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Happy Easter Everyone!

I like Easter. In Oklahoma, it means Spring is sproinging its onslaught of Tornadoes and wild fires. There’s nothing like the smell of cyclonic burning carnage to remind you of renewal. I also like time with family and friends, the Red Cross, the good food, and of course… the vintage ephemera.

Booksellers were known for selling all kinds of paper goods, including Easter cards, as advertised on this atypical square trade card from the late 1800s. Although he doesn’t say where he conducts business beyond Main St., Mr. Allyn published a book, The Battle of Groton Heights in 1882 in New London, CT.

If you’re looking for information on an American bookseller, bookbinder or printer, or have any book trade ephemera you want to share with the world, get on over to flickr and post it to the American Book Trade Index.

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Looming Book Sales APRIL 17-19


It’s that time of the year again. I’ve received my postcard in the mail to remind me of the 9th Annual Booksale APRIL 17-19 supporting of the Friends of the UCO Library. If you remember last year, I went and had a good time, including (but not limited to) finding a chocolate chip in the spine of a book. It’s so cheap to join, you should go. After all, if Walter Benjamin taught us anything, it’s books can be anywhere. It will also be a chance to take in their exhibit Books that Change Lives now on display.

The UCO sale will be Friday-Sunday, 12pm – 8pm, each day. Friday is Friends Only, but you can join for as little as $5. I will certainly be there.

That same weekend, there is another book sale in Yukon, OK, west of the OKC metro. The sale is held by the Mabel C. Fry Library, but it will be at the YMAC building at 6th and Oak. YMAC being the Yukon Museum and Art Center, which is the converted old Central School building. A peek at Google Maps, it looks like it is on the NW corner of that intersection.

It will only be held on APRIL 17-18, Friday 9am – 7pm and Saturday 9am – 3pm. Since I didn’t know much about it, and had not been to this sale before, I called them. The librarian I spoke to said that the friends group has hosted the sale for at least the 8 years she’s been there, except last year. So, they have two years worth of booksale books to unload, and this year in particular the books have “been flowing in”. A bonus, there is no cost to attend the sale, even on Friday.

In Bibliophiles of Oklahoma news, we have scheduled our April meeting for the 23rd. Email me for time and place.

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Shamrocks and Roses

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The lovely shamrock image at right is another “one that got away”, but as I’m working on a label for myself, I’m drawing some inspiration from it. The image is from an 1894 advertising cover.

J. Horace McFarland (1859-1948) was born on September 29th in McAlisterville, Pennsylvania. He was the son of Union Civil War colonel George F. McFarland. In 1865 his father, a returning Civil War hero, moved the family to Harrisburg and started a printing company and a nursery.

At the age of twelve and with only four years of formal education, McFarland went to work in his father’s printing shop. In 1878, at age nineteen, McFarland opened his own printing business Mount Pleasant Press and began to publish gardening and seed catalogs. The press was devoted primarily to horticultural printing. Realizing that woodcuts did not adequately represent the plants, he started to explore the use of photography. By 1894, he was experimenting with color photography and his company had become America’s premier publisher of gardening catalogs, with what may have been the first color photographs produced in the US. The success of his publishing business provided McFarland with wealth and security and freed him to engage extensively in the philanthropy and civic activism he loved.

McFarland helped organize the defense of Niagara Falls from development efforts by power companies, worked with the famous environmental preservationist John Muir to protect Yosemite National Park. He wrote more than a dozen books on roses and made the American Rose Society a world-renowned institution. As president, he established a method of rose identification and registration that is still in use today. He was also a founder and president of the American Rose Society.

Thanks, Wikipedia and Pugsley Award

About the Author: Benjamin L. Clark writes and works as a museum curator.

Half Price Books to OKC

I now have May 21st circled on the calendar. Half Price books is coming to Oklahoma City. They will be at 6500 N. May, on the NE corner of the 63rd and May intersection, which I think will be a great spot for them. Now, apparently, they had a location in OKC before, but it was gone before I got here nearly 3 years ago.

According to the building permit from the city, it’s a 9800 sq. ft. location, which sounds pretty good. So, I’m looking forward to the new book hunting digs, especially a used book store.

The announcement from HPB says:
STORE OPENING MAY 21, 2009
We will begin buying from the public April 27th
Before our Great Opening on May 21, we will buy between 10am and 4 pm Monday through Friday only.

