No Binding. Condition: Good. Another young man learns, to his dismay, how much a dainty young thing can eat. From the Quaint Kids series, mailed in 91916; serious creasing in lower left corner, not really enough to spoil the joke.
Language: English
Published by Art & Humour Publishing Co.
Seller: Postcard Anoraks, Battle, United Kingdom
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
No Binding. Condition: Good. Brighton Fred Spurgin Original 1921 Postcard. From the collectable series,Art & Humour Publishing Co.This one is the A&H Civil Life Series,No.571. In good condition throughout, note stamp franking bleed impression to lower edge.Reverse displays the authentic double oval statue trademark, with all sepia tone type font and typeface. Forwarded to an addressee in, Smithfields London E.C.
Language: English
Published by Art and Humour Publishing Co, London, 1920
Seller: Broadwater Books, Southampton, United Kingdom
Manuscript / Paper Collectible
No Binding. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. Fred Spurgin (illustrator). Postcard - Colour. Used. Seaside Series no 706. Front clean and tidy. Stamp on rear at an angle, franked Blackpool 31 july 1920. Neat message in ink.
Language: English
Published by Dean and Son, London, 1936
Seller: Your Book Soon, Stroud, GLOS, United Kingdom
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Good. Fred Spurgin, Cora E. Paterson, Joyce Mercer, Joyce Plumstead, Nora Annie Birch et al (illustrator). 1st Edition. 188 pp 4 colour plates, numerous bw illustrations, quarter blue cloth , colour illustrated cover by Nora Annie Birch. Corners scuffed, endpapers spotted with prize label, pages tanned with a few marks - solid copy . Date from prize label.
Pictorial Wraps. Condition: Good. No Jacket. Fred Spurgin (illustrator). Color printed pictorial wraps, spine worn, corner loss, creases, pages age-toned, childish writing erased from two pages. A French alphabet illustrated in color and b&w by Fred Spurgin. Size: 4to.
Hardcover. Condition: Good. 'Stories of Bygone Days: Told by the Pictures' by Fred Spurgin et al. Art & Humour. Undated. Circa 1920. Inscription. Title page slightly tanned. Small inscription. Edges rubbed. Good.
Album in-8 carré ( 230 X 190 mm ) cartonnage illustré en couleurs. Nombreuses et charmantes compositions en couleurs et en noir dans le texte, en couleurs hors-texte de Fred. PURGIN. Bel exemplaire. enfantina.
Published by Philadelphia: Henry Altemus, 1929
Seller: Books From California, Simi Valley, CA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Good. Scarce. Non-series #59, over 100 pages, nonpaginated. Thick 4to, 2 parts bound as one. Illustrations in black and white, 12 color plates with chipping on the edges. Illustrated cover shows minor wear, tear, rubbing, and edgewear. Pages are shaken, lightly tanned, and mostly clean with a bit of foxing on the edges.
POSTCARD. Condition: Good. Cards 319, 321 and 322. All three unposted and unwritten. Light edge and corner wear with light marking to borders; one card (The Flying Dutchman) has light ink markings to right hand border and small indentation mark. [621A]. MANUSCRIPT.
Published by Dean & Son
Seller: Waimakariri Books and Prints Limited, Oxford, New Zealand
Hardcover. Condition: Fair. Scarce. Undated hardback, but British Library dates other volumes by this author and publisher to the 1920s. Fair condition. Pictorial boards bumped, corners and edges scuffed, surfaces lightly worn with minor marks and stain, contents complete with minor marks and wear, some edge tears, two plates loose, binding holding but strained and cracked at the rear gutter revealing webbing, rear board torn to 3/4 of its length and fragile. There is no list of illustrations, and no copy is listed in the British Library, so it is unclear whether the four plates present represent all those called for, but the books is otherwise complete. Free standard airmail worldwide. 0.
Published by London: Circa 1905-1910, 1910
Seller: Wittenborn Art Books, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.
Art / Print / Poster
Condition: Good. Watercolor. 30 x 23cm.cm. On board.Dirty young man eyeing a lovely lass reading "Printers' Pie." Printers' Pie was a humorous publication published at the offices of "The Sphere", London, to benefit the Printers' Pension Corporation (under various names).Publication HistoryPrinters' Pie appears to have begin in 1903. It was renamed "The Sketchbook and Printers' Pie" in the mid-1920s and appears to have continued under that name for a few more years. In some years when it published semiannually, the Christmas issues were titled "Winter's Pie".