Katherine Beaty (Harvard): Italian Stationery Binding Lecture

Date and Time

November 17, 2017
04:00PM - 05:00PM EST

Location

90 Mt. Auburn Street, Cambridge, Room 021

Harvard Library Preservation Services invites you to attend the following event:

 

Italian Stationery Binding Lecture

by Katherine Beaty

 

Friday., November 17, 2017
4.00  - 5.00 pm

90 Mt. Auburn Street, Cambridge, Room 021.

 

medici

      Baker Library, Medici 544 v.1 front cover, spine and tail.

 

The Harvard Business School’s Baker Library houses the largest collection of early Italian business records outside of Italy.  It includes 150 account books and day books of the Medici Family, 81 volumes from the Barberini Family, and many more.  Presenter Katherine Beaty will talk about the use and structure of early Italian stationery bindings that were observed during recent conservation projects of the Medici and Barberini collections.  These unique limp vellum bindings include unusual structural features, such as overbands, decorative alum-tawed lacings, spine and endband tackets, and different fastenings types, including ties, loop and toggle, and buckles.  This lecture is presented in conjunction with a workshop on Italian tacketed stationery bindings hosted by the New England Chapter of the Guild of Bookworkers. 

 

Presenter Katherine Beaty is a rare book conservator in the Weissman Preservation Center for the Harvard Libraries.  For the past 10 years, Katherine has been treating rare books from the Harvard library collection, with a special interest in parchment, Islamic and non-western books, and investigating historical book structures.  Over the last four years, she has been conserving early Italian account books from the Harvard’s Business School’s Baker Library Historical Collections.  Katherine earned her M.A. from the Buffalo State College Art Conservation program with a specialization in book conservation.

 

No RSVP needed.  Questions?  Email preserve_wpc@harvard.edu

 

Interested in more Preservation Services events? See our website:

http://library.harvard.edu/preservation-services