University of Birmingham the Century Guild Hobby Horse
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Five Hundred Years of Fine, Fancy and Frivolous Bindings George bayntun Manvers Street • Bath • BA1 1JW • UK Tel: 01225 466000 • Fax: 01225 482122 Email: [email protected] www.georgebayntun.com BOUND BY BROCA 1. AINSWORTH (William Harrison). The Miser's Daughter: A Tale. 20 engraved plates by George Cruikshank. First Edition. Three volumes. 8vo. [198 x 120 x 66 mm]. vii, [i], 296 pp; iv, 291 pp; iv, 311 pp. Bound c.1900 by L. Broca (signed on the front endleaves) in half red goatskin, marbled paper sides, the spines divided into six panels with gilt compartments, lettered in the second and third and dated at the foot, the others tooled with a rose and leaves on a dotted background, marbled endleaves, top edges gilt. (The paper sides slightly rubbed). [ebc2209]. London: [by T. C. Savill for] Cunningham and Mortimer, 1842. £750 A fine copy in a very handsome binding. Lucien Broca was a Frenchman who came to London to work for Antoine Chatelin, and from 1876 to 1889 he was in partnership with Simon Kaufmann. From 1890 he appears under his own name in Shaftesbury Avenue, and in 1901 he was at Percy Street, calling himself an "Art Binder". He was recognised as a superb trade finisher, and Marianne Tidcombe has confirmed that he actually executed most of Sarah Prideaux's bindings from the mid-1890s. Circular leather bookplate of Alexander Lawson Duncan of Jordanstone House, Perthshire. STENCILLED CALF 2. AKENSIDE (Mark). The Poems. Fine mezzotint frontispiece portrait by Fisher after Pond. First Collected Edition. 4to. [300 x 240 x 42 mm]. -
The Century Guild Hobby Horse Mitchell, Rebecca
The Century Guild Hobby Horse Mitchell, Rebecca DOI: 10.1086/696259 License: None: All rights reserved Document Version Peer reviewed version Citation for published version (Harvard): Mitchell, R 2018, 'The Century Guild Hobby Horse' Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, vol. 112, no. 1, pp. 75-104. https://doi.org/10.1086/696259 Link to publication on Research at Birmingham portal Publisher Rights Statement: Version accepted for publication by Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America on 11/09/2015. Final version of record available at: https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/696259 General rights Unless a licence is specified above, all rights (including copyright and moral rights) in this document are retained by the authors and/or the copyright holders. The express permission of the copyright holder must be obtained for any use of this material other than for purposes permitted by law. •Users may freely distribute the URL that is used to identify this publication. •Users may download and/or print one copy of the publication from the University of Birmingham research portal for the purpose of private study or non-commercial research. •User may use extracts from the document in line with the concept of ‘fair dealing’ under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 (?) •Users may not further distribute the material nor use it for the purposes of commercial gain. Where a licence is displayed above, please note the terms and conditions of the licence govern your use of this document. When citing, please reference the published version. Take down policy While the University of Birmingham exercises care and attention in making items available there are rare occasions when an item has been uploaded in error or has been deemed to be commercially or otherwise sensitive. -
The American ≤Uarter Horse Journal That You Can’T Get Anywhere Else Are the Breeding, Halter and Performance Statistics That We Mine from A≤HA’S Database
