![L'office de la semaine saincte, corrig par le commandement du Roy: conformment au Brviaire & Messel de Ntre S. Pere le Pape [Urban VIII]. Paris: Charles Fosset and Denis Chenault, [1680?].](https://www.christies.com/img/LotImages/1999/NYR/1999_NYR_09178_0047_000(115052).jpg?w=1)
細節
L'office de la semaine saincte, corrig par le commandement du Roy: conformment au Brviaire & Messel de Ntre S. Pere le Pape [Urban VIII]. Paris: Charles Fosset and Denis Chenault, [1680?].
8o (193 x 118 mm). Additional engraved title, printer's woodcut device on title, 2 engraved plates by Charles Fosset after Le Febvre. Ruled in red throughout. Early 18th-century red morocco gilt by Antoine-Michel Padeloup, covers with strapwork decor on a ground of massed pointill spirals and volutes, the stamped arms of Louis XIV within central oval cartouche, fleur-de-lis stamps at corners, spine in six compartments with royal arms and fleurs-de-lis, board edges and turn-ins gilt, gilt edges, marbled endpapers (discreet restoration to tail of spine and lower joint, 4 tiny wormholes at joints); board slipcase. Provenance: Ren Descamps-Scrive (bookplate, sale Paris, Part I, 23 March 1925, lot 68).
A FINE EARLY BINDING BY ANTOINE-MICHEL PADELOUP, dated to circa 1705 by Raphal Esmerian. A.-M. Padeloup, called "Le Jeune" (1685-1758), was the third and greatest member of the Padeloup dynasty, and the outstanding French binder of the 18th century. Apprenticed with his father Michel before setting up his own shop in 1712, Padeloup decorated his earliest bindings in the still fashionable pointill style. Esmerian suggests that Padeloup's pointill tools may have originated in the shop of Pierre Rocolet, with whom his grandfather Antoine Padeloup (d. ca. 1666-1668) had been associated late in his career.
BM/STC French 17 L-1695. Binding: Esmrian sale, Part IIA, Douze tableaux synoptiques sur la reliure au XVIIe sicle , Annexe A, X ("Antoine-Michel Padeloup, environ de 1705 1738 pour les dcors pointills"), no. 5; E. Rahir, Catalogue de Reliures (Paris 1910) 162, pl. 27.
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A FINE EARLY BINDING BY ANTOINE-MICHEL PADELOUP, dated to circa 1705 by Raphal Esmerian. A.-M. Padeloup, called "Le Jeune" (1685-1758), was the third and greatest member of the Padeloup dynasty, and the outstanding French binder of the 18th century. Apprenticed with his father Michel before setting up his own shop in 1712, Padeloup decorated his earliest bindings in the still fashionable pointill style. Esmerian suggests that Padeloup's pointill tools may have originated in the shop of Pierre Rocolet, with whom his grandfather Antoine Padeloup (d. ca. 1666-1668) had been associated late in his career.
BM/STC French 17 L-1695. Binding: Esmrian sale, Part IIA, Douze tableaux synoptiques sur la reliure au XVII