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The Collation

The Collation

Research and Exploration at the Folger

The Collation is a gathering of useful information and observations from Folger staff and researchers. Read more about this blog

Steady sellers
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Steady sellers

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Author
Goran Proot

Recently, Jan van de Kamp, a scholar from the Netherlands, contacted me with the question of whether I knew a method to extract all religious steady sellers from the Short Title Catalogue, Netherlands (STCN). He would like to use that…

Making a Karibari board
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Making a Karibari board

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Author
Rhea DeStefano

In conservation, the drying or humidification of paper poses particular challenges when dimensional and visual characteristics of the original paper are to be retained. Because of this, the drying of an artifact is a key step in its treatment. There…

Timon of Athens: nine not-actually-lost drawings by Wyndham Lewis
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Timon of Athens: nine not-actually-lost drawings by Wyndham Lewis

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Author
Erin Blake

In 1998, modernist art and literature scholar Paul Edwards wrote about “a set of watercolours and (apparently) ink drawings on the theme of Shakespeare’s Timon of Athens” by Wyndham Lewis that had been published as a portfolio in 1913. Paul Edwards, “Wyndham…

A digital adieu
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A digital adieu

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Author
Jaime McCurry

The time has come for me to say farewell as my National Digital Stewardship Residency placement at the Folger Shakespeare Library comes to a close later this month. It has been a wonderful nine months working with born-digital assets here…

Click-clack and crocodile tears: an annotated Elizabethan dictionary
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Click-clack and crocodile tears: an annotated Elizabethan dictionary

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Author
Heather Wolfe

If dictionaries are still on your mind after reading in The Collation and elsewhere about the 1580 copy of John Baret’s Alvearie owned by George Koppelman and Dan Wechsler, then here’s another tri-lingual annotated dictionary to ponder: the intensively-annotated Folger copy of John…

Abbreviations and signatures
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Abbreviations and signatures

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Author
Goran Proot

As Sjoerd Levelt guessed in the comments, this month’s crocodile image featured an abbreviation, rather than a letter, in the signature mark: sig. 22Here’s a longer look at what this character is and how it ended up being used in…

"What manner o' thing is your crocodile?": May 2014
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"What manner o' thing is your crocodile?": May 2014

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Author
The Collation

Do you see what we see? Or do you see something else? More specifically, can you tell us what the characters are on the last line of this column of text? What manner of thing is this? (click to embiggen) Leave…

A peek into the Conservation Lab
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A peek into the Conservation Lab

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Author
The Collation

Ever wonder what the conservators are up to on our third floor? Here’s a peek into what’s happening in the Werner Gundersheimer Conservation Laboratory this month: The team is in full treatment mode for the Library’s upcoming exhibition, “Symbols of Honor: Heraldry…

Continuing the celebration: Preserving birthday-related digital ephemera
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Continuing the celebration: Preserving birthday-related digital ephemera

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Author
Jaime McCurry

Taking a break from birthday festivities in the Folger Cataloging Office. It’s official: the Bard doesn’t look a day over 425. 450 years have now passed since William Shakespeare’s birth and it’s clear he is just as relevant and as…

Cataloging questions: How should we display variant titles?
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Cataloging questions: How should we display variant titles?

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Author
Erin Blake

Do you use Hamnet, the Folger’s online catalog? Do you want to help make it better? Of course you do! This is the first in what I hope will be an ongoing series of conversations designed to keep me from…

Buzz or honey? Shakespeare's Beehive raises questions
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Buzz or honey? Shakespeare's Beehive raises questions

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Author
Heather Wolfe Michael Witmore

Shakespeare’s birthday week begins with a bang: two New York booksellers, George Koppelman and Daniel Wechsler, announced that they have found Shakespeare’s dictionary. In their new book, Shakespeare’s Beehive, Koppelman and Wechsler present their reasons for believing that William Shakespeare…

Waste not, want not
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Waste not, want not

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Author
Sarah Werner

As all three commenters worked out, this month’s crocodile image is of printer’s waste used as endleaves. You can see the end of the book on the left side of the opening below (note the “finis” marking the end of…

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