Descriptive Bibliography, RBS (July 2010): Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 62: | Line 62: | ||
type is not an abstraction, not the printed impression, but an object - ''something you pick up in your hand'' | type is not an abstraction, not the printed impression, but an object - ''something you pick up in your hand'' | ||
diagram of type: page 9 in Gaskel, page 31 in RBS workbook | |||
Phillip Gaskell, "A nomenclature for the letter-forms of Roman type," ''The Library'' 5.29 (1974): 42-51. | |||
comparing typefaces: | |||
* x-height; also relative relation of ascenders to descenders | |||
* axis or stress; draw vertical line through "o" -- is it vertical or oblique? | |||
* weight: thin and light letters, or thick and heavy? | |||
* contrast | |||
* set -- how much relative space does the font take up? | |||
* serifs |
Revision as of 13:02, 28 July 2010
Introduction to the Principles of Descriptive Bibliography, Rare Book School (Charlottesville, VA) July 26-30; Richard Noble, David Whitesell
Bibliography
pagination: omit detailed records of routine omissions (chapter headings, etc.), because disguises actual interesting bits of omission (don't make something simple look complicated, or something complicated look simple); pagination should always come out even (foliation should generally come out even); use commas to separate sections
use commas sparingly
put number of unnumbered pages in italics in brackets
Paper
pre-1820, almost certain to be handmade; post-1840, almost certain to be machine-made 1820-1840, transitional phase
laid and wove can be handmade or machine-made
in Western world, all paper up to 1760 is laid
handmade laid paper: around chainlines, paper pulp gathers more, creating bar shadows -- 1/4in. darker area -- incicates handmade paper
white/light spot on paper -- created from a drop of paper that forms a depression (vatman's tears)
mold side: meets the paper mold; has a kind of grid line characteristic felt side: meets the felt; flatter, smoother
shadowless laid paper: modern handmade laid paper that doesn't produce bar shadows
Brits leaders in machine-made paper; by 1820s, very rare to find handmade paper in London
in German-speaking territories, handmade paper used well into 1840s
some early wove papers, you still get chainline-like impressions -- rib marks
machine-made paper: two ways -- pulp spread on continuous belt (Fourdrinier), or on revolving drum of wire mesh (cylinder and vat machine); other impressions can be made on it by running it under a dandyroll (e.g. fake chainlines, watermarks
deckle edge can be found on cylinder vat machine; usually cylinder creates continuous web, but if dropped onto rubber belt with felt shapes on it, pulp sticks to felt but runs away from rubber; can create different shapes
watermarks:
- originally identified the papermill;
- by 1830, indicates paper size and quality
- by c18, find paper with no watermark at all
- location of watermark varies
- identifying watermarks not exact
describing paper:
- dimensions
- watermarks, countermarks
- thickness of paper
- thickness of book / number of leaves
- chainline patterns and widths
- number of wirelines in 3cm space
paper as bibliographical evidence:
- anomalies
- deckle edges, cut edges
Printing
type is not an abstraction, not the printed impression, but an object - something you pick up in your hand
diagram of type: page 9 in Gaskel, page 31 in RBS workbook
Phillip Gaskell, "A nomenclature for the letter-forms of Roman type," The Library 5.29 (1974): 42-51.
comparing typefaces:
- x-height; also relative relation of ascenders to descenders
- axis or stress; draw vertical line through "o" -- is it vertical or oblique?
- weight: thin and light letters, or thick and heavy?
- contrast
- set -- how much relative space does the font take up?
- serifs