The Book of the Erinyes

Archive for October, 2009

Letterpress Update

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

I’ve been put­ting some hours into the Let­ter­press side of the Book of the Erinyes recently, and have made a fair bit of progress.

Yes­ter­day even­ing I man­aged to print out the text for the first sec­tion (there’s only one page of text per section).

I’d spent an even­ing the pre­vi­ous week metic­u­lously set­ting most of the type (shown inked up and sit­ting on the press, below), which just left me to fin­ish it off this week and start printing.

type set

After a hand­ful of adjust­ments for typos or overly-worn let­ters I was lucky enough to get a decent print on the first real attempt.

In some ways it’s strange — I could type and print the text for this page on my com­puter in less than five minutes, so why spend six hours slowly pick­ing each indi­vidual let­ter, arran­gingthem, ink­ing it up, run­ning test prints…?

The answer is in the fin­ished res­ult.  If you’ve ever seen a piece of letterpress-printed type you’ll have noticed the way the metal let­ters slightly indent the paper and the shine of the oil-based ink (it sparkles just a bit when it catches the light).

The Book of the Erinyes is being prin­ted on a heavy (220gm) cart­ridge paper, which is prob­ably the thick­est paper I can get away with put­ting through the press. The body text is 12pt Goudy Old Style, with lar­ger sizes of the same font being used for headings.

The com­bin­a­tion of let­ter­press prin­ted type and a good qual­ity paper makes the fin­ished page really enjoy­able to handle and hold.  I was think­ing of scan­ning a copy, but a scan just can’t catch the tact­ile qual­it­ies of the paper or the look of oil-based ink sit­ting on the sur­face of it.

first print off the press

Victorian Gothic Revival “Papier Mâché” Binding

Sunday, October 4th, 2009

One of the fash­ions of the “Gothic Revival” dur­ing the mid-1840s to 1860s was for “mon­astic” style bind­ings that imit­ated the Medi­eval wooden book covers.

Rather than repro­du­cing these in wood, the Vic­tori­ans (pre­sum­ably for reas­ons of cost and mass pro­duc­tion) recre­ated this style with  Plaster of Paris and a filler (pos­sibly papier-mâché and anti­mony?), which was then formed in a rigid frame usu­ally made of metal. Another source sug­gests they were made from “fibrous plaster and paper pulp rein­forced with metal”.  I sus­pect some more research is needed on my part!

The tech­nique was  pat­en­ted by the Brit­ish firm J. Jack­son & Son.  Print runs of over 1000 were needed to off­set the expense of pro­du­cing the com­plex molds, accord­ing to book­bind­ing his­tor­ian Bern­ard Middleton.

From what I can find out, the tech­nique seems to be espe­cially asso­ci­ated with the Brit­ish illus­trator and illu­min­ator Henry Noel Humphreys (1810–1879).  Humphreys was influ­enced by his study of medi­eval manu­scripts dur­ing a stay in Italy as a young man.

The fin­ished res­ults have been described as resem­bling “noth­ing so much as cast iron” (Book­bind­ing in the Brit­ish Isles: six­teenth to the twen­ti­eth cen­tury, Part 2. Lon­don: Maggs Bros. Ltd., 1996)

Some Examples of “Papier Mâché” Bindings

Eng­lish Bible, 1849

1849 English Bible

Black papier mâché of a Vic­torian Gothic Revival design in imit­a­tion of carved wood, fea­tur­ing arches entwined with flower­ing vines in the cent­ral panel of each cover; cov­ers bev­elled. Spine with “Holy Bible” at top and sur­face of same also encrus­ted with vine­work. Gilt roll on board edges and gilt den­telles on turn-ins; all edges gilt and gauffered in a dia­mond and dot design. Brass clasp, part miss­ing. Bind­ing attrib­uted to D. O. Smith of Lon­don, as per McLean who illus­trates an identical bind­ing on an 1851 Bible from the same publishers.

More details at The Phil­adelphia Rare Books & Manu­scripts Company

Par­ables of Our Lord, edited by Henry Noel Humphreys, 1847.

Henry Noel Humphreys, ed. Parables of Our Lord. London: Longman & Co., 1847.

Par­ables is Humphreys’ first prin­ted illu­min­ated book in a papier-mâché bind­ing. The pub­lisher recor­ded that 2,000 cop­ies of Par­ables were prin­ted in 1847, of which 1,000 were sold to D. Appleton in New York with a changed title page. Longman’s prin­ted a second edi­tion in the same year. Each of the four corners has a wreath con­tain­ing the head of an angel, a lion, an eagle or an ox, rep­res­ent­ing Gos­pel authors Mat­thew, Mark, John and Luke. Styl­ized oak leaves occupy the top and bot­tom cent­ral rect­angles. The cent­ral fig­ure is a sower within a wreath around which two rib­bons are wrapped on a staff. “Scrip­ture Par­ables” appears on the rib­bons in raised Gothic letters.

More inform­a­tion at Uni­ver­sity of Rochester Lib­rar­ies Rare and Spe­cial Books Col­lec­tion.

The Coin­age of the Brit­ish Empire, by Henry Noel Humphreys, 1855.

Henry Noel Humphreys. The Coinage of the British Empire. London: David Bogue, 1855.

The cent­ral design of this papier-mâché bind­ing is the royal coat-of-arms as it appeared on the reverse side of the gold sov­er­eign of Henry VIII. The bind­ing is signed “H R”, for Wil­liam Harry Rogers.

More inform­a­tion at Uni­ver­sity of Rochester Lib­rar­ies Rare and Spe­cial Books Col­lec­tion.

A record of the Black Prince, by Henry Noel Humphries, 1849.

A record of the Black Prince, by Henry Noel Humphries, 1849

The carved cover is taken from one of the com­part­ments of the Prince’s tomb at Can­ter­bury, slightly altered by the addi­tion of a label where the title was inser­ted and by the extra adorn­ment of the mould­ings. The turn-ins are blocked in gold. The design is identical for both cov­ers. Two dec­or­ated raised bor­ders are sep­ar­ated by a bor­der of bosses. The cent­ral rect­angle is filled with sym­met­rical medi­eval dec­or­at­ive motifs. The coat of arms of the Black Prince is on the centre. The title words are within a rib­bon, which is above and on each side of the coat of arms.

More inform­a­tion at Memorial Uni­ver­sity Digital Archives Ini­ti­at­ive.