11 November 2006 : PARIS MAP-FAIR

The fifth edition of this Map-fair will be held on November 11th. again in Hotel Ambassador, in the heart of Paris, just 2 minutes from the famous Opera Garnier and the major department stores, also located near Montmartre and the Louvre museum. The fair is organized by Loeb-Larocque and Agnès Talec.

Here is a list of participans:

Paris : LeBail-Weissert, Loeb-Larocque, Librairie Moorthamers, Monsieur le Prince, Hémisphères, Agnès Talec, Livres & vieux papiers, Didier Martinez.
London
: Shapero Gallery, Clive A.Burden Ltd, IMCoS, Imago Mundi.
U.S.A. :
Graham Arader III Galleries , Jo-ann & Richard Casten, – New York. Paulus Swaen – Indian Rocks.
Spain :Gonzales Pontes – Madrid.
The Netherlands : Asher & Co.B.V. – IJmuiden, Paul Peters, Iris Globes – Almen, Silverenberg Galleries – Eindhoven, Antiquariaat Plantijn, Breda, Canaletto Publishers – Alphen a/d Rijn.
Belgique : Sanderus – Gent, BIMCC – Bruxelles.
Germany : Robert Berg – Regensburg, Nikolaus Strück – Berlin, Adina Sommer – Munich, Gebr. Haas – Bedburg-Hau, Antiquariat Holgar Christoph – Bonn, Schmidt & Green – Wuppertal.
Italy : Old Times – Perugia, Stampe Antiche Enotria Antiqua – Moio – Alcantara.
Austria : Johannes Müller – Salzburg

More information can be found here

Published in: on October 13, 2006 at 8:34 am  Comments (3)  

Librarians: maps are missing

A month after a notorious thief admitted to stealing five antique maps from Yale, librarians said they recently discovered that 78 more rare maps are missing from the University’s collection.

The missing titles, identified in an inventory taken over the winter, were privately released to members of the map-trading community last week. University Librarian Alice Prochaska said the thefts occurred over many years and seem unrelated to the case against Edward Forbes Smiley III, who was caught raiding the Beinecke Library last July.

Read the complete article

Published in: on October 13, 2006 at 8:27 am  Leave a Comment  

Interesting article

I found this article somewhere on the web:

On the uppermost floor of Sydney’s Queen Victoria Building is a room where time has stopped. In the north-western corner is Louis Kissajukian’s Antique Print Room, with its vintage maps, associated engravings and prints. The prevailing flavour is of the 17th century, when the world as we know it was still being discovered.

Maps produced in this period were very much works in progress, especially when it came to what would later be called Australia. Some maps show only one coastline, with the rest of the continent an educated guess. Some suggest that Australia was connected to New Guinea and the Solomon Islands. Tasmania was thought to be part of the mainland.

The shop is a mecca for map enthusiasts around Australia and the rest of the world, judging by the international customers who seem to know of this place more than we locals do.

If you would like to read the complete article, you can find it over here

If, when you finished reading this article, would like to have a look at more maps from Ortelius, you can do so here.

More updates on antique new, coming up :)

Published in: on October 13, 2006 at 8:20 am  Comments (1)  

New blog found

I found another blog writing about antique maps:

http://antiquemaps.blogspot.com/

Might be interesting to take a look

Published in: on October 13, 2006 at 8:09 am  Comments (9)  

Looking for writers

I’m looking for people who are willing to write little articles about antique maps.

Please comment in this article and I will contact you to give access to this blog.

Published in: on October 12, 2006 at 2:42 pm  Comments (2)  

Here’s what I found

I found some website where you can buy antique maps directly from the internet:

http://www.sanderusmaps.com/

If anyone has some other good websites where you can buy antique maps, please let me know

Published in: on October 12, 2006 at 2:20 pm  Comments (2)  

Taking care of antiquarian books

Many of the caveats associated with the care of furniture can also be applied to the care of old books. Although tolerant of a fairly wide range of humidity and temperature, wide variations must be avoided: as well as the simple expansion and contraction which can break joints of books, the different materials in a binding will move at different rates, often leading to serious problems of warping.

The most delicate part of the construction of a book is the joint or hinge, which not only takes the load of the opened cover, but also is the thinnest and least reinforced part of the leather. The joints in particular suffer from drying out, the first symptoms of which are small areas of friable and usually white damage. To minimise this and other problems of a dry atmosphere, a regular but not obsessive application of a mild leather dressing such as Marney’s Conservation Dressing, which typically contain lanolin, neatsfoot and beeswax, is recommended. Always try it out on an inconspicuous area of the book, apply very lightly at first, never use on sheep or reversed calf, both of which have a suede-like finish.

Problems of excessive humidity are usually more evident, but beware of made-to-measure shelving which can often cover damp walls: it is quite common to find a library of books which appear fine from the spines, but where all the fore-edges will be badly dampstained, often with subsequent fungal problems.

The least understood enemy of books is light. Not only does over-bright natural light fade books, but it also accelerates the drying process, which can be minimised by ultra-violet resistant films applied to windows, or by keeping curtains closed on bright days. When shelving books avoid leaving them at an angle, which can twist the bindings more-or-less permanently.

When it comes to handling books, always support the front cover when you open it, and never leave it dangling supported by its own weight. Never pull a book off a shelf by putting a finger on the headcap at the top of the spine. Most leather bindings are not harmed by averagely sweaty hands, but be very careful with nineteenth century cloth bindings and twentieth century dust-jacketed books. For these it is sensible to follow the example of the trade and cover them in loose jackets of a stable transparent material such as mylar or acetate, which is available in rolls from graphics supply stores. Secure these jackets simply by folding the material around the fore-edges of the books, to allow some circulation of air under the material, and do not use any adhesive or tape, even if just applied to the jacket itself, for it is likely to stain the opposite endpaper.

If the covers come off, or pages become loose, do not attempt a repair yourself without proper training. Nearly all sorts of tape and many types of glue are inimical to books, and it is far better to preserve a book in pieces for restoration later than to bodge a repair, no matter how well-meaning.

src: b.a.d.a advice

Published in: on October 12, 2006 at 2:18 pm  Comments (6)  

Why buy antique maps?

Antique maps can be a good investment, largely because they remain relatively undiscovered among collectibles-and therefore relatively undervalued. Yet, no one should collect maps solely as an investment, but as a peace of art you like as a decoration in your house.

They can be a good investment, especially on a long term…

Antique maps have an important historical value. They were necessary for the discovering of the world. Also the decoration found in maps (cartouches,..) is very intresting and it’s a theme that still isn’t studied very well yet.
Most of the antique maps were originally published in atlases and travel books.

Published in: on October 12, 2006 at 2:17 pm  Comments (2)  
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