine Arts, 1925. Works held: Lincoln High School (Los Angeles); Exposition Park Galleries, (Los Angeles); Cecil B. DeMille Home for Girls (Hollywood)"

I currently have the artist's own bookplate. If you have any others he designed please send a scan to 
Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com

Bookplate News and Events

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Fellow book and bookplate collector Jerry Morris send me  his new bookplate and I asked him to send me a brief description. Here is his response.

Back in February 2013, I wrote a blog post 
On Selecting a Bookplate For My Library .
 Recently, I asked a friend to make two copies of Bookplate #4 for me.  I was donating two books, Four Oaks Farm and Four Oaks Library, from my Mary Hyde Collection for the silent auction at the upcoming Florida Bibliophile Society Banquet in May, and I wanted to paste the bookplates in them.
This friend, Charles Brown, the President of the Florida Bibliophile Society, makes exquisite bookplates for our guest speakers; but instead of merely making copies of my bookplate, Charles improved upon it .
I liked it so much that I had 100 copies made for the other books in my Mary Hyde Collection.

Jerry Morris

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Piggy Go Fetch My Book
Shown above is one of my favorite plates by William Fowler Hopson
If you are near New Haven Connecticut before October 6th you should
visit the Hopson Exhibit at Yale.

" From his home on New Haven’s Whitney Avenue, William Fowler Hopson catered to a growing marketplace that sought out individualized, personal bookplates. Hopson’s process realizing his 201 bookplate commissions—preserved in correspondence, sketches, and corrected trial proofs—demonstrates his commitment to encapsulating his patrons’ identities.
This exhibition in the Sterling Memorial Library exhibits corridor, features Hopson’s artistic materials and personal papers, part of the Yale Bookplate Collection and Yale’s Manuscripts and Archives, to elucidate the process of inventing, negotiating, and printing bookplate designs in their golden age. Ultimately, Hopson’s clients commissioned bookplates with artistic representations that were emblematic of their familial, personal, and communal contributions. By tracing the claims made through these commissions, we gain unique insight into some of the social standards and aspirations at the turn of the twentieth century in America."
http://web.library.yale.edu/news/2017/05/constructing-pictorial-identity-bookplates-golden-age
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DON'T Procrastinate
The contest is almost over

The contest is easy.
 Just create a caption for the bookplate ,shown below.




The rules are simple .

Only one submission per person
The judges (Lew and Mary Jaffe) will delete any submissions in poor taste.



All submissions must be received by Midnight (E.S.T) May 30,2017 



The winner will receive a copy of John Grisham's upcoming new thriller about the antiquarian book trade , Camino Island




http://www.jgrisham.com/heist-thriller-camino-island-to-publish-june-6/

Send Your Submissions to
Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com

A Win-Win No Brainer for Amazon or Barnes and Noble

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"Be on the lookout for a train with 10 subway cars that have been covered in bright blue, purple, green, orange and yellow.
The train — which is alternating between the E and F lines in Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens — is decorated with the words “SUBWAY LIBRARY.”
Inside those 10 cars, the seats resemble books on a shelf.
Beginning today, the Subway Library will offer commuters six weeks of free downloadable books from the city’s public libraries.
But you don’t need to be in a library car to take advantage. When you enter a subway station, connect to the Transit Wireless WiFi network available at all underground stations. When you’ve logged on, you’ll see a prompt for SubwayLibrary.com, and — voilà — you can start browsing and downloading books, short stories, chapters and excerpts donated by publishers to the New York Public Library. The New York Public Library, Brooklyn Public Library, Queens Library, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and Transit Wireless created the project.
“It used to be that you were ‘unplugged’ on the subway, and even though you’re connecting to the wireless now, you’ll still have the sense of being unplugged when reading books,” said Lynn Lobash, manager of reader services for the New York Public Library. “It’s a lot different than the frantic sense of checking your email or being on Twitter.”
You’ll find short reads curated for the quick commutes, and long reads for the farther destinations or delayed rides. You can explore New York stories, children’s titles, young-adult novels or new releases in the “New and Noteworthy” category."CC "

This article was copied from The New York Times 6/9/2017
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/08/nyregion/new-york-today-subway-library-mta-nypl-frank-lloyd-wright.html
=========================================
Note From Lew- What an innovative , thoughtful idea.
Hopefully other cities will offer similar services , maybe some will even have "real books" Personally I would be pleased to pay an extra fare to ride in a library car with real books and a librarian.
If you are so inclined  send this on to your local transit system. 
 I am going to send a copy of this posting to the marketing director at Amazon. It seems like it would be a win -win no brainer for them.

