« Previous | Main

2009 Rare Book Calendar from 42-line

2009 Rare Book Calendar from 42-lineThe most striking printed gift I received this holiday season — being Jewish I get gifts a bit earlier than most of you — is the 2009 Rare Book Calendar from 42-line, a bay area firm that specializes in "digital publication services" for rare book dealers, libraries and book collectors. This means that 42-line deals with imaging, editing and other services related to the organization and archiving of books, manuscripts, photography, and other types of rare-materials collections.

The Calendar is small and of a non-standard shape — 11 inches tall by 6 inches wide — and would fit fine on a small bulletin board or hanging in even the tightest workspace. The structure, too, is somewhat unorthodox, or at least new to me: six pages have January through June on the front, at which time the calendar is flipped over, and July through December, printed on the rear, are then presented.

2009 Rare Book Calendar from 42-line

While the format is interesting and the typesetting is exceptionally clear (the principal type is Mark van Bronkhorst's subtly beautiful Verdigris, one of my favorite text faces of the last several years, and the calendar itself was designed by the type designer), the calendar is really about its illustrations: each month is accompanied by a printed reproduction from an important piece of bibliographic history. January's Giovanni Battista Ferrari copperplate engraving of an amaryllis is a beautiful example of 17th-century lettering and illustration, and some of them are very funny — Benjamin Warner's 1821 Tragi-Comic History of the Burial of Cock Robin, for example, and an engraving of a dog taking a very unfortunate swim by the always-surreal William Blake.

2009 Rare Book Calendar from 42-line

I feel like I must have done something to warrant such a nice gift, but I can't quite remember what it was. It's available for a mere $10 and is a good introduction to an interesting company.

More images of the 2009 Rare Book Calendar »

Posted by Joshua Lurie-Terrell | January 03, 2009 | LINK

Comments

Thanks for letting us know about this gorgeous calendar, Joshua. Just ordered mine and can't wait to receive it!

Thy Tran | Jan 9, 2009 07:02 PM

Beautiful--thank you for this tip!

Ashley McFarland | Jan 10, 2009 09:22 PM

Very desirable, if you — like me — spend too much time at Bibliodyssey

fredrik | Jan 11, 2009 11:55 PM

Fantastic link, Fredrik. Thank you!

Stephen Coles | Jan 12, 2009 12:35 AM

Really beautiful! Shall have to look at getting one.

Patrick McLaren | Jan 13, 2009 05:56 PM

Great gift, I would feel really glad to get that too! Congratulations. Hope you use it as much as can in this new year that has arrived with lost of prospect promises. Cheers from New Zealand!

Cezarlz | Jan 25, 2009 08:51 PM

awesome

designer | Feb 25, 2009 09:00 PM


Post a comment.

Your Name (Required.)


Your Email (Required. Will not be published.)


Your Website (Optional.)




Your Comments


Despaminator
Please enter the letter "b" in the box at left.



GUIDELINES
Please refrain from off-topic banter and personal attacks. Your comment may be edited or removed at the discretion of Typographica editors. Our goal is not to stifle debate but to keep it relevant.

HTML TAGS (Copy, paste, and replace the gray text with your own.)
Bold: <strong>Text</strong>
Italic: <em>Text</em>
Link: <a href="http://url">Linked text</a>
Insert Image: <img src="http://url/image.gif" />
(Please limit image width to 350 pixels.)