J J J J The AMERICAN ≤UARTER HORSE J OURNAL APRIL 2013 • $4.25 WWW.AQHAJOURNAL.COM U ≤≤U R R N N A A ON A HIGH THE JOURNAL’S 2012 HIGH-POINT STORIES BEGIN ON PAGE 72 GRASP THE TWO-REIN WITH L L JIMMY STICKLER SILKY SOCKS WAS AN UNPREDICTABLE CHAMPION CONTENTS FEATURES FEATURES 18 Structure in Detail 58 Hard To Get Playboy By Christine Hamilton By Jennifer K. Hancock The hind limb – looking at the stifle This Bank of America high-point senior horse has an all-around great personality 24 Borrow a Trainer By AQHA Professional Horseman 62 A≤HA’s 2012 Michael Colvin with Christine Hamilton High-Point Winners Lengthening stride at any gait 64 Making Runners 28 Barn Babies By Richard Chamberlain Breeders share their 2013 arrivals. Follow along with 2-year-olds on the track. Part of a continuing series 32 Grasping the Two-Rein By Annie Lambert 68 Ricky Ramirez Symbiosis of the mecate and bridle reins has By Honi Roberts enhanced training since the vaqueros developed This young jockey is going places – fast. it into an art form. 38 The Unpredictable 78 Foundation Donors Champion By Larri Jo Starkey April 2013 Silky Socks spooked on a dime, but he The official publication had a world championship ride in him. of the American Quarter 44 60 Years Ago These two are Horse Association. AQHA’s first high-point award winners all-around About the Cover 46 characters. 2012 AQHA All-Around 46 Kaleena Weakly and Senior Horse Hard To Get Playboy Hours Yours And Mine By Jennifer K. -
The General Stud Book : Containing Pedigrees of Race Horses, &C
^--v ''*4# ^^^j^ r- "^. Digitized by tine Internet Arciiive in 2009 witii funding from Lyrasis IVIembers and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/generalstudbookc02fair THE GENERAL STUD BOOK VOL. II. : THE deiterol STUD BOOK, CONTAINING PEDIGREES OF RACE HORSES, &C. &-C. From the earliest Accounts to the Year 1831. inclusice. ITS FOUR VOLUMES. VOL. II. Brussels PRINTED FOR MELINE, CANS A.ND C"., EOILEVARD DE WATERLOO, Zi. M DCCC XXXIX. MR V. un:ve PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. To assist in the detection of spurious and the correction of inaccu- rate pedigrees, is one of the purposes of the present publication, in which respect the first Volume has been of acknowledged utility. The two together, it is hoped, will form a comprehensive and tole- rably correct Register of Pedigrees. It will be observed that some of the Mares which appeared in the last Supplement (whereof this is a republication and continua- tion) stand as they did there, i. e. without any additions to their produce since 1813 or 1814. — It has been ascertained that several of them were about that time sold by public auction, and as all attempts to trace them have failed, the probability is that they have either been converted to some other use, or been sent abroad. If any proof were wanting of the superiority of the English breed of horses over that of every other country, it might be found in the avidity with which they are sought by Foreigners. The exportation of them to Russia, France, Germany, etc. for the last five years has been so considerable, as to render it an object of some importance in a commercial point of view. -
On the Laws and Practice of Horse Racing
^^^g£SS/^^ GIFT OF FAIRMAN ROGERS. University of Pennsylvania Annenherg Rare Book and Manuscript Library ROUS ON RACING. Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2009 with funding from Lyrasis IVIembers and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/onlawspracticeOOrous ON THE LAWS AND PRACTICE HORSE RACING, ETC. ETC. THE HON^T^^^ ADMIRAL ROUS. LONDON: A. H. BAILY & Co., EOYAL EXCHANGE BUILDINGS, COENHILL. 1866. LONDON : PRINTED BY W. CLOWES AND SONS, STAMFORD STREET, AND CHAKING CROSS. CONTENTS. Preface xi CHAPTER I. On the State of the English Turf in 1865 , . 1 CHAPTER II. On the State of the La^^ . 9 CHAPTER III. On the Rules of Racing 17 CHAPTER IV. On Starting—Riding Races—Jockeys .... 24 CHAPTER V. On the Rules of Betting 30 CHAPTER VI. On the Sale and Purchase of Horses .... 44 On the Office and Legal Responsibility of Stewards . 49 Clerk of the Course 54 Judge 56 Starter 57 On the Management of a Stud 59 vi Contents. KACma CASES. PAGE Horses of a Minor Age qualified to enter for Plates and Stakes 65 Jockey changed in a Race ...... 