 In the golden era of railroad transportation library cars flourished.
Here are two examples of bookplates used in railroad cars.
"The Atalanta was a private  railroad car built  for Jay Gould, a noted financier and owner of several railroads. It was built in 1888 to Gould's specifications and was named the "Atalanta". The car had four staterooms, two observation rooms, two baths, an office, a kitchen, a dining area, and a butler's pantry. Only the finest materials were used. Upon Gould's death, ownership of the car fell to his son George Jay Gould who was also a railroad president. The car remained in the Gould family until the 1930s. It was then used as a private residence during the Texas oil boom until finally coming to Jefferson Hotel in 1954. Today it is a tourist attraction in Jefferson Texas". 
I suspect the bookplate was designed in the 1930s.

In 1901 The Alton Road (railroad) hired J.W.Spenceley to engrave the bookplate shown above.
In writing about this subject in the Journal Of Library History (vol15,No.4) Phillip Metzger mentions that During the 1850's and 1860's , railroads began heavy competition for first class passengers and that the development of the "vestibule" or flexible covered connection between cars made it safe for passengers to move about the train. Railroads began attaching parlor cars to their crack trains and the parlor car shortly thereafter became the " library -buffet smoker car".
"The Chicago and Alton(C&A) traced it's roots back to 1846, eventually developing a triangular route between Chicago, St . Louis, and Kansas City.The C& A also carried President Lincoln's body on the final leg of it's journey to Springfield. In 1900 The Alton Limited was probably the premier train of the ten or eleven the C&A ran daily, leaving Chicago every morning at 11 A.M. and arriving in St. Louis at 4:30 P.M."
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
If you plan to be in New Zealand before July 5th you might wish to see this bookplate exhibit.
http://www.canterbury.ac.nz/news/2017/ex-libris--art-for-bibliophiles-features-in-uc-exhibition.html

Bookplate Odds and Ends 6/29/2017

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Links worth Perusing

The American Antiquarian Society has an Instagram site .
Lots of interesting bookplates I've never seen before.
You can view it on your computer.

 https://www.instagram.com/explore/tags/aasbookplates/

The Luna Image Collection from Washington University in St. Louis should be bookmarked. It is an excellent digital bookplate resource.
http://luna.wustl.edu:8180/luna/servlet/view/all/who/os/950/what/Bookplates/when/n.d.?sort=Title%252CCreator_Name%252CObject_Typ

Three Mystery Bookplates
Send your Mystery Bookplate scans and answers to inquiries to
Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com



Hi Lew -

Thanks for getting back to me and offering to help me sort this out -- I would be most grateful if you were to post something on your blog or otherwise point me in the right direction. (However limited your knowledge of Russian bookplates may be, I can assure you that mine is far more limited!)
This is what I have figured out so far...

The translation says:

"From the books of Б. М. Тенин." 

The foreground graphic is obviously Shakespeare's portrait with  a quote from Hamlet, Act 1 scene 5, lines 190-1: 
"The time is out of joint. O cursèd spite / That ever I was born to set it right!"

From what I have gleaned, Boris Mihaylovich Tenin (Б. М. Тенин) was a famous Soviet actor born in 1905. In addition to his work on stage, film, and television, he was quite a bibliophile and collected bookplates. I found -- and have attached -- a picture of Tenin in his library, with what appear to be some bookplate designs, one of which also seems to have Shakespeare's portrait. I can't read Russian, so I have no idea what the text says. I've asked my daughter, who is more adept with computers and research, to try to figure it out.

As for this particular bookplate, I have no idea who the artist that designed (and signed) it is, nor where this particular bookplate came from. It was given to my daughter as a gift over a decade ago. Any help or advice you can give would be most appreciated.

Thanks!
Susan


Hi Lew,
          Any idea who this artist may be? LBM are the initials but I have no idea.

                         Best,

                             Tom

I suspect this was an honorarium plate for Fidel Castro. It may be a Russian Plate.  Your input would be appreciated. Thanks,
Lew



Recent Additions To My Collection

Send scans of  recent additions to your collection to
Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com

In 1945 Ernest Morgan , the president of Antioch Bookplate Co. sent this letter to
Louis Henry Cohn , the owner of House of Books Ltd. in New York City.

Here is one of the Lynd Ward Proofs

By way of comparison shown below is one of the printed bookplates.




