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Talk to me about Harper's Weekly Wood Cuts
Are these really on wood? What exactly are they? Does/will PSA/SGC grade them?
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mouschi-- If you go to the memorabilia side & search "Harper's", you'll find quite a bit of info.
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Not on wood, from a paper and I think I've seen a few graded.
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Woodcuts
There was a great article in the Jan/Feb issue #14 of VCBC - if you can find one.
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Doug |
Well, paper is technically wood pulp, right? Didn't they etch a wood plank in reverse and then ink it?
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Harper's Weekly was an entertainment newspaper that was issued in the latter half of the 19th century. It covered baseball and would periodically have an artist's rendition, in the form of a woodcut, depicting a famous team or a game in action. They were printed using an engraved wood block, hence the term woodcut.
Most are relatively inexpensive, usually in the $50-150 range. It makes absolutely no sense to have them graded, as it might cost more to grade them than to buy them. They are a great way to get original 19th century baseball memorabilia cheaply, and the illustrations are very well done. None are especially rare so you can actually complete the set of around 35 woodcuts with a bit of patience. |
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I refuse to comment on you invoking "sense" into a conversation involving the people who get paid for their opinions... Doug "you can buy some for just a bit more than a few cents" Goodman |
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They did carve the image into wood. With the detail they have probably endgrain maple. Many of the papers of the time were not on wood pulp paper, but paper with a high rag content, cotton and linen fibers. And sometimes it's nearly acid free so it holds up well instead of getting brown and brittle. |
The woodcuts were magazine pictures. However, unlike in the 1900s and today with reprint technologies, the prints were made directly from hand carved blocks blocks of wood (thus the name woodcuts) and thus are original works of art-- as original as a Rembrant or Picasso in a museum. They also have great graphics, and are great for framing and display. You can find them from as early as the 1850s.
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I could be wrong, but isn't the James Creighton woodcut somewhat rarer? They seem to sell for decent money, but that may be just due to his status and the fact that there is hardly any memorabilia that exists for him. |
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Indeed. I have all of the Harper's and the Leslies. Pre-1900. They are newspapers, but very old newspapers, and they are very cool in my opinion. None of mine are graded. Would never think of grading them. I don't grade my books, publications, sheet music etc. either. I do know there were more than a few people who took clips cut from Reach and Spalding guides, graded, slabbed and sold them on ebay as "cards".
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I am not sure what the baseball ones sell for, but some from the Civil War period sell for very good money. One of the main artists for Harper's Weekly during the Civil War was Winslow Homer. His initials are found in all of the sketches he did for them. One of his most famous is a two page spread from the center of the paper called 'The Sharpshooter'. I recall seeing this one sell for well over $500.00 years ago. Sometime in the late 1980's the Portland Museum of Art in Maine had an exhibit of his Harper's sketches along with studies for some of his well known paintings including 'Breezing Up'.
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Thanks!
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Relatively speaking, and with prudent care, they can be displayed. The ink is pretty permanent, and the paper is much less susceptible to aging than later newspapers paper. Newspapers from the 1900s have much more woodpulp in them, which causes them, to turn brown and crumbly.
Counterintuitively, newspapers from 1770 can be in far superior shape than ones from 1970, because of the lack of wood pulp in 1700s paper. Harper's has some wooldpulp, but a fraction of 1900s paper. |
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The very first baseball woodcut, and as such the first illustration of baseball in an American newspaper, was featured in the Spirit of the Times on September 12, 1857. The Spirit was likewise a weekly paper of sporting events of all kinds, and the front page illustration of a game in progress is a classic (and decidedly scarce). |
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You can collect Harper's Woodcuts by the famous painter Winslow Homer (he did a lot of them, many grade A, and there are books about them), and by Western artist Frederic Remington. In fact, Remington did a series of football woodcuts.
Collecting Frederic Remington’s 1800s American Football Prints http://www.littlestourbooks.com/covers/84261.jpg So woodcut collecting goes far beyond baseball and sport. A fascinating area. Below is an 1874 Winslow Homer Harper's woodcut of a New York City Chinatown opium den https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-113rc8lYU...slow+Homer.jpg |
It's hard to find a good opium den these days.
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For the record, I've never been in it. |
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Relevantly, to plug my old book
Identifying Antique Commercial Printing Processes, and the Basics of Authenticating Antique and Art Prints Includes a chapter on paper. |
Have one on my shelf!!
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Has anyone ever found an actual woodblock engraving depicting one of these baseball related woodcuts? I have 3 different woodblock engravings (as well as an 1880’s copper full front page from the Daily Graphic) but none are baseball themed. As an avid baseball woodcut collector, that would be an impressive discovery.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
I have not.
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Greeting woodcut aficionados -
Have any baseball related Harper's woodcuts turned up that ARE NOT on the checklist published in VCBC #14? If so, can we see some pictures, and get some details? With that question now having been asked, here is another : Are those baseball bats hanging from that kid's shoulder? Doug |
Hey Doug,
I don’t have the checklist in hand at the moment but I believe it to be comprehensive for the players, teams, games in progress prints etc. It also includes many of the more general baseball themes. There may be other baseball related prints that are tangentially related such as reference to baseball board games etc but my comments are specific to players and teams. I’ve found a number of previously undocumented woodcuts in other publications (and I believe there are more) but I’d be surprised/elated if there are Harper related prints that I have previously not seen. Even the supplements are well documented/known to the (small woodcut) collecting world. It’s possible that there were regional editions of Harper’s which came out in limited publication as I believe that to be the case for some of the obscure Leslie’s prints. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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Yes. My comments were specific to teams and or players. I’m skeptical that there are undocumented ones out there. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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I think they are baseball bats. Good one.
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That's a great find! I still get a kick out of ... well ... anything 19th century baseball but especially when it comes to pieces like this that are pre-commercially produced / nationally distributed baseball cards.
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