65 Both Jockeys falling abreast Winning Post . 66 A Horse arriving too late for the First Heat allowed to qualify 67 Both Horses thrown—Illegal Judgment ... 67 Distinction between Plate and Sweepstakes ... 68 Difference between Nomination of a Half-bred and Thorough-bred 69 Whether a Horse winning a Sweepstakes, 23 gs. each, three subscribers, could run for a Plate for Horses which never won 50^. ..... 70 Distance measured after a Race found short . 70 Whether a Compromise was forfeited by the Horse omitting to walk over 71 Whether the Winner distancing the Field is entitled to Second Money 71 A Horse objected to as a Maiden for receiving Second Money 72 Rassela's Case—Wrong Decision ... -
Morgan Horses
The 12th Annual NATIONAL MORGAN HORSE SHOW Sponsored by: Saturday Evening Friday Evening 7:00 P. M. 7:00 P. M. Sunday Saturday Afternoon Afternoon 1:00 P. M. 1:00 P. M. PERFORMANCE BREED CLASSES CLASSES For Stallions and Saddle, Harness, Mares: Colts and Pleasure. Utility Fillies and Equitation THE MORGAN HORSE CLUB Watch The Foundation Breed of America Perform. TRI-COUNTY FAIR GROUNDS NORTHAMPTON, MASS. July 30, 31 and August 1, 1954 Adults $1.00 Children - under 12 - 50' A LAW FOR IT . by 1939 Vermont Legislature "There oughta be a law agin it," is a favorite expresion of Vermonters. Sometimes they reverse themselves and make a law "for it" as they did in 1939 when the legislature passed the following resolution: "Whereas, this is the year recognized as the 150th anniversa y of the famous horse 'Justin Morgan,' which horse not only established a recognized breed of horses named for a single individual, but brought fame th•tzugh his descendants to Vermont and thousands of dollars to Vermonters. "The name Morgan has come to mean beauty, spirit, and action to all lovers of the horse; and the Morgan horses fo• many years held the world's record for trotting horses, and "Whereas the Morgan blood is recognized as foundation stock for the American Saddle Horse, for the American Trotting Horse, and for the Tennessee Walking Horse. In each of these three breeds, the Morgan horse is recognized as a foundation, and therefore, with the recognition of its value to the horse b seeders of the nation, and recognition that it was in Vermont that Morgan -
Fttdec2008cat.Pdf
Barn E1 Hip No. Property of Hidden Valley Thoroughbreds (L. T. Smith Enterprises) 1 Mary Jo Mary Jo Native Dancer Jig Time . { Kanace Strong Performance . Blazing Count { Extra Alarm . { Deedee O. Mary Jo Mary Jo . *Noholme II Gray/roan mare; Smooth At Holme . { *Smooth Water foaled 1993 {Smooth Pamper . *Moonlight Express (1981) { Miss Pamper . { Poupee By STRONG PERFORMANCE (1983), $252,040, Tropical Park Derby [G2], etc. Sire of 15 crops, 35 winners, $1,375,507, including Thomas Jo (8 wins, $390,207, Federico Tesio S., Sir Barton S., Francis Jock LaBelle Memorial S., 2nd Gallery Furniture Juv. S., 3rd Belmont S. [G1]; winner in Saudi Arabia), Mary Jo Mary Jo ($169,240), Quitaque ($97,907). 1st dam SMOOTH PAMPER, by Smooth at Holme. Dam of 9 foals of racing age, 7 to race, 4 winners, including-- Nevada’s Pampered (f. by Nevada Reality). 3 wins at 3 and 4, $10,713. 2nd dam MISS PAMPER, by *Moonlight Express. Winner at 3. Dam of 4 winners, incl.-- Redskinette. 10 wins, 3 to 6, $30,052. Producer. Jr’s Pamper. Unraced. Dam of Big River (c. by Big Gun) in Venezuela. 3rd dam POUPEE, by *Quatre Bras II. 3 wins at 2. Sister to Bras, half-sister to CROWNLET. Dam of 9 foals, all winners, including-- Puppet. 18 wins, 2 to 8, $56,895, 3rd Richard Johnson S. Enchanted Eve. 4 wins at 2 and 3, $32,230, 2nd Comely H., etc. Dam of TEMPTED (18 wins, $330,760, champion, Ladies H.-nAr, etc.), SMART (19 wins, $365,244, set ntr). Granddam of BROOM DANCE- G1 ($330,022, dam of END SWEEP [G3], $372,563), ICE COOL- G2 (champion), PUMPKIN MOONSHINE-G2; TINGLE STONE-G3 (dam of ROUSING PAST [G3]), LEAD ME ON (dam of TELL ME ALL), SALEM, ENCHANTED NATIVE (dam of BEDSIDE PROMISE [G1] 14 wins, $950,205), MISGIVINGS (dam of AT RISK), etc. -