Here is another proof

Lewis Henry Cohn's bookplate was designed by his friend Ernest Hemingway

"Ernest Hemingway,
autograph inscription and bookplate [n.d.]
Original autograph text by Ernest Hemingway used for design of a Cohn bookplate, includes autograph notes on scale and line cut for the printed bookplate. The Hemingway autograph was written on the verso of Hotel Brevoort (New York) stationery."

http://www.lib.udel.edu/ud/spec/exhibits/hemngway/cohn.htm

I got the Lockett plate on Ebay. It just strikes my fancy.



More Recent Arrivals

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Jeffrey Price has a new wood block bookplate engraved by Andy English.
I asked him to write something about his new plate and this is his response:

It started with the idea of  referencing M. C. Escher’s artwork and including my own Latin motto. I enjoy the phrase ‘Seek the Extraordinary,’  and the closest Latin translation of that is ‘Quaerite Singulari.’ I used ‘Ex Collectione’ rather than ‘Ex Libris’ for flexibility, thinking that I may put it on the back of a picture from my gallery, a book from my collection, or perhaps exchange it with other collectors..
     Both Andy and I are fans of Escher’s work, especially his 1931 series of  woodcuts titled ‘XXIV Emblemata.’ Emblemata prints have a history going back hundreds of years. Their function was to educate by illustrating a moral lesson or motto with a memorable picture, often created in woodcut. The design Andy created has its roots in an Emblemata print of a sundial, in which the transience of time is shown by a passing shadow. But a fortune-teller’s crystal ball sees the future, and I am indebted to good fortune. 

Andy even crafted a reflection of Artists’ Market in this sphere, and you can even make out the number 163 of our address in the image. The tiles are engraved like Escher’s, and the garden is 100% Andy English. Andy cut his initials into the block in Escher’s style, tying  everything together quite neatly.

Jeffrey Price                                     


Artists' Market Inc.
The Artists' Bookplate Museum
163 Main Street
Norwalk, CT 06851 USA                   
203.846.2550
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Here are a few recent additions to my collection


By way of explanation I purchase bookplates that fit into themes that have  some weird appeal to me.

                       Severed Heads

For quite some time I have been fascinated by bookplates with severed heads and exposed brain matter. I call it my Donovan's Brain collection.
If you are turned off by this topic do not click onto this memorable link from the movie
  Underwater awakening

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrVc_8vbZP8

If you want similar bookplates from your own collection added to this posting send jpeg scans to
Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com

This bookplate was designed by Roberto Buonacconsi
I see no artist's signature on this plate but the previous owner noted that it was done by Pavel Simon
This bookplate shown above is a gift from fellow collector James Keenan.
It was etched by Matthew Collins

Okay, this is not a bookplate. It is a magazine cover which reflects my own fears about our current president - his misguided , and very muddled mindset.
As a nation we survived the civil war , two world wars and the great depression
 Hopefully we will also survive this very sad turn of events .

Two Dumpster Tales

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New York Times Obituary for Frederick C. Blank -1942
Mr. Blank's bookplate from The Richard Schimmelpfeng Collection

The One That Got Away

I am not exactly sure exactly what year I became infected with bookplaticitis. I assume it was in the early 1980's. 
By then Frederick Charles Blank had been dead around forty years.
At the time I was selling advertising space for a trade publication so I was a firm believer in the power of advertising. I placed an ad  in The Antique Trader  and was quickly contacted by a dealer who had about six hundred items relating to Mr. Blank . They included correspondence between him and King Gillette about a proposed bookplate. along with sketches.
The dealer explained that a picker found the items in a dumpster and the asking price was $125.00. Unfortunately, I had no idea who Charles F. Blank was and I declined the offer. Several days later I found out that I made a big mistake and contacted the dealer. You guessed it. By then the lot had been sold.

The One That Didn't Get Away

In 2010 a real estate broker called to tell me that he sold a house in which a bookplate collection had been stored in the attic.The new owner threw everything into a dumpster and the broker contacted me.
I bought the collection from him  without hesitation. The most significant item in the collection was this Charlie Chaplin bookplate.

Here is a detailed inventory of the collection. The original owner was Katherine C. Bartholomew.
http://bookplatejunkie.blogspot.com/search?q=katherine+bartholomew

=========================================================
Mystery Bookplates


Dear Mr. Jaffe,


I received an inquiry regarding the bookplate of Robert Hoe, and your name was referred to me as someone who might be able to proffer some assistance or opinions. 

One of our members recently acquired a book bearing the blue bookplate of Robert Hoe, which differs from (but is quite similar to) his red bookplate.  The red bookplate I am familiar with, but the blue one I have never seen before.  The question is, do you know if the blue bookplate is a variant of the red, or if it could be the bookplate of his son, Robert Hoe III?

