Published by The Religious Drama Society, London, 1949
Seller: Neil Shillington: Bookdealer/Booksearch, Hobe sound, FL, U.S.A.
Paper Wraps. Condition: Good. 35 pages. Minor wear.
Published by St. Dominic's Press, 1929, Ditchling Common, Susses, 1929
Language: English
Seller: M H Harrington, Boston, MA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. Three-quarter decorated board covers with leather spine; boards are near fine with minimal darkening and wear; text is fine (bookplate with offset), closed text sides lightly dusty, spine shows wear with very small piece missing at top and bottom, but is firm; 4.5" x 6", deckle-edged paper, hand printed with original woodcut frontispiece and end-pieces; hand numbered (91) and initialed by playwright; one of 1 of 100. 46 pages; no dust jacket.
Published by St Dominic's Press, Ditchling Common, 1929
Seller: Swan's Fine Books, ABAA, ILAB, IOBA, Walnut Creek, CA, U.S.A.
Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Near fine. Limited Edition. No. 16 of 100 copies, twenty-fourmo size, 68 pp., initialled and numbered by Hilary Pepler. The Saint Dominic's Press, founded by Harry (Hilary) Douglas Clarke Pepler, flourished at Ditchling, Sussex, from 1916 to 1936. The first home of the Press was "a disused stable", with a hundred-year-old Stanhope hand-press which supposedly had belonged to William Morris. Pepler endeavored to do everything possible by hand, believing that such would both produce the best results and also be a "more individual or 'humane'.product". He therefore "preferred the handpress to the machine, handmade to machine-made paper, and handset founder's type to the products of typesetting machines." Pepler met Edward Johnston and Eric Gill while living in Hammersmith; Pepler and his family would eventually move to Ditchling to join Gill, who was one of the most important artists to provide illustrations for the St. Dominic's Press. Other artists who provided illustrations for the Press included David Jones, Desmond Chute, Philip Hagreen, and Mary Dudley Short, among others. This work one of Pepler's plays in which he imagines the Three Wise Men and their journey to Bethleham, taken from the Gospel of Mt. Matthew. Pepler "had his own puppet theatre at Ditchling" and his puppets performed another of his plays, "The Ox and the Ass", at an international marionette festival in 1929. ___DESCRIPTION: Bound in quarter black leather over paper-covered boards, the front board repeats the title-page illustration on the lower left with red and black stars around and red lettering, the back board with three black stars, top edge rough-cut, fore- and bottom edges uncut, numbered and initialled by Hilary Pepler on the recto of the list of plays by Pepler (p. [v]), title page wood-engraved illustration of the three kings and tailpiece illustration (no attribution of artist); twenty-fourmo size (5 13/16" by 4 1/2"), pagination: [i-xviii] 1-46 [1, blank] [1, colophon] [2]; limited edition of 100 copies initialled and numbered by Pepler and printed on hand-made paper, this no. 16; note that there were also 500 copies on machine-made paper. ___CONDITION: Near fine: the boards without noticeable wear, the corners straight and without rubbing, a strong, square text block with solid hinges, the interior clean and bright, and entirely free of prior owner markings; a bit of wear on the spine (mostly at the head and tail, with light loss at the head), light rubbing to the stars on the front baord and toning to the endpapers. ___CITATIONS: Taylor and Sewell, no. A175; note that the quotes and much of the introductory information from "Three Private Presses" by Brocard Sewell. ___POSTAGE: International customers, please note that additional postage may apply as the standard does not always cover costs; please inquire for details. ___Swan's Fine Books is pleased to be a member of the ABAA, ILAB, and IOBA and we stand behind every book we sell. Please contact us with any questions you may have, we are here to help.
Published by Ditchling Common: St. Dominic's Press (1929), 1929
Seller: Bow Windows Bookshop (ABA, ILAB), Lewes, United Kingdom
£ 90
Convert currencyQuantity: 1 available
Add to basketLimited edition, one of 500 copies on machine paper 16mo, (xiv), 45, (3) pp. Two engravings, ink stamp of the Abbey Library, Fort Augustus, to paste down. Original quarter cloth, decorative boards, spine ends bumped otherwise very good. Taylor & Sewell A175.
Published by Printed & published at St Dominic's Press, Ditchling Common, Sussex, 1929
£ 155
Convert currencyQuantity: 1 available
Add to basketDisbound. Condition: Fair. [xiv], 45, [3] pages. Printed on machine made paper, apparently there were also copies printed on hand made paper. In the remains of the original binding - printed paper covered boards and cloth spine. the cloth on the spine has deteriorated and the front board is now detached - the rear board is on its way also. The paper is soiled and browned. Bookplate to the front pastedown of Dunstan & Anne Pruden. Light browning to pages throughout, some spotting. Dunstan Pruden was a silversmith in the Guild of St Joseph and St Dominic at Ditchling. The bookplate was designed by Philip Hagreen.