Item Details
Description
"The Arabian Nights: Their Best Known Tales". Edited by Kate Douglas Wiggin and Nora A. Smith, illustrated with color plates by Maxfield Parrish, published by Charles Scribner's Sons, New York, First Edition, later printing. First Edition marks on the copyright page: Copyright 1909, "Published October, 1909" and Scribner's colophon on the copyright page. "MCMXXI" (1921) is imprinted on the title page. Complete with all 8 listed color plates by Maxwell Parrish present.
Hard boards, original publisher's cloth with Parrish's illustration on the front board [some wear, spine fade: see photos; 7" x 9.1/2"; illustrated endpapers, 339 pages + complete all 8 listed color plates on glossy paper by Parrish are present; very good condition [see photos].
Eugene Field (1850-1895), was an unusual poet. He was one of the few poets who wrote only children's poetry. That is how he got his nickname, The Children's Poet. Some of his most famous poems are "Wynken, Blynken, and Nod"; "The Duel"; and "Little Boy Blue"
Maxfield Parrish (1870-1966) was born in Philadelphia in 1870. His artistic talents were encouraged by his parents and though it was initially architecture that beckoned him, it was quite obvious that he would be an artist. His college work was remarkably sophisticated. In 1893 he approached Howard Pyle in hopes of getting instruction, but he was told that Pyle had nothing to teach him. Parrish audited a few of Pyle's classes at the Drexel Institute and came to the same conclusion. It was time to start a long and respected career. By 1900, Parrish was an established, successful artist with membership in the Society of American Artists, and a custom built studio on the New Hampshire-Vermont border.
Parrish art was in magazines, books and was receiving recognition in the exhibits and expositions. Most significantly, the public was enamored with his images. A trip to Arizona in early 1902 resulted in a suite of seven color plates that seem to have been crafted with the earliest versions of the new "varnish" technique above and capture the colors and light of the desert. Book illustrations were equally in demand. His post-1900 color output included: "Italian Villas and Their Gardens" and "Poems of Childhood" (1904), "The Arabian Nights" (1909), "A Wonder Book" and "Tanglewood Tales" (1910) and "The Knave of Hearts" (1925). He lived his entire life at his New Hampshire home/studio at The Oaks.
US: Priority (c 2-4 days) ------ $16.50
Canada: Priority (c.2-7 weeks) ----- $32.50
World: Priority (c.2-10 weeks) ----- $48.50
Hard boards, original publisher's cloth with Parrish's illustration on the front board [some wear, spine fade: see photos; 7" x 9.1/2"; illustrated endpapers, 339 pages + complete all 8 listed color plates on glossy paper by Parrish are present; very good condition [see photos].
Eugene Field (1850-1895), was an unusual poet. He was one of the few poets who wrote only children's poetry. That is how he got his nickname, The Children's Poet. Some of his most famous poems are "Wynken, Blynken, and Nod"; "The Duel"; and "Little Boy Blue"
Maxfield Parrish (1870-1966) was born in Philadelphia in 1870. His artistic talents were encouraged by his parents and though it was initially architecture that beckoned him, it was quite obvious that he would be an artist. His college work was remarkably sophisticated. In 1893 he approached Howard Pyle in hopes of getting instruction, but he was told that Pyle had nothing to teach him. Parrish audited a few of Pyle's classes at the Drexel Institute and came to the same conclusion. It was time to start a long and respected career. By 1900, Parrish was an established, successful artist with membership in the Society of American Artists, and a custom built studio on the New Hampshire-Vermont border.
Parrish art was in magazines, books and was receiving recognition in the exhibits and expositions. Most significantly, the public was enamored with his images. A trip to Arizona in early 1902 resulted in a suite of seven color plates that seem to have been crafted with the earliest versions of the new "varnish" technique above and capture the colors and light of the desert. Book illustrations were equally in demand. His post-1900 color output included: "Italian Villas and Their Gardens" and "Poems of Childhood" (1904), "The Arabian Nights" (1909), "A Wonder Book" and "Tanglewood Tales" (1910) and "The Knave of Hearts" (1925). He lived his entire life at his New Hampshire home/studio at The Oaks.
US: Priority (c 2-4 days) ------ $16.50
Canada: Priority (c.2-7 weeks) ----- $32.50
World: Priority (c.2-10 weeks) ----- $48.50
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Arabian Nights, 1stEd. 1921 Print, Maxfield Parrish Color Plates, Scribner
Estimate $150 - $250
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Item located in Petersburg, VA, US$16.5 shipping in the US
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Children's Books, Collectibles, Art, Prints
Petersburg, VA, USA
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