I have attached photographs of both bookplates herewith.  Any thoughts you might have on the matter would be greatly appreciated.


With my best regards,


Sophia


Sophia Dahab, MLIS

Assistant Librarian

The Grolier Club

47 East 60th Street

New York, NY 10022

Phone: 212-838-6690




This title page was sent by Tom Boss .

7/19/2017 Fellow collector  Richard Cady  sent the following message:

 I think both your plates are Robert Hoe's.

Grolier Club members at around the turn of the century often had their leather bookplates printed in varying colored leathers as well as on paper.  And there are some design variants.  I have three Hoe plates - one reddish, one brown, one blue. In my own collection Cortland Bishop had at least three - green, red and blue.  William L. Clements four, Barton Currie two, Ernest Gee two, Frank Hogan five, Pierpont Morgan two, W. Van R. Whitall two, John Camp Williams three (diamond shaped), and assume this is just the tip of the iceberg.  RHC
=========================================================

Hats off to Stephen Fowler, owner of The Monkey Paw Bookshop in Toronto
In this day of diminishing antiquarian book shops Mr. Fowler figured out a way to
get customers from all over the world .
http://www.monkeyspaw.com/the-biblio-mat/

The Wonders of the Internet

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Shortly after I wrote about Charles Frederick Blank I received this email.

Lew....

Hello.... enjoyed your blog on bookplates..in particular the obit. for Charles Blank and the Blank signed Bookplate proof....

I am a barbershop collector and have in my collection the original art work grouping leading to the bookplate.
However I still have yet to find an actual bookplate... 

So in the event you ever run across another of these plates I would be interested in acquiring it... I even talked with Charles Blanks grandson in hopes of getting one from him..but he would not sell his extra plate.

Thanks,
Chief Mike
407-496-5319


a little about me..
http://www.peachridgeglass.com/2012/05/chief-mike-barber-shop-art-collectables/

Shaving Kit engraved by Charles F. Blank
=========================================================I
Note from Lew
 I contacted Spencer Frazee Charles Blank's great grandson and he was very helpful in sharing information with me.
He has  an excellent Face Book page with many images of bookplates.
https://www.facebook.com/Frederick.Charles.Blank/
He also sent this scanned photo of his great grand father.
Charles Blank

An email from Spencer Frazee

Lew, 



This may be interesting to you.  
Frederick C. Blank is buried less than 2 miles from my house in
Rockville, CT.  I actually live in Tolland, CT, but it's still less than
2 miles away.  I've since bleached his stone and tidied up the
grave site.  Link below includes photos and a little background.
 https://findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Blank&GSfn=Frederick&GSmn=C&GSbyrel=all&GSdyrel=all&GSst=8&GScntry=4&GSob=n&GRid=33592625&df=all&

Mystery Bookplate

If you recognize this bookplate please contact me.
Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com

Hi,

I saw your awesome blog and thought you might like to see this do you know anything about Shoji?

.PS. it is in a 1936 book on Japanese woodblock prints by P. Neville Barnett which is also cool.

Thanks!
Sean Blanchet

=====================================================================================

The Smithsonian has a very impressive digitized research tool.
Here is the link for bookplates.  This site should be bookmarked.


Twenty Five Judaica Bookplates for Possible Exchange

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Two Mystery  Bookplates

Fellow Collector Tom Boss Has sent two bookplates engraved  by F.B. 
Does anyone out there recognize this artist ? 
Send your response to
 TGBoss @gmail.com
=======================================================================

Judaica Bookplates for possible Exchange

I've been trying to get my duplicates organized but it is challenging because I've got the clutter gene.
If you have any Judaica bookplates for possible exchange send jpeg scans to 
Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com

I'll be back in several days with bookplates of notable people for possible exchange.


 

This Week in Bookplates 9/3/2017

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I am going to attend the fourth annual Brooklyn book show.( Sept 8-10)
If you are in or near Brooklyn and have bookplates for sale or trade please send me an email.
Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com

This is an exceptionally well run show  and at least two dealers  Tom Boss and Richard Thorner will be bringing bookplates.
Here is their contact information.


Here is a link with detailed information about the show
https://www.brooklynbookfair.com/
============================================================================================

Fellow Collector Anthony Pincott sent me this information about the Emma Toedteberg Collection at the Brooklyn Historical Society.

