The Binding of Books: An Essay in the History of Gold-tooled BindingsKegan Paul, Trench, Trub ̈ner & Company, Limited, 1894 - 224 oldal |
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1 - 5 találat összesen 25 találatból.
11. oldal
... commonly to be found employed , in the bindings of Grolier and an earlier example may be seen in the copy of the Moralia of St. Gregory , already mentioned . In sewing a book round single cords , the method is precisely similar to the ...
... commonly to be found employed , in the bindings of Grolier and an earlier example may be seen in the copy of the Moralia of St. Gregory , already mentioned . In sewing a book round single cords , the method is precisely similar to the ...
12. oldal
... commonly made of vellum , or white paper . book be printed on a fine hand - made paper , the same paper may be used for its fly - leaves and end - papers and , perhaps , there is no more pleasing method to be found , especially if the ...
... commonly made of vellum , or white paper . book be printed on a fine hand - made paper , the same paper may be used for its fly - leaves and end - papers and , perhaps , there is no more pleasing method to be found , especially if the ...
20. oldal
... commonly employed flat strips of parchmen or leather , upon which they sewed their sections , an which they afterwards pressed into the back , as the case of the vellum bindings , already described so that when the back was covered , it ...
... commonly employed flat strips of parchmen or leather , upon which they sewed their sections , an which they afterwards pressed into the back , as the case of the vellum bindings , already described so that when the back was covered , it ...
26. oldal
... commonly cut from the first to the second holes sufficiently deep to prevent the slips from protrud- ing above the surface of the boards : the slips were then laced in the usual way , being secured in the second hole , which did not ...
... commonly cut from the first to the second holes sufficiently deep to prevent the slips from protrud- ing above the surface of the boards : the slips were then laced in the usual way , being secured in the second hole , which did not ...
32. oldal
... commonly plain gilt , a t which accords with the severity of their design , which may be thought to distinguish them , fi the earlier Venetian bindings , the edges of wh are generally gauffered with the rope - pattern : w the Lyonnese ...
... commonly plain gilt , a t which accords with the severity of their design , which may be thought to distinguish them , fi the earlier Venetian bindings , the edges of wh are generally gauffered with the rope - pattern : w the Lyonnese ...
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Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
admirable Aldine Aldus Aldus Manutius angles appears arms azured Badier bands bears beauty Berthelet Bibliothèque Nationale binders bindings executed blind bookbinding books bound border Boyet British Museum Burlington Fine Arts cameo catalogue centre Clovis Ève collector colour commonly copy cords covered cypher decoration device Diane de Poitiers doublure early elaborate employed end-papers English example figured tools finished fore edge formed France French binders Gascon Geofroy Tory gilders gilding gilt gold-tooled bindings Guild of St head-bands Henri Henri II imitated interlaced fillet Italian Italian bindings Jean kind king leather legend London lying-press Maiolus manner manuscript marbled morocco Nicholas Nicholas Ferrar occurs Old Royal Library ornament Padeloup painted panel paper Paris Peiresc placed possesses printed printer red morocco Relieur Roger Payne Seuil sewing sewn sheets sixteenth century stamped style tail taste Thoinan Thomas Berthelet tion tooled in gold vellum Venetian Venice volume workman workmanship
Népszerű szakaszok
194. oldal - Towards the end of the seventeenth and the beginning of the eighteenth centuries, cocoa was largely and successfully cultivated, but in 1725 a blight fell upon the plantations.
142. oldal - La Lyre du jeune Apollon , ou la Muse naissante du petit de Beauchasteau. Paris, Charles de Sercy, 1657, in-8.
32. oldal - It consists in one hundred and seventy volumes, for the most part folios, dating from the end of the fifteenth, and the first half of the sixteenth, century, and bound, for the most part, in dark pig-skin, with brass bosses and clasps.
13. oldal - They take divers oiled colours, and put them severally (in drops) upon water ; and stir the water lightly ; and then wet their paper (being of some thickness) with it; and the paper will be waved and veined, like chamolet or marble.
182. oldal - Amongst other articles of instruction and amusement, MR. FERRAR (senior) entertained an ingenions Book-irituUr, who taught the family, females as well as males, the whole art and skill of book-binding, gilding, lettering, and what they called pasting-printing, by the use of the rolling press.
199. oldal - Em-border'd with ERMINE expressive of The High Rank of the Noble Patroness of the Designs, the other Parts Finished in the most elegant Taste with small Tool Gold Borders Studded with Gold ; and small Tool Panes of the most exact Work.
182. oldal - He composed a full harmony, or concordance, of the four Evangelists, adorned with many beautiful pictures, which required more than a year for the composition, and was divided into 150 heads or chapters.
217. oldal - A CAUTION TO POETS WHAT poets feel not, when they make, A pleasure in creating, The world, in its turn, will not take Pleasure in contemplating.
26. oldal - ... given to the screw of the plough. If too much turn is given to the screw, the knife will bite too deeply into the paper and will tear instead of cutting it. If the knife has not been properly sharpened, or has a burr upon its edge, it will be certain to cause ridges on the paper. The top edge being cut, the book is taken out of the press and the tail is cut. A mark is made on the top of the hind or back board just double the size of the square, and the board is lowered until the mark is on a...
184. oldal - ... not his man, but himself would carry it : he knew it would be an acceptable service to his master ; and engaged his faith, that at the king's departure from Apthorpe, he would bring it again. But a quarter of a year past. Then came the gentleman again, but brought no book; but after much compliment said, the king so liked the work itself, and the contrivement of it in all kinds, that there had not a day passed, but the king, in the midst of all his progress and sports, spent one hour in the perusing...