19th century book
JOHN HUNTINGTON
huntington.2 at OSU.EDU
Wed Jul 27 18:43:23 UTC 2005
Valerie
If you are going to have digital photograps made anew, have a
couple made of a very clean page with the light source at a very
low angle to see if there is any visible texture. That would be the
most telling.
John
_ * _ * _ * _ * _ * _ * _ * _ * _ * _ * _ *
John C. Huntington, Professor
(Buddhist art and Practice Methodologies)
The Department of the History of Art
The Ohio State University
----- Original Message -----
From: Valerie J Roebuck <vjroebuck at MACUNLIMITED.NET>
Date: Wednesday, July 27, 2005 1:26 pm
Subject: Re: 19th century book
> Thank you to everyone who has provided information about the
19th
> century copy of the Tulsi Ramayana. I hope shortly to have some
> digital photos of the work. I believe it is possible to place
> relevant photos on the Indology website?
>
> Valerie J Roebuck
> Manchester, UK
>
> At 8:49 am -0400 25/7/05, Allen W Thrasher wrote:
> >I find that lithographed books from India often look as much
like
> >mss as like books printed from moveable type. I think it is not
> >just that the graphemes are somewhat less regular, but that
the
> >ink-paper interface (w.w.?) is different from letterpress.
Graham
> >Shaw at the British Library has done a study of lithography in
> India
> >and is still collecting material on it. Have you shown it to him?
> >
> >It is possible, also, that under the inspiration of moveable type
> >books the scribe was particularly careful to be very regular,
more
> >so than traditionally the best scribes would be. I have in my
own
> >library an ed. of the Bhagavatapurana published in Pune in the
> 1970s
> >or 1980s made by a brahmacari by hand and reproduced by
> >photo-offset. You would think it was letterpress, all the more
so
> >since the same decorative frame was around the text on each
page,
> >done on a transparency and then photographed along with the
text.
>
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