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36 results from Collation on

New acquisitions

New acquisitions to the Folger collections
The Return of the Prodigal Painting(s)
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The Return of the Prodigal Painting(s)

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Author
Erin Blake

I’d guess that few people look at Appendix III in the back of William L. Pressly, Catalogue of Paintings in the Folger Shakespeare Library (Yale University Press, 1993). Appendix III is unillustrated, not very detailed, and rather depressing: it’s the list…

News of St. Bartholomew's Day, 1572
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News of St. Bartholomew's Day, 1572

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Author
Erin Blake

When the Swann Auction Gallery catalog for the March 15 sale crossed my desk, I flipped through as usual, looking for things that might fit the Folger’s collection development policy. I wasn’t paying too much attention, since it was primarily…

Dye to live, live to dye
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Dye to live, live to dye

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Author
Heather Wolfe Margaret Hannay

The Folger has recently acquired some interesting hybrid books; that is, books which consist of a mixture of thematically-connected printed, manuscript, and graphic material gathered from a variety of sources into a single binding. Sidney scholar and Folger reader Margaret…

Another (sort of) happy reunion...
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Another (sort of) happy reunion...

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Author
Heather Wolfe

A few months ago I wrote about the joys of bringing together parts of an archive or collection that had gone astray, and provided three recent examples (Manuscript reunions).  Well, it has happened again, but this time, the story is…

Librarians gone wild: an alternative spring break
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Librarians gone wild: an alternative spring break

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Author
Sarah Wingo

A guest post by Sarah Wingo I am a student working towards my Masters of Science in Information from the University of Michigan’s School of Information (UM-SI).  I recently had the opportunity, along with six of my peers, to volunteer…

The road to Acquisitions Night 2012
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The road to Acquisitions Night 2012

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Author
Erin Blake

This Thursday is Acquisitions Night, the annual benefit to support Folger collections. It’s something of a three-ring circus: buffet dinner in the Great Hall, conservation demonstrations at one end of the Paster Reading Room, and—in the center ring—dozens of newly-acquired…

Manuscript reunions
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Manuscript reunions

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Author
Heather Wolfe

Sometimes we come across a manuscript on the market that looks vaguely familiar, and sends us scrambling to Hamnet to figure out why. I was reminded of this last week when a bookseller offered us a “naval return for Queen…

A Trip to the Fair
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A Trip to the Fair

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Author
Erin Blake

Every November, the International Fine Print Dealers’ Association (IFPDA) holds a fair at the Park Avenue Armory in Manhattan. Colloquially known as the New York Print Fair, almost 100 dealers from the US, Canada, and Europe bring a selection from…

Interrogating a hermit
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Interrogating a hermit

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Author
Heather Wolfe

Three months ago the Folger was lucky enough to acquire a letter from Thomas Cromwell to George Talbot, earl of Shrewsbury. I say lucky because while roughly 350 letters from Cromwell survive, almost all of them are at either the…

From printing house to coffee house
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From printing house to coffee house

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Author
Heather Wolfe

Last Friday a much-anticipated package arrived at the Folger, containing a series of fifteen deeds describing the successive ownership of two adjacent properties on Fleet Street (“The King’s Highway”) in London from 1543 to 1735. Deeds can be tedious to…

Sue Doggett's The Tempest, a unique artists' book
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Sue Doggett's The Tempest, a unique artists' book

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Author
Erin Blake

Conventional wisdom sets up two distinct experiences of Shakespeare’s plays: readers encountering a text, and audiences encountering a performance. The Folger recently acquired a 1995 version of The Tempest by London book artist Sue Doggett that complicates the distinction. Readers…

Much Ado about Eighty-Two
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Much Ado about Eighty-Two

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Author
Steve Galbraith

Seventy-nine.  In the same year the Folger Shakespeare Library turns seventy-nine years old, it updates a number that since the founding of the library has helped define the strength of its collection. It’s the number that was found on all…

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