HAVE you ever asked yourself ‘I wonder where I put that book, did I lend it to someone?’ Books are valuable to us, emotionally, financially and as a source of information. They may have an appealing content, they may be rare, they may be expensively produced— or all three. Even in the age of e-reading via tablets, real books mean something to us and we do not like losing them. The bookplate is an artistic way of solving a practical problem. It allows the marking of a book as someone’s property by means of a printed piece of paper stuck in the front of the volume.
Bookplates range from the highly decorative, featuring the heraldic devices, favourite pets or pastimes of the owner in exquisite drawings, to the simple, proclaiming only the owner’s name (usually known as ‘book labels’). The design is most usually rendered in black-and-white print, on good-quality paper and—ideally—glued with a non-yellowing adhesive into the book. They usually bear the inscription Ex Libris, meaning ‘from the books of’, which is what they are called in Continental Europe.
Esta historia es de la edición June 01, 2022 de Country Life UK.
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Esta historia es de la edición June 01, 2022 de Country Life UK.
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Put some graphite in your pencil
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Dulce et decorum est
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Heaven is a place on earth
For the women of the Bloomsbury group, their country gardens were places of refuge, reflection and inspiration, as well as a means of keeping loved ones close by, discovers Deborah Nicholls-Lee
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After recent renovations, this masterpiece of Harold Peto's garden-making must be counted one of the finest gardens in England
It's the plants, stupid
I WON my first prize for gardening when I was nine years old at prep school. My grandmother was delighted-it was she who had sent me the seeds of godetia, eschscholtzia and Virginia stock that secured my victory.
Pretty as a picture
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How golden was my valley
These four magnificent Cotswold properties enjoy splendid views of hill and dale
Mere moth or merveille du jour?
Moths might live in the shadows of their more flamboyant butterfly counterparts, but some have equally artistic names, thanks to a 'golden' group, discovers Peter Marren
The magnificent seven
The Mars Badminton Horse Trials, the oldest competition of its kind in the world, celebrates its 75th anniversary this weekend. Kate Green chooses seven heroic winners in its history
Angels in the house
Winged creatures, robed figures and celestial bodies are under threat in a rural church. Jo Caird speaks to the conservators working to save northern Europe's most complete Romanesque wall paintings