Powell's Opus Sectile Locations
Powell’s Opus Sectile Locations The list of locations was compiled by Dr Dennis Hadley during private research in the Powell’s of Whitefriars archive held by the Victoria and Albert Museum, Archive of Art and Design, London. A note for users: This list has been transcribed to computerised format by the Tiles and Architectural Ceramics Society. It may contain errors introduced during the transcription process and should therefore be treated as a first draft. Introduction The list of opus sectile reredoses and tablets made by James Powell & Sons has been extracted from a larger index of figurative designs by the Whitefriars firm, which excluded the many items of opus sectile that comprised only lettering and/or symbols, emblems and heraldry. Another omission is the decoration of walls with glass tiles, which are identical in composition with opus sectile. The Order Books do not always state whether a reredos is opus sectile or simply painting on wood or slate. Hence it is possible that some of the entries listed below do not refer to opus sectile. In some cases it is known that the church mentioned has been demolished, but is is likely that many other buildings listed no longer exist, or their fittings have been destroyed. From 1845 until 1873/4 the Window Cash Books (WCB) form the best record of orders. The so-called Order Books (OB) up to 1869 are scrappy ledgers that deal mainly with initial enquiries. Order Book 1869-1873 is missing, as is Order Book 1882-85. The Order Books, 1873 on, give the date on which a firm order was placed, the WCB give the date on which the order was complete and ready for delivery. -
'Perhaps the Greatest Artist of the Lot'
INTRODUCTION ‘PERHAPS THE GREATEST ARTIST OF THE LOT’ By all accounts Henry Wilson was a quiet man, modest to a fault. At first sight, apart from his distinctive aquiline profile, his appearance was unremarkable. He was not widely known to the general public, and even amongst friends it was hard to get him to talk much about his own works, which were mostly unsigned. When he died in Menton, France in 1934, he was buried in a leased plot, long since obliterated. Such unassuming worldly credentials belie the powerful originality of his work and his prodigious skills as a craftsman. In dramatic architectural schemes, and in the expressiveness of his executed buildings and sculptures; in his richly evocative jewellery and fine metalwork, in inspirational lectures and writings; in all these, he displays an exceptional intensity of invention and insight. The works summon up deep-seated meanings which often surpass their material reality. They, and the thinking that underlies them, most thoroughly represent Henry Wilson. And it is through the diverse, yet linked, aspects of his creativity that his character and impact is most properly revealed. As he himself wrote in 1902 ‘design is the expression of your personality in terms of the material in which you work’.1 Janet, the astute and observant wife of Wilson’s fellow designer and ideologist C.R. Ashbee, testified to the admiration felt for Wilson in arts and crafts circles when she described a group of Art Workers’ Guild members gathering for a rehearsal of their masque Beauty’s Awakening in May 1899. Gradually they assemble: Selwyn Image, Walter Crane, Louis Davis .. -
Durham E-Theses
Durham E-Theses The century guild hobby horse and Oscar Wilde: a study of British little magazines, 1884-1897 Tildesley, Matthew Brinton How to cite: Tildesley, Matthew Brinton (2007) The century guild hobby horse and Oscar Wilde: a study of British little magazines, 1884-1897, Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/2449/ Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in Durham E-Theses • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full Durham E-Theses policy for further details. Academic Support Oce, Durham University, University Oce, Old Elvet, Durham DH1 3HP e-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 0191 334 6107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk 2 The Century Guild Hobby Horse and Oscar Wilde: A Study of British Little Magazines, 1884-1897. Matthew Brinton Tildesley. The copyright of this thesis rests with the author or the university to which it was submitted. No quotation from it, or information derived from it may be published without the prior written consent of the author or university, and any information derived from it should be acknowledged. -
