Milestones in Colour Printing 1457–1859
In this book, derived from his 1994 Sandars lectures, Bamber Gascoigne concentrates on those areas in the history of colour printing that have yet to receive critical attention. This broad historical survey covers the intaglio colour printing of the seventeenth and eighteenth century, the inventive attempts of nineteenth-century British publishers to achieve cheap, effective colour printing, and the pioneering work of the firm Thomas Nelson and Sons. A catalogue of more than 1,000 British and foreign views published by the firm in their own distinctive technique, the Nelson print, is also provided. Gascoigne links these developments to the wider scientific, cultural, and social currents during the period. This lavishly illustrated book presents with clarity and wit an extensive overview of the emergence of colour printing. It will be of interest to all students of publishing and printing history and bibliography, as well as art historians.
- First comprehensive overview of developments in colour printing from the fifteenth to the nineteenth century
- Includes extensive bibliography of Nelson firm's printings from nineteenth century
- Author is a well-known TV personality
Product details
November 2010Paperback
9780521175913
156 pages
254 × 203 × 10 mm
0.7kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. German relief to French intaglio fifteenth-eighteenth century
- 2. The beginnings of chromolithography
- 3. Towards the penny print in Britain 1834–1859
- 4. Nelson and the Nelson prints
- Publications with Nelson prints
- Index of Nelson prints
- Bibliography
- Index of books containing Nelson prints.