Showing posts sorted by relevance for query litho. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query litho. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, April 18, 2014

Proofs for a Ferry Seed Packet

This is a wonderful find from Ebay if you are
interested in how things made. ..seed packets in particular. 

The Ebay description was as follows:
"This is a genuine original one of a kind progressive proof book used by stone litho printers to check the quality of each stone and it’s functions! This is from the files of Calvert Litho, one of the highest quality lithographers at the turn of the century.

Calvert was the most expensive lithographer in the country, but Mr. Ferry was a proud man and probably wanted the best in everything, especially his own products! ...
Surprisingly clean for a progressive proof book kept in the back room of a printing shop with all 13 pages intact! Approximate size: 6” x 8”."

Before you scroll down, estimate how many colors were used to give the above effect!

from Wikipedia: Chromolithography is a method for making multi-colour prints. ... The initial technique involved the use of multiple lithographic stones, one for each colour, and was still extremely expensive when done for the best quality results. Depending on the number of colours present, a chromolithograph could take months to produce, by very skilled workers. However much cheaper prints could be produced by simplifying both the number of colours used, and the refinement of the detail in the image. Cheaper images, like advertisements, relied heavily on an initial black print (not always a lithograph), on which colours were then overprinted. To make an expensive reproduction print as what was once referred to as a “’chromo’”, a lithographer, with a finished painting in front of him, gradually created and corrected the many stones using proofs to look as much as possible like the painting in front of him, sometimes using dozens of layers.









Links:  

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Chromolithograph Lushness - Seed Packet Art






Seed packets are what drew me into looking at the seed trade.

The early packets are what I enjoy the most.  I love the soft texture of the lithography.


For a chromolithography intro, go to end of post.



 The Label Man has written a nice "in a nutshell" introduction to packets.  "Of the very early printers of antique seed packets you will find Genesse Valley Lithograph Co. who printed many of the Burts seed packets."






These first two are so lush!!
This nasturtium packet was represented as 1910. 
Note it has red lines and less text.  Its reverse side is at the bottom of this page.





This is the reverse of the packet at the top of the page.

Chromolithography

"Chromolithography, or the technique of "printing in colors," had a dazzling and meteoric life. After centuries of black ink on white paper, chromo-lithography burst onto the American scene about 1840 and then vanished by the 1930s. But during this nearly one hundred year period, chromolithography revolutionized the printing industry and intoxicated the world with lush colorful hues. It transformed calling cards, wedding announcements, greeting cards, tickets, cigar box labels, advertising posters and many other types of printed ephemera into eye-catching works of art that proved too beautiful to be thrown away after temporary use. " from THE JOHN and CAROLYN GROSSMAN COLLECTION

An excellent page on the process that makes it very clear.

Lithographs are pulled from litho stones...a super fine limestone.  Look HERE.


When I was in college in Philadelphia, the kitchen door's step stone was a litho stone from a former tenant, another art student.  I lived in a what they called a trinity house, or a father, son, holy ghost house.  It had 3 floors, each floor just one tiny room. The stairs were very narrow, steep and twisted and most people who lived in them had a story of sliding down the stairs when missing their step on the shallow treads.

Row Houses of Philadelphia
The Trinity is the smallest and therefore cheapest to construct, and it normally served as housing for the working-class or servants of larger properties nearby. These homes were often constructed on courts (mine was, with 3 trinity facing 3 others in a small courtyeard off a back ally) behind larger properties or in narrow alleys that divided larger blocks. The bandbox is typically no larger than sixteen feet on any side, with one room on each floor, rising two or three stories with enclosed winding stairs. The privies, or “necessaries,” were normally at the rear of the courts. -  (When they modernized them with inside plumbing they took a little square along the front wall for a tiny bathroom that had a shower. )

Monday, September 11, 2017

1891 - Seedsman John Child's Colorful Vegies Litho

'Tis the season of harvest...and I sure wish mine looked like this!  It is the Marimekko of vegetables! 




I can't resist sampling the litho.  Just love those dots!






Saturday, June 17, 2017

1896 - The "Marchioness of Bute" Dahlia Litho

It must be the litho dots.  I am just attracted to them.  
Below is the Marchioness.  She was featured on the 1896 John Gardiner & Co. catalog.



I had not encountered any of John Gardiner's catalogues before this week.  They are not especially noteworthy as they lack the over-the-top charm or vegetable enthusiasm that I prize. 



However,  one of them is rather different and is worth sharing.
Not very appealing, but a lot of work went into this earlier 1890 catalog.

 

Victorian jardinieres are so ugly they are almost cute.

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

1844 - The Pansy, Grand Duke of Russia; A Lovely Litho

My mother always bought me a pot of pansies for my birthday so they have become a flower that always makes me feel good when I see them.  While I buy my own now, her gift is always there.  This litho stands out for its charm!











Thursday, October 19, 2017

1892 - Litho Surfing on a John Lewis Childs' Fall Bulb Catalog



You can't beat a lithographed catalog for luxuriant surfaces.

Your attention can slide down the sweeps of color, twirl around a curlicue, and wipe out with a plop in the center of a blossom! 

Love it!!!
 
 











Wednesday, June 20, 2018

1901 - A Maiden's Cheek and Lovely Litho Dots






I wasn't going to share the cover of the 1901 Burpee catalog cover as it looked so saccharine.

But, when I saved it at full scan resolution it was lovely.

The apple cheeked maiden just glowed!




























Monday, June 5, 2017

1910ish - Luxurious Litho of a Lima Bean

Can't help it!  I am just drawn to the the lithos on seed packets.  Maybe it's all the little dots...the rich colors...the simple shapes...  Whatever it is, they make me feel good.