Dictionary

Press book
Press book is the older term for books published by private presses run on artisanal lines, that is, small workshops for composing and printing that did not produce for commercial purposes but rather for a small, select circle or even just for internal circulation. Press books figured prominently in late 19th-century England and America as part of the Arts and Crafts Movement (Kelmscott Press, William Morris), later also in Germany (Ernst-Ludwig-Presse) as a backlash against industrial mass production. More recently the term has been used for works printed in small, often severely limited editions following the tradition of the book as artwork movement.
Press book is the older term for books published by private presses run on artisanal lines, that is, small workshops for composing and printing that did not produce for commercial purposes but rather for a small, select circle or even just for internal circulation. Press books figured prominently in late 19th-century England and America as part of the Arts and Crafts Movement (Kelmscott Press, William Morris), later also in Germany (Ernst-Ludwig-Presse) as a backlash against industrial mass production. More recently the term has been used for works printed in small, often severely limited editions following the tradition of the book as artwork movement.
Offers for Bibliophilia
Headquarters
Joseph-Wild-Str. 18
81829 Munich
Phone: +49 89 55 244-0
Fax: +49 89 55 244-177
info@kettererkunst.de
Louisa von Saucken / Christoph Calaminus
Holstenwall 5
20355 Hamburg
Phone: +49 40 37 49 61-0
Fax: +49 40 37 49 61-66
infohamburg@kettererkunst.de
Dr. Simone Wiechers / Nane Schlage
Fasanenstr. 70
10719 Berlin
Phone: +49 30 88 67 53-63
Fax: +49 30 88 67 56-43
infoberlin@kettererkunst.de
Cordula Lichtenberg
Gertrudenstraße 24-28
50667 Cologne
Phone: +49 221 510 908-15
infokoeln@kettererkunst.de
Hessen
Rhineland-Palatinate
Miriam Heß
Phone: +49 62 21 58 80-038
Fax: +49 62 21 58 80-595
infoheidelberg@kettererkunst.de
We will inform you in time.