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oai:orbis.library.yale.edu:11395287
2022-02-25
bacrb
02243cam a2200265 i 4500
11395287
20220225174342.0
130524s1820 enk 000 0 eng d
(OCoLC)ocn871023785
11395287
CtY-BA
eng
rda
CtY-BA
871021444
The drying book.
[Great Britain] :
[publisher not identified],
[approximately 1820]
1 volume ([12] unnumbered leaves) ;
43 cm
text
rdacontent
unmediated
rdamedia
volume
rdacarrier
Large folio blank album, bound by the manufacturer in sugar paper wrappers, with printed label on front cover: "The drying book." The volume comprises 12 blank leaves, on heavy wove paper, with no watermark. It includes a silk ribbon tie on the leading edge of the rear cover. The paper is not watermarked, but the volume appears to date to about 1820. The manufacturer is unidentified.
The precise function of the drying book is not evident. It may have been used, for example, to blot excess ink from freshly written letters. It is also possible that the drying book was part of an ensemble of tools used to make copies of printed or manuscript material ca. 1800. Rhodes and Streeter note: "The drying book was ... composed of absorbent paper, and was used to dry the newly made copies in, providing light compression so that they dried without cockling. Dampening and drying books remained part of the standard equipment for letterpress copying well into the nineteenth century. The London firm of Nissen and Parker were selling these accessories along with letter presses at least as late as 1850." (Rhodes, Barbara J. Before photocopying : the art & history of mechanical copying, 1780-1938. New Castle, Del. : Oak Knoll Press, 1999. Page 11). The second leaf of the present "drying book" includes faint marks apparently offset from printed material. One cannot rule out other functions for the volume as well, such as the drying of botanical specimens.
Copying processes.
Botanical specimens
Collection and preservation.
Botanical specimens
Drying.
Blotting paper.
aat
Chron.
1820.