Ashendene Press
The Ashendene Press was a small private press founded by St John Hornby (1867–1946). It operated from 1895 to 1915 in Chelsea, and was revived after the war in 1920. The press closed in 1935.[1]
Most Ashendene editions used one of two fonts which were specially cast for the Press: Subiaco, which was based on a fifteenth-century Italian type cast by Arnold Pannartz and Konrad Sweynheim in Subiaco, Italy, and to a lesser extent Ptolemy.[2] Some Ashendene books, such as that by St. Francis of Assisi shown here, were illustrated with wood-engravings, but the majority were printed solely using type.
The wood engraver William Harcourt Hooper worked for them from about 1896.[3]
The illustrator Florence Kingsford Cockerell illuminated an Ashendene edition of The Song of Songs Which Is Solomon's in 1901, varying the designs for each of the 40-odd copies in the edition.[4]
References
- William S. Peterson, The Kelmscott Press (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991), 282.
- R. O. B., "The Ashendene Press 'Don Quixote,' 1927–28," Huntington Library Quarterly 3 (1945), 321–322.
- "Guide to the William Harcourt Hooper Papers". University of Iowa Libraries. Retrieved 4 October 2014.
- "Florence Kingsford". Bridwell Library, Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University.
External links
- Image of Ashendene's edition of The Faerie Queene, located at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee.