1,500 armorial services are described. With 1,880 color illustratios.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Shipping:
US$ 17.78
From United Kingdom to U.S.A.
Shipping:
US$ 44.04
From Portugal to U.S.A.
Seller: R.G. Watkins Books and Prints, Ilminster, SOMER, United Kingdom
Hardcover. Condition: As new. 1,880 colour illustrations; 1,500 armorial services described, General Index and 50-page comprehensive Index of Services covering both volumes; 904pp. 4to (282 x 216mm) orig. dark blue buckram, This second volume of the standard work on the subject unlike the first volume it has the armorials all illustrated in colour. It also has all the appendices reprinted and updated.It has a new introduction and four illustrated chapters on aspects of the China Trade: Reflections, Replacements, Reproductions and Revival Of Counters, Carriages and BookplatesArmorial Porcelain for Scotland and the role of the Swedish East India Company Chinese Armorial Porcelain: The Market during the last Century and in the Future.Has The Laws of Blazon, and a chapter on understanding heraldry.Together with a comprehensive analysis and classification of styles and dates of armorial porcelain; 16 appendices including details of directors, captains, ship-owners and merchants of the Hon. East India Company; Governors of Madras, Bombay and Bengal; Lords Mayor of London and city livery companies; analysis of owners of services; bookplate originals for services; and a complete list of mottoes recorded in both volumes. Seller Inventory # RGW19485
Quantity: 1 available
Seller: Jorge Welsh Books, Lisboa, Portugal
Hardcover. Condition: New. Dust Jacket Included. 1st Edition. English text; Hardcover dark blue buckram with dust jacket in slipcase; 22.9 x 29.3 cm; 4.313 Kg; 904 pages with 1,880 colour illustrations, 1,500 armorial services described; STILL WRAPPED IN PLASTIC.; Foreword by Peter Ll. Gwynn-Jones, CVO, Garter Principal King of Arms.; In 1974 Faber & Faber published Chinese Armorial Porcelain which has remained the most comprehensive book on the subject. At that time David Howard did not anticipate the need for a second volume; however, continued research has resulted in this book which illustrates 1,380 services not illustrated in Volume I, in addition to the 160 services which formed the addendum to that volume. The material in Chinese Armorial Porcelain Volume II is almost entirely additional to the first volume, containing a new introduction and four new chapters on aspects of the China Trade. All the appendices are revised and extended and the index of mottoes and index of services cover both volumes (the later containing an alphabetical list of over 4,000 services - more than 3,320 illustrated and 680 unillustrated - all made for the British or American market). This is an essential companion for those who own the first volume but this book certainly stands on its own and, as Garter King of Arms writes in the foreword, 'is an astounding work - destined to be a major reference source in the future'. While the book relies heavily on the evidence of armorials and their ability to date, sometimes to the exact year, when a service was made, it also throws extra light on to the whole China Trade which was an integral part of the commercial success of the 18th Century Britain. The details of captains and supercargoes and the record of the sheer volume of trade which attended the growth of the largest company the world has ever known - the Honourable East India Company - provide a reliable and accurate backdrop to many other events in the 18th Century. This also enables researchers to use the evidence of heraldry and the 1,980 illustrations (all but 100 in colour) to date many stylistic changes of porcelain in a way which, because of the lack Chinese records of the export trade, would not otherwise be possible. Publication of the first volume led to a reassessment of the scale of this specialist porcelain trade which was handled, almost exclusively, by private traders working with framework of the East India Company. Details of what these merchants purchased are not recorded in the India Office Library and it is only possible to gauge their influence on trade and decorative etiquette in Europe by studying what they brought home - some 12,000 miles by sea - at a time when travel was far less certain than it is today. The chapters in this book explain not only the natural but also the political risks of trading in the 18th Century. To many, this volume will provide the moment when the identity of a piece of porcelain is revealed. While the book, with its considerable index of mottoes and cross-references to both volumes, will fulfill that need, in his foreword Garter King of Arms concludes, 'Unlike so many works on an esoteric subject, this had the aesthetic combined with the heraldic and genealogical to ensure a wider base of popular support - from the connoisseur to the armorist and from the collector of works of art to the social historian.'.;Containing: Introduction and four illustrated chapters on aspects of the China Trade: 1.Reflections, Replacements, Reproductions and Revival, 2.Of Counters, Carriages and Bookplates, 3.Armorial Porcelain for Scotland and the role of the Swedish East India Company, 4.Chinese Armorial Porcelain: The Market during the last Century and in the Future and The Laws of Blazon, a chapter on understanding heraldry. Together with a comprehensive analysis and classification of styles and dates of armorial porcelain.General Index and 50-page comprehensive Index of Services. Seller Inventory # 199B
Quantity: 1 available
Seller: Newbury Books, Atlanta, GA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Fine. 1st. inscribed by author; in fine slipcase. Dust jacket in clear protector. 1,500 armorial services are described. With 1,880 color illustrations. 900pp 9.71lb 11.9x9.3x2.7in EXTRA SHIPPING CHARGES NECESSARY. Inscribed by Author(s). Seller Inventory # 25197
Quantity: 1 available