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#1
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Posted By: warshawlaw
I just scored my first Harpers item, a full magazine with a baseball engraving in it. Here is what I am wondering: I would like to display the item in some way but my instinct tells me not to cut up the magazine to do it. Any suggestions besides a laser copy? |
#2
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Posted By: Julie
ever offered me a WHOLE MAGAZINE! In short, I don't know what I'd do. I admit to enjoying the backs of the engravings almost as much as the front (in fact, before I put them in mylar and acid=-free board, I often xerox the back and attach it to the back of the board. |
#3
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
However, I have never tried to list them on eBay, b/c I have no digital camera and my scanner is too small. Also, I don't have them on display b/c of their size. I guess on of the big diploma frames would work however. |
#4
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Posted By: hankron
Adam, buy one that has already been cut from the magazine. I would leave your publication alone, as it's rarer that way ... There is an 1880s Harper's with a great Buck Ewing in catcher's gear on the cover. |
#5
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Thanks for your input. Since it is more valuable than I thought, I will not damage the whole magazine. I am doing my entire office (not just my waiting room) in baseball; that is what I bought it for. If I can get a clean enough scan I will print it out and frame the print instead. |
#6
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Posted By: Reid Bruce
Adam, |
#7
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Posted By: hankron
Reid may be correct. If it is a partial page woodcut, it may be more interesting to have the whole page displayed anyway. |
#8
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Posted By: hankron
The pictures in 1800s Harper's Weeklies and similar magazines are popular and significant to collectors as they are original prints. The pictures were printed directly from handmade printing plates. The printing plate was made by a full time craftsman who carved or cut the design into a block of wood using hand held tools-- the same way Rembrandt or Pablo Picasso would have done it. If you or your kid ever made a linoleum cut in art class (carving into a piece of linoleum, adding ink then making a print), that is basically how a woodcut is made. Though wood is obviously a tad harder than linoleum. It sometimes took a couple of weeks to make a single printing plate. Though a print was usually done with the colaboration of several people (artist, carver), as opposed to a single famous artist, a Harper's print of the 1869 Cincinnati Reds or 1880s Buck Ewing is as much an original print as the Picasso hanging in a museum .... In fact, one of the Civil War artists who worked for Harper's was a then unknown painter named Homer Winslow. |
#9
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Posted By: warshawlaw
I used to frame while I was in college to pay the bills, so I am aware of how I could potentially shadowbox the item. I was thinking more in terms of conventional framing, though, since I did not want to spend the bucks on a shadowbox with archival materials. |
#10
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Posted By: Scott
If anyone is interested in these, at resonable prices, let me know via email and I'll set you up with somone who deals in Harpers woodcuts. |
#11
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Posted By: Andy Baran
Does this person have New York Clipper Woodcuts as well? |
#12
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
leather bound editions by year containing ALL Harpers Magazines for that particular year! These are not that expensive either - only a few hundred bucks. I still wish I would have bought a couple last winter that I passed on which I knew had some nice BB woodcuts in them. I haven't searched for these in a while, but they might have went up in price by now - just do a harpers weekly search on eBay in all catagories and you might find one! |
#13
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Posted By: warshawlaw
It is a lot bigger than I thought--more like newspaper sized. |
#14
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Posted By: Reid Bruce
Adam, |
#15
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Posted By: davidcycleback
Adam, I think you learned why the Harper's (and Leslie's, a similar magazine) woodcuts are considered undervalued by those who know them in person. Consider that there are similar (thought often smaller) prints showing King Kelly, Cap Anson, Billy Sunday, Chas. Comiskey (as player), Buck Ewing, James Creighton, etc. |
#16
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Posted By: Julie
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#17
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Posted By: Rick McQuillan
Hello, The Vintage & Classic Baseball Collector's Issue #14 has a good article on Harper's woodcuts. Rick |
#18
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
I suppose that none of the wooden plates used to make these woodcuts have survived. Boy, it sure would be nice to have one of those. |
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