The Crafts in Britain in the Twentieth Century Ebook, Epub
THE CRAFTS IN BRITAIN IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Tanya Harrod | 496 pages | 01 Apr 1999 | Yale University Press | 9780300077803 | English | New Haven, CT, United States The Crafts in Britain in the Twentieth Century PDF Book Aims, Aesthetics and Ideals. University Press Scholarship Online. The book covers a range of topics from lifetime work patterns and education to unemployment and the welfare state. Tile Magazine. It brings a critical new dimension to understanding British naval history in this period setting naval intelligence in a wide context and emphasising the many parts of the British state that contributed to naval requirements. Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote. By closing this message or continuing to use our site, you agree to the use of cookies. The result was a number of buildings - especially houses for the middle class - that architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner called 'fresher and more aesthetically adventurous than anything done at the same time abroad'. This book is a great read. Products Authors Categories Series. The anti-industrial structure of the firm was based on the concept of medieval guilds, in which craftsmen both designed and executed the work. Toggle navigation. See Article History. History at your fingertips. Save searches from Google Scholar, PubMed. Popular protest against capital punishment and public responses to and understandings of capital cases are also discussed, particularly in relation to conceptualisations of justice. Print Cite. Original excavation of official records is combined with a fine judgement of personalities and a developed, most accessible, narrative style. -
5. Art Crafts
1/12/15 AGD 1222 HISTORY OF GRAPHIC DESIGN TOPIC 5: Arts & Craft Movements in Europe and America By Puan Rosyida Mohd Rozlan The Arts & Crafts Movement WHEN? - Key Moment/Timeline • Mid 19th Century A.D : The term/word ‘Arts & Crafts Movement’: • Inspired by the social reform concerns of thinkers named; Walter Crane, John Ruskin and together with the ideals of reformer and designer; William Morris. • Arts & Crafts Movement is the notions (conception of or belief of) of good design were linked to their notions of good society. • Subsequently, this style was taken up by American designers and was also known as Mission Style. • They were fervently (displaying a passionate intensity) belief that beautiful things were valuable and useful precisely because they were beautiful. • 1820’s Century A.D : Publishing & Editorial Design Begins by Pickering • Emphasizing the designs of books; “The Elements of Euclid” 1 1/12/15 WHEN? - Key Moment/Timeline • A.D 1834-96 : William Morris is the Leader of the English Arts and Crafts movement that called for a fitness of purpose, truth to the nature of materials and methods of production, and individual expression in both designer and worker. • A.D 1856 : Owen Jones, The Grammar of Ornaments Besides William Morris & John Ruskin, Jones is one of the important innovator to this style that provides aesthetic ideas for the ideal craft production system borrowed from Medieval European & Islamic sources. • A.D 1882 : Century Guild is Formed The group of artists and designers who banded (group) together; included designer/illustrator; Selwyn Image, designer/writer; Herbert P.Horne, an architect; Arthur H.