ChatterBank5 mins ago
How To Describe Old Books (Help)
7 Answers
I volunteer in a Oxfam book and music shop. Part of my job is to list books that we wish to sell online.
I know what Foxing is but can anyone advise me if any other words or phrases that I might want to use?
Newer books are simpler to describe but the donated books can sometimes be a hundred or so years old.
Thanks to anyone who can help.
I know what Foxing is but can anyone advise me if any other words or phrases that I might want to use?
Newer books are simpler to describe but the donated books can sometimes be a hundred or so years old.
Thanks to anyone who can help.
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Ozzy has largely got it covered. I'll just add the following:
In several decades of reading the 'Book Collector' magazine, I've hardly ever seen 'DJ' ('dust jacket') used by any professional bookseller. It's nearly always 'DW' ('dust wrapper').
'Poor', as indication of condition, is often substituted by 'reading copy only'.
The absence of something like 'second edition' at the front of a book doesn't necessarily mean that it's a first edition. The date of publication (crosss-checked against the British Library catalogue) is a far better indicator:
http:// explore .bl.uk/ primo_l ibrary/ libweb/ action/ search. do?vid= BLVU1
Occasionally a bookseller will choose to indicate the size of a volume, using terms such as 'quarto' or 'octavo'. (That's particularly so where the illustrations in a book are as important as , or even more important than, the text). The meanings of such terms can be found here:
https:/ /en.wik ipedia. org/wik i/Book_ size#Co mmon_fo rmats_a nd_size s
Illustrated pages are commonly referred to as 'plates'. With some books, such as large Victorian volumes on ornithology or botany, the money that can be made by selling the plates individually can greatly exceed the privce that can be obtained by selling a book as a whole (but seek advice before cutting up a possibly valuable book!)
In several decades of reading the 'Book Collector' magazine, I've hardly ever seen 'DJ' ('dust jacket') used by any professional bookseller. It's nearly always 'DW' ('dust wrapper').
'Poor', as indication of condition, is often substituted by 'reading copy only'.
The absence of something like 'second edition' at the front of a book doesn't necessarily mean that it's a first edition. The date of publication (crosss-checked against the British Library catalogue) is a far better indicator:
http://
Occasionally a bookseller will choose to indicate the size of a volume, using terms such as 'quarto' or 'octavo'. (That's particularly so where the illustrations in a book are as important as , or even more important than, the text). The meanings of such terms can be found here:
https:/
Illustrated pages are commonly referred to as 'plates'. With some books, such as large Victorian volumes on ornithology or botany, the money that can be made by selling the plates individually can greatly exceed the privce that can be obtained by selling a book as a whole (but seek advice before cutting up a possibly valuable book!)
Thanks guys.
I had wiki on my list of places to go but I hadn't got there yet.
You are right about some of the illustrations, Chris, some of them are set works in their own right.
We sold a book at auction for £1500 recently.
We currently have a 50% off sale online (on our website) if anyone is interested.
G'night from Frankie and me x
I had wiki on my list of places to go but I hadn't got there yet.
You are right about some of the illustrations, Chris, some of them are set works in their own right.
We sold a book at auction for £1500 recently.
We currently have a 50% off sale online (on our website) if anyone is interested.
G'night from Frankie and me x
-- answer removed --
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