With a little advance planning you can go to the show and visit the  Historical Society also.



http://www.brooklynhistory.org/
Call Number: 2012.004
Extent: 23.5 Linear feet, in 48 manuscript boxes.
The Emma Toedteberg Bookplate collection, spanning from 1701 to 1982, was the bookplate collection of long-time Brooklyn Historical Society (BHS) librarian Emma Toedteberg (1856-1936). The collection was originally created by Miss Toedteberg’s father, Augustus Toedteberg (1824-1909), and later expanded by BHS librarians. The present collection numbers over 7,000 bookplates ranging from the eighteenth to the twentieth century, including armorial, heraldic and presentation bookplates of individuals and institutions. Works of numerous engravers are represented such as Edwin Davis French, Charles W. Sherborn and John W. Evans.
======================================================================

Fellow collector Luigi Bergomi  has listed over two hundred bookplates on Ebay this week.. His seller name is Olindo.

To be continued on Monday 9/4

This Week in Bookplates 9/3/2017-Part Two

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Yesterday I wrote about the Brooklyn Book Show.
This morning I received this Email from Cara Schlesinger  owner of the Faenwyl Bindery

"I hope to see you this weekend at the Brooklyn Antiquarian Book Fair, at Brooklyn's Expo Center in Greenpoint!
Do you have a book in need of special care - - repair or a protective slipcase or clamshell box? I'd be glad to talk with you about it at the fair. If you'd like to bring the book with you, please call me from the door at (917) 414-4575 and I'll come to walk you in.
I have a few passes for complimentary entry available for people who'd like a consultation - - reply to this email to let me know you're interested! "

Cara Schlesinger, Faenwyl Bindery

www.faenwyl.com

Here are some Brooklyn bookplates  from my collection.


Kurt Zimmerman recently mentioned Dr Purple in his book collecting blog 
http://www.bookcollectinghistory.com/search?q=dr+purple
I wrote about Emma Toedteberg in yesterday's blog posting.
This bookplate was engraved by E.D. French

The Pratt Institute has an excellent bookplate collection which can be viewed by following this link
.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/34900073@N07/sets/72157613160345964/

Mystery Brooklyn Bookplate

The artist's initial's are FB.Does anyone out there know who that might be ?By the way , if you have any Brooklyn bookplates send a scan to Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com and I will add them to my next blog posting.




Support your local bookseller

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Support your local Book Seller
I  never run paid advertising but I am always pleased to promote book shows, Book Sales and  Booksellers .It is tough out there in the real world if you are running an independent bookstore.

Here are  two noteworthy announcements

I received this email from Curtis Kise the owner of Neighborhood Books after I visited his store and complimented him on the attractive and reasonably priced framed bookplates he had for sale.




Lew
We are selling the framed bookplates for $5.95 - $8,95
 Loose or unframed ones are $1 each or 3 for $2, .
The exceptional ones range from $2 - $5 each.

The store is open seven days a week, 11am to 6pm, closed major holidays (next is Thanksgiving). We are located at 1906 South St. Philadelphia, Pa. 19146, 

 Our phone number is 215-545-BOOK

 email is       neighborhoodbooks215@gmail.com.


Thanks for doing this for us! - Curtis

Support The Bookplate Society

A new collector asked me yesterday why he should join The Bookplate Society


http://www.bookplatesociety.org/

My response was Trust Me. Do It.

Perhaps I was too brusque so I will elaborate.
The Bookplate Society publishes well researched and profusely illustrated books about bookplates.
I use them frequently.In addition , most members go out of their way to assist me when I have questions about heraldry.Beyond that the member's bookplate auctions provide an opportunity to buy  items for your collection.
This book is currently available to non-members.

Price is £24 which is $31  and for a 1kg parcel Royal Mail quote £13.50, in other words $17.25, which I find grim but ipost and MyHermes are still more expensive.  So a total of $48.25 to non-members living outside the EU.


Item Description: The Bookplate Society, London, 2016. Soft cover. 199p. Publishers stiff wrapper. A biographical descriptions of 22 families and their bookplates with 249 black & white illustrations and an Appendix.

 Send Orders to:  members@bookplatesociety.org

An Interview with Daniel Mitsui

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This is  an email interview I recently had  with Daniel Mitsui.

My questions are highlighted in blue and his responses are in black.


Daniel Mitsui

In ten years you have become the most prolific living American bookplate designer.

How many bookplates have you completed and how many are you currently working on ?

I do not keep perfect records of the things I draw, so I do not know exactly how many bookplates I have designed. Probably eighty or ninety.

Bookplate commissions are not steady; some years I only draw a couple, and in other years I draw a dozen. I suppose this is because I do not actively seek out bookplate commissions, but let inquiries about them come to me. This means that most of the commissions I undertake are from people who are really enthusiastic about the bookplate and have a distinct idea about what they want on it, which is helpful.

