Color Pictorial Paper Bindings on 19th-Century Picture Books

Over the last few months, I’ve been selecting the illustrations for the forthcoming third volume of the Cotsen catalogue, which will describe over 5,000 children’s books published between 1800 and 1899.  It’s been enormous fun to get acquainted with the hidden jewels of nineteenth-century graphic design.  I’ve been especially delighted by example after example of  books bound in boards covered with paper color-printed with magnificent illustrations.

In the following three front covers the artists have transformed the front boards into posters.  I also like them as different representations of  children learning to see.

Pracht-ABC-Buch. Stuttgart: H. Müller’s Kunstverlag, [1868]. (Cotsen 5808)

Wilhelm von Breitschwert’s  cover design for Pracht-ABC: das schonste Bilderbuch, (ca. 1868) puts a new spin on an old theme in educational illustrations: teaching children with paintings or wall charts.  The gigantic picture book is a free-standing gallery whose pages can be explored by any number of children.  Dominating the composition is the mother holding a baby on her shoulder to whom she points out (and presumably explains) different images.   Another of her toddlers tugs at her skirt, anxious for his turn to begin.

Alexander Pock’s Bilderbuch für die Jugend. Wien: Verlag der Gesellschaft für Vervielfältigende Kunst, [1899]. (Cotsen 10986)

The interplay between the animals and the humans in Alexander Pock’s cover is deliciously complicated.   The family is standing with their backs to the viewer as they watch a program of short subjects posted to the right.   A natty fox is pointing to one currently on display–a fox chasing a boy caught out in a lie–but it’s unclear if it’s a magic lantern show, a moving panorama or a film.  The chimpanzee in the hat tries to catch the eye of the boy next to him, hoping for a hand-out.  The bear and eagle in the niches above the standing figures look over their heads, but the viewer has no idea what they are see in the distance to the right.

A Travers l’Exposition. Paris: Librairie de Theódore Lefev̀re et Cie, Émile Guérin, [1889?]. (Cotsen 43278)

The children’s heads are literally bursting through a map of the 1889 Paris Exposition universelle, which they will “tour” via the picture book.  The Tour Eiffel (unfinished at the event’s opening) marked the entrance to the spectacle and is likewise the gateway into this illustrated account of the shows that were on display inside.  Of course in the plates, the brother and sister are accompanied by their chic maman, but the cover holds out the liberating prospect of wandering around on their own.

There are plenty more where these bindings came from–and some of the best of the best will be illustrated in the Cotsen catalogue when it comes out at the end of this year.

Hair Cuts, Styles and Products in Children’s Books

Long or short, curly or straight, black or blonde, hair influences how people see themselves and how others regard them.  That’s one reason why changing hair styles is profoundly upsetting–it may radically alter a person’s self-image.

For girl characters in the nineteenth century, it was rarely for the better because of the social expectation to wear hair long.  Remember Anne Shirley’s humiliation after she dyes her auburn tresses green and has to accept that there is no choice except for Marilla to closely crop them.  Or Jo March shearing off her hair to earn a $25 contribution towards her father’s comfort while he regains his health.   Camille, the heroine of Le parrain de Cendrillon, chops off her magnificent dark hair on a dare from her brother.  Of course he laughs and tells her how ugly she looks.

Louis Ulbach, La parrain de Cendrillon. Illustrated by E. Bayard. Paris: J. Hetzel et Cie and Calmann-Levy, 1888. (Cotsen 60200)

Grown men disgraced by their thinning hair can be ridiculed just as heartlessly as  girls with short hair, especially when they turn to unguents that promise to replant the “waste places of the human cranium.”   Carrot-Pomade by American illustrator Augustus Hoppin is an alphabetical history of the “origin and performances” of one such wondrous remedy.

Augustus Hoppin, Carrot-Pomade. New York: James G. Gregory, 1864. (Cotsen 2323)

Handsome young men with full heads of hair, on the other hand, are ridiculed for their vanity.  Here is the dandy Cadet Roussel, a famous character in traditional French song.

Cadet-Roussel adapte par F. de Grammont d’apres les ancient textes a l’usage de la jeunesse. Illustrated by Lorenz Froelich. Paris: H. Hetzel et Cie, 1877. (Cotsen 4970)

The careless elegance of his coiffeur cannot be maintained without setting his hair in curl papers morning and evening.   An emblem of male vanity, if there ever were one…    

But not an emblem  of proverbial Gallic vanity.  In the fourth plate of William Hogarth’s Marriage-a-la-Mode (1745) “The Toilette,” one of Lady Squanderfield’s hangers-on appears in curl papers…  He is seated, legs crossed, by the flute player at the far right.

Curl papers are still used by modern women who want rippling locks without the use of heat or harsh chemicals.