We buy books, CDs, LPs, DVDs, Books on CD and more.
In fact, we will make a cash offer on anything printed or recorded, except yesterday’s newspaper.
Once we open for business on May 21, we will buy from the public anytime we are open.

Our hours of operation will be:
9am to 10 pm Monday through Saturday
10 am to 8 pm on Sundays.

For employment applications please go to halfpricebooks.com
Click on Join Our Team then click on download an application.
Please forward completed applications to richrberger@halfpricebooks.com
Half Price Books management will be on site beginning April 13, 2009.

If you have any feelings about Half Price Books coming to town, let me know in the comments. For those of you outside Oklahoma City, if you have any feelings about them in your neighborhood, let me know too.

Book Trade Labels redux

Below is my latest post on the Fine Books & Collections blog. Sorry about phoning this one in here. PS, I did get my neato postcard in the mail today for the book sale at UCO in Edmond, April 17-19. I’ll post more on that soon.


One area I collect in is books about books. A part of that collection includes book trade labels. What is a book trade label? If you’ve handled old books, you’ve likely noticed teeny-tiny labels typically on the front or rear endpaper. They will often be less than an inch long and a half-inch tall.

I’m not really sure why, but it seems more natural to refer to these tiny bits of paper as tickets when associated with a bookbinder, and a label when it is from a bookseller. Perhaps because craftsmen use jobbing tickets and retailers label their merchandise. In the interest of casting my net wide, I refer to them all as book trade labels. That was the nomenclature used when I found Seven Roads Book Trade Labels and realized I was not the only one interested in these gems. Unfortunately, Seven Roads went dormant in June 2007. However lost Seven Roads is, we gained the Bibliophemera blog, which often features labels.

Book trade labels were used by booksellers, bookbinders, and can be a wealth of history and fun. Labels, historically, were available from commercial label printers. However, some specially made labels could set a bookseller apart from others nearby. This 1891 advertisement from James Clegg in London gives just a few examples of common types. I’m currently working on a “field guide” to book trade labels and advertisements like Clegg’s are golden discoveries. Some booksellers today use custom return address labels, which are certainly effective but can be ho-hum. I’ve not seen any contemporary “bibliomorphic” labels like this one from Oklahoma City

Last week I received a new label for my collection from Scott J. Coutts at Solidus bookbindery in Melbourne, Australia. Scott is honestly the first active bookbinder I’ve met who has decided to use a label to identify his work. Deciding to use one, he went all out to make it memorable. He used the image by woodcut artist Jost Amman of bookbinders at work in the 1568 work A True Description of All Trades.

Scott, a microbiologist working at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, decided to take up bookbinding about a year and a half ago.

Exile Bibliophile: What drew you into bookbinding?

Scott: I’ve always loved good books, particularly photography books. Also, I’m often annoyed at how badly constructed modern books are! I like old things and things that have a certain ‘charm’ and sentimental value, things that are quite tactile – especially books, which I collect. So I guess the love of well-made books, my annoyance with badly made books attracted me to binding. It’s a creative outlet.

Exile: What spurred your decision to create your own label?

S: I’ve always liked ex libris and book trade labels. Since I started making my own books, I thought it was reasonable that I should have my own! Primarily, I like the look of them. As you can tell, my labels contain no contact information so, for better or worse, they’re not really designed for advertising or increasing sales (maybe they should be!)

Exile: I think they’re memorable enough! Could you describe the process you used to create your label? Are they letterpress printed?

S: The actual labels are not printed traditionally, only because I don’t have the means. The label was prepared digitally and printed with an inkjet printer. I didn’t use coated paper on purpose – In this instance, I like the small amount of bleed that occurs. The paper is Van Gelder Zonen 120gsm laid paper, which is one of my favourites! After printing several to a sheet, they were torn down using a ‘deckled edge tearer ‘ to produce the irregular edges. Finally, the edges were boned flat and smooth, ready for use.

Exile: I really like the deckled edge effect, and was impressed with your method. I’ve never seen a label featuring a deckled edge. I have some perforated labels, but nothing like this. Thank you for the beautiful label for my collection. I’m sure it will stand out for a very long time!

 

About the Author: Benjamin L. Clark writes and works as a museum curator.

It’s ALIVE


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My first post is up over at Fine Books & Collections. If you’re not reading it already, you should. No kidding, they have some of the most interesting folks writing for them in the bibliosphere. Also, I’ve been playing with Twitter for a week or two now and will probably keep it going. I like it better than most other banalities of the internet. You should come look me up just to see my book trade label custom background over there! Wicked awesome.