At the moment, I have two bookplate commissions secured, and I am discussing four others that I expect will be secured soon. There is a real thematic variety in these - one is to be in a medieval Irish style, one to make visual references to old movies (Cleopatra and The Seventh Seal), one to take its inspiration from M.C. Escher and the Borges short story The Library of Babel. None of the bookplates are in the drawing stage yet, but I will probably put pen to paper for at least one in the coming week. 

Of all those bookplates which was the most challenging ?

It would be easier for me to say which are the least challenging.

Ornament has always been one of my artistic strengths; millefleur patterns, Celtic knots and fanciful lettering are the sort of things that I draw well without much effort. Some of the bookplates that I have drawn featuring these are, I think, among my most impressive - but they were not especially challenging. When not drawing bookplates, my specialty is medieval religious art, so the many bookplates that I have drawn featuring patron saints or heraldry were not especially difficult to realize either. Neither were those that take inspiration from biological illustration, as this is a minor specialty of mine.

I suppose the most difficult bookplates for me to draw are those that require me to adopt a style or subject totally different from what I normally draw. One reason I like bookplate commissions so much is that they require me, on occasion, to stretch myself creatively. For example, the John T. Barfield bookplate. This is not especially complicated in its design, but the patron wanted a Classical ornamental style and a landscape with a recognizable tree and house. These are the sort of things that I almost never draw.

The Kathy Tapia bookplate required me to draw a scene with dramatic foreshortening, totally unlike the perspectival space of medieval art. My wife posed for that one, on top of a stack of our own books. If you look closely, you can make out The Origin of the Serif and The Second Book of Negro Spirituals. I think the big open one is Dryden's translation of The Aeneid.

The Leonora Janisheski bookplate might also be the answer to your question, because the subjects are so outlandish to me: the Rietveld Schröder house (a famous work of Bauhaus architecture), Valeska Gert (an avant-garde dancer) and lemurs. When otherwise would I draw something like this?  Somehow, I was able to fit some medieval lettering and millefleur into it.

Of all those bookplates do you have one that you are particularly proud of ?

I think that the Renata Rua bookplate turned out very well; this depicts an Irish saint, Gobnait, in a style that is like that of early medieval manuscripts, but with some subtle influences from Utagawa Kuniyoshi and sangaku tablets. Medieval art was always accepting of international influences, so I think that this sort of approach is in its right spirit, even though the monks at Kells obviously knew nothing of Japanese culture!

I am very fond of the bookplate I drew for the maritime library of the Acania, which depicts the ship surrounded by a border of seashells and aquatic invertebrates. It's simple but very balanced. I'm not sure what exactly I did right there.

Andrew Lohrum's is a personal favorite, because of its especially clever choice of subject. I cannot take credit for that; the patron told me exactly what he wanted. It depicts an episode from the life of St. Francis of Assisi. He founded a religious order whose members are committed to complete poverty; they beg for sustenance, and cannot own personal property. Here, a novice has asked him permission to own a breviary, which is a book of daily prayers that all priests and monks and mendicants recite. St. Francis responds by rubbing ashes on his head, saying I am a breviary! I am a breviary! to demonstrate the vanity of wanting to own books.


You have created   ephemeral items like calling cards, greeting cards a
label for a musical instrument etc.

Can you put together a complete list with as many scans as possible?



I've never kept anything like a complete list for small miscellaneous projects like these, but here are some of the examples I found:

Bookmarks - John and June Mellman, Bloody Candlestick Mystery Bookshop

Business cards - Bloody Candlestick Mystery Bookshop (2), Bruno Cicconi, Donald Lambert, Stephanie Sheffield


Calling cards - Nicole Cuadra

Invitations - Clerical Tonsure, Pace Wedding



Luthier label - Miles Mibeck

Coats of arms - Bishop Joseph Perry, Shane Pliska

Note From Lew

If you would like to see more of Daniel Mitsui's artwork here is a link to his website

Odds and Ends

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 Occasionally I examine  the page views for this blog by   country .
This is an analysis of the last thirty days.Surprisingly the U.K. is much lower than usual and I have no idea why the French readership has dramatically increased.
China is not shown because of its pissing contest with Google.

EntryPageviews
United States
3313
France
1274
Spain
403
United Kingdom
398
Russia
367
United Arab Emirates
305
Portugal
189
Brazil
162
Netherlands
147
Germany
135

From the why  did I  buy this bookplate collection

I spotted this bookplate in  Indiana Bookplates by Esther Griffin White.
It is also mentioned here.
http://pastispresent.org/2016/fun-in-the-archive/boo-bookplates/
"The railroad executive, doctor, and book collector Frank  Graef Darlington of Indianapolis, ordered a bookplate design from Frank  S. Bowers, the famous cartoonist for the Indianapolis News. Bowers crammed in references to all of  Darlington’s passions (engineering, mining, MIT) and surrounded a  leering skeleton with a python border. Darlington struggled with health  issues most of his adult life (suffering a debilitating  stroke at age thirty-seven) and apparently had a wry sense of his own  mortality. A fellow bibliophile commented that this particular bookplate  was appropriate for Darlington as it held a “hideous and inexplicable  fascination."

Email  from blog readers

Fellow Collector  Ben  Zeckel sent this email

Hi Lew,

I wonder if you might have any ideas on how to approach researching the identity of the plate attached - ex libris et musicis Dr. Norbert Rossa by Ludwig Hesshaimer 1933

Thanks for any advice you can offer.

Ben
Note From Lew
Here is some information about the artist.

http://www.malariastamps.com/exhibits/exhibits_images/Spille_Ludwig/Ludwig08-08.pdf
Can anyone out there identify Dr. Norbert Rossa ?
Please send your responses to
Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com 
============================================================


Paul Cymrot a bookseller in Washington D.C. and Fredericksburg,Va, sent

the following emails


http://www.riverbybooks.com/


Good morning, 



I have stumbled onto your fascinating blog this morning
while researching an early and interesting bookplate. I wonder if you
might be able to help me learn a little bit more about it. 






It’s small and plain, about 2” x 2.5”, with decorative border, name and address.






The address is 266 Arch St, Philadelphia, which of course
is an important central location, & just around the corner from
Franklin’s print shop.






The book is in a copy of Jefferson’s Notes (London 1787)
bound with the 1800 (Philadelphia-printed) appendix, printed by another
Philadelphia printed, Samuel H. Smith.


Before long he sent additional information about Mr.Priestman

 Priestman was an English merchant and resident of Baltimore. He is best remembered for amassing a remarkable library and for running afoul of the early US import regulations, resulting in a Supreme Court ruling (against him) and eventual pardon from President Thomas Jefferson.



In 1798 Priestman imported 219 watches from England, paid import tax in Baltimore, and then transported the watches the Philadelphia. Upon arriving in Philadelphia, he failed to report the watches to Philadelphia customs officials. Instead, he set up a stall to sell them -- right next door to the Custom House. Customs inspector Sharp Delany promptly seized them. Priestman sued for their return, but Pennsylvania courts and eventually the Supreme Court both ruled against him. Priestman continued to fight for the return of his watches, “Two hundred and three silver watches, three gold ditto, two enamelled ditto, two hunting ditto, and seven pinchback ditto…” (from Jan 22, 1798 report written by Sharp Delany, in American State Papers, volume 9) through the final years of the Adams administration. In so doing, he contributed money to Thomas Jefferson’s Republicans -- and in 1801, the same year Jefferson assumed the presidency -- Customs inspector Sharp Delany was fired, Priestman was pardoned, and Jefferson ordered the watches returned to him.


According to contemporary assessments, the watches were worth $3,385, which was a fortune at the time.


Priestman’s address (on the bookplate) is 266 Arch Street. The house still stands (there is a Starbucks there). It is at the corner of Arch and N. 3rd Street, directly across the street from Betsy Ross’s house & just around the corner from Benjamin Franklin’s house & printing press. 4.5 blocks to Independence Hall. It is a remarkably prominent location & its proximity to Franklin’s Press raises the question of whether the bookplate might have been printed there. Despite proximity to Franklin’s shop, it’s also worth noting that the Appendix was printed by Samuel H. Smith, another Philadelphia printer & particular friend of Thomas Jefferson. Since it was Smith who published the Appendix & likely bound the two together, it seems more likely that it was Smith who made the bookplate. I have not yet been able to find matching examples of either Smith or Franklin bookplates.


Other Priestman bookplates (mentioned in online listings) give his address at Market and 9th St, about 6 blocks from the Arch St address.


When the Federal Government moved from Philadelphia to Washington in 1800, Jefferson urged Smith to move with it & to set up a print shop in the new City. Smith agreed, and established one of Washington’s first newspapers, “The National Intelligencer.” Smith went on to publish Jefferson’s Parliamentary Manual in 1801. Then in 1813 he was appointed Commissioner of the Revenue and in 1814, briefly, the Secretary of the Treasury (under Madison).