Right Place, Wrong Time

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You’ve been there. The right place at the wrong time. There’s even a very catchy funk tune about it. There I was, gun in hand, maniacal gleam in my eye standing next to the governor and …. well… I missed a great opportunity.

There I am, hulking my mass to cover Kim Henry, oblivious that I’d already missed my chance to meet and have a picture taken with N. Scott Momaday. Don’t misunderstand me, the Governor is nice and all, but for a bibliophile, there’s no beating a wonderful writer and Pulitzer Prize winner.

To add insult to injury, the paper put my cheery Abe Lincoln lovin’ mug on the front page of the paper to be doodled on over mornin’ joe. Maybe I should try growing a mustache again.

Fine Books & Collections Blog 2.0

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The finest bibliophilic publication in the USA has gone 100% digital. Except the annual, so actually 90% digital. Oh, and the publishing they’re getting into… 85% digital. But according to “them”, the Fine Books website had 45 times more hits than the magazine did subscribers, so we’re back up over 100% again. That doesn’t sound right. I was a history major, you do the math.

I say all of that to say this: I’m excited. At first I felt angry, betrayed, and a trifle weepy for the scrappy can-do magazine that made us love them over a couple short years. But I was only mad until they invited me to the party. Book collectors have no shame. None.

The new Fine Books & Collections blog will be written by a small flock of bloggers and I get to be one of them! And all the nerds yell Huzzah! The other bloggers are likely well known to all of you already, but will give a good cross section of the bibliophilic sphere. I’m very happy to see Scott Brown, the original editor of the magazine involved in this project especially as we don’t get to hear from him much these days. We’ll have rare book dealers in from the snootiest auction rooms of large cities where they have taxi cabs. We’ll have new booksellers, old booksellers, kind and cranky, academics, and publishers. And me. They think I’m a librarian. I’ve also been mistaken for being named Barry, so there’s no accounting for some things. Over at FB&C, I’ll represent we who do not reek of globtrotting ozone, and only ooze trace amounts of green insidious envy onto our cherished tomes while reading of the book fairs, auctions, readings, and sightings. I promise, it’ll be good.

STICK THAT IN YOUR READER!

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Abraham Lincoln is 200!

Bibliophile President Lincoln would have turned 200 years old yesterday. He probably would have loved to receive a good book for his birthday. Or maybe a gift certificate to a bookstore. We had a large event at the museum (where I work) and I completely forgot to mark the occasion for all of you in the blogosphere. So, with a small apology, I’m posting a classic from the Exile Bibliophile Archives.



Isn’t this gorgeous? I love the layout, the image, the typography. It all comes together very nicely. I’ve seen it described as a trade card and a voucher. Isn’t it a bit long for a trade card? If it was a voucher of some kind, wouldn’t it say something to that effect, or give a value? Is there anything on the back? Is it supposed to look like currency? Anyway, trying to nail down some years on this little gem. The capitol dome was completed with the statue on top by 1869. Wikipedia says 1863, but photos on the Library of Congress page dated 1864 show an uncompleted dome. Also, the dome looks a little tall and skinny in this photo. That could just be the artist’s interpretation. I wonder when you could no longer drive your horse and buggy up to the front steps. A completed auction cites it to 1862, as part of a lot of souvenirs from DC from that year. In that case, the completed dome would be pure imagination, or based on another sketch.

Thanks to the Lincoln Log (http://www.thelincolnlog.org/view/1862/5) I know they were in business May 7, 1862, as President Abraham Lincoln (a documented bibliophile) ordered some books: “Library of the Executive Mansion” orders books from William F. Richstein, bookseller and dealer in foreign and American stationery, 278 Pennsylvania Ave. “1 set Hood’s Poems $6.50, 1 Goldsmiths Poems $5.00, 1 Homes of American Authors $6.00.” [Thomas Hood, Poems; Oliver Goldsmith, Poems; Homes of American Authors: Comprising Anecdotical, Personal, and Descriptive Sketches, by Various Writers . . ., New York, 1853.] Last item is paid for by President; others out of annual appropriation of $250 for books for White House per Benjamin B. French, Commissioner of Public Buildings.” Pg. 180. (Pratt, Harry E. The Personal Finances of Abraham Lincoln. Springfield, IL: The Abraham Lincoln Association, 1943.)

I wonder if Benjamin B. French is the same French of French & Richstein…

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