Priestman died in 1830 and is buried at Christ Church in Philadelphia.


Priestman appears to have put together quite an impressive library - many of them are catalogued and identified in the collection of the American Philosophical Library, which bought a number of maps from Priestman in a famous 1831 sale. The correct Jefferson map is not mentioned among them.


Note from Lew



Thank you Paul -



I hope to visit your shop on my next trip to Washington





10/23/2017I received this comment from Carmen Valentino


Lew,



If
Priestman died in 1830, then the 266 Arch St. address was elsewhere
because I believe the street nubers in the city were changed at some
point AFTER 1830. !!



Cheers,



Carmen D. V.



I recently purchased this bookplate by Annie French.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annie_French
This is the only one I currently have in my own collection
 I would be most interested in obtaining anyother bookplates
she designed.
Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com


The Devil Made Me Do It

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 Some of you may remember the American comedian Flip Wilson whose tag line was
The Devil Made Me  Do It.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0SLifea3NHQ
I though about him when I started writing 
this blog posting about Devils and Satyrs. 

My first satyr bookplate was sent  by Jacques Vallee in 2001

"Jacques Fabrice Vallée (French: [vale]; born September 24, 1939) is a computer scientist, author, ufologist and former astronomer currently residing in San FranciscoCalifornia.


In mainstream science, Vallée co-developed the first computerized mapping of Mars for NASA and worked at SRI International on the network information center for the ARPANET, a precursor to the modern Internet. Vallée is also an important figure in the study of unidentified flying objects (UFOs), first noted for a defense of the scientific legitimacy of the extraterrestrial hypothesis and later for promoting the interdimensional hypothesis".






Mr. Vallee  wrote  that his bookplate was designed around  an illustration from The Circus of Dr. Lao


He thought it was appropriate for a library of the paranormal, the innocent girl representing science 


and the satyr .the forces of nature.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------




Note sent by Samuel Chambliss 111




S. Pritikin - Several bookplates in my collection were designed by S. Pritikin including the one illustrated.below.
 All were for men of the cloth.
 Don't do a Google search for more information unless you are  interested in weight loss




The bookplate shown above is a serigraph done in 1991 by Hara Yoshiaki

This Rev. Peterson bookplate was designed by Bessie  Pease Gutmann

The Jane F. Peters plate was designed by Charles Henry Carter

If you have any devil bookplates you would like added to this
blog posting send a scan to 
Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com

Some Ephemeral Devil Items


This Week in Bookplates 11/12/2017

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 Mystery Bookplates

I have received several  inquiries  about bookplates I do not recognize.
If you have information about any of these bookplates please share it with us.
Send your responses to
 Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com


Lew,

I recently purchased this set as American bindings.
 Are you familiar with this book plate, which appears in all 3 volumes?
The set belonged to Alexander Barret, who was a wealthy tobacco merchant..
Did he use any other bookplates ?

Regards, Steve


Hi Lew,

I hope all is well with you!

Thank you for your kind responses to my previous emails. Might I lean on your bookplate expertise again? Do you have any suggestions on identifying the RGS associated with this bookplate? Thanks for any tips you might suggest!

Sincerely,

Gina

Note From Lew
I have been experimenting with Google's image search, in which you match your bookplate  image against  thousands of Google images. It is somewhat like facial  recognition software.  
I tried it with Gina's bookplate and was unsuccessful. You might wish to experiment with your own mystery bookplates.
Let me know if  it works for you.
https://www.google.com/intl/es419/insidesearch/features/images/searchbyimage.html

Two Mystery Bookplates in my own collection.




The diameter of this small circular bookplate is two CM   ( 0.7874016  in.)
It was part of a European collection I purchased several months ago.
At first I thought it might be a letterhead crest but it has glue on the verso.
I suspect it might be a royal plate ,




Does anyone out there recognize this Judaica plate ?

Annie E, French

Several weeks ago I wrote about this Annie E.French plate and requested images of other plates  she made.


This message was recently sent to me .

Dear Sir,

I came upon your website earlier today and saw you had purchased a bookplate by Annie French and were interested if there were any others. It so happens that Annie French designed a bookplate for my grandfather, Ion Smeaton Munro. He fought in the First World War and then was a writer and journalist. He died in 1971 and, sadly I don’t remember him. I think they were friends as we also have a couple of pictures beautifully painted by her.

The plate is beautiful I think. The crest bottom left is the Munro family crest, which includes the words ‘Dread God’ that can just be seen.

Best wishes,
Fiona Phillipson


Here are some original Annie E. French drawings from the  the Phillipson collection.

See you next week,
Lew


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