Ashendene Press
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The Ashendene Press was a small private press founded by St John Hornby (1867–1946). It operated from 1895 to 1915 in Chelsea, London, Chelsea, London and was revived after the war in 1920. The press closed in 1935. Its peers included the Kelmscott Press and the Doves Press. Hornby became friends with William Morris and Emery Walker, who helped inspire his work. These three presses were part of a "revival of fine printing" that focused on treating bookmaking as fine art. The Ashendene Press was famous for producing high-quality works by Dante Alighieri, Dante. Ashendene books had excellent bindings and focused more on pleasure than reform than the other private presses of the time, though one review claims that the Ashendene Press was the most successful private press in recapturing the essence of fifteenth-century printing. Ashendene books were carefully printed with large margins, and despite their lack of extravagant decoration, they were considered spectacular works of art. Two original Typeface, typefaces were created for the Ashendene Press: Subiaco and Ptolemy. They were known for handwritten, colored initials by Graily Hewitt. The press' main customers were book collectors who paid for a subscription for Ashendene books.


History

The printing press was originally set up in Hornby's father's estate, Ashendene, where his sisters, brother, and cousin could assist in printing the press' first books. Printing was a hobby for Hornby; he undertook the project solely for the pleasure it would bring him. Hornby moved the Ashendene Press with him when he moved to Shelley House, Chelsea, London in 1899. It closed for five years in 1915 but continued printing from 1920 until 1935. Hornby was greatly influenced and inspired by the work of the Kelmscott Press and the Doves Press, both in his decision to start the Ashendene Press and in his artistic choices. These three presses are considered part of the Private press#Private press_movement, Private Press Movement and the larger Arts and Crafts movement, Arts and Crafts Movement in England at the end of the 19th century, though for Hornby, printing was always a hobby to be enjoyed rather than a venue for reform. Each of these presses produced books that were considered works of art, though the Ashendene Press produced books of excellent quality inspired by fifteenth-century printing practices. The wood engraver William Harcourt Hooper worked for them from about 1896. Edward Prince, who also worked with the Kelmscott and Doves presses, cut types for Ashendene. Emery Walker worked with Hornby to design the press' two original types. Hornby worked with Sydney Cockerell to analyze the historic fonts on which the Ashendene Press fonts were based. Eric Gill, Graily Hewitt, Charles Gere, and Gwen Raverat were other artists who worked for the press. The illustrator Florence Kingsford Cockerell illuminated an Ashendene edition of ''The Song of Songs Which Is Solomon's'' in 1901, varying the designs for each of the 40-odd copies in the edition."Florence Kingsford"
Bridwell Library, Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University.
Hornby used Albion press, Albion presses. He used paper from J. Batchelor & Sons and vellum from H. Band & Co. Ashendene books were bound by Joseph Zaehnsdorf, Zaehnsdorf initially and later were done by the William Henry Smith (1825–1891), W. H. Smith bindery. The press' main customers were book collectors who paid for a subscription for Ashendene books. In addition to his impressive books, Hornby was known to print announcements, menus, and Christmas cards. Before the press closed in 1935, Hornby printed a farewell notice to his subscribers announcing that ''A Descriptive Bibliography of the Books Printed at the Ashendene Press'' would be the last book. Southern_Methodist_University#Libraries_and_museums, Bridwell Library now holds archives for the Ashendene Press in their special collections, a collection that includes papers, original designs, manuscripts, correspondence, ledgers, and folios.


Design

Initially, Hornby used fonts of the History_of_Western_typography#Fell_types, Fell type, but most Ashendene editions used one of two fonts which were specially cast for the Press: Subiaco Press, Subiaco, which was based on a fifteenth-century Italian type cast by Arnold Pannartz and Konrad Sweynheim in Subiaco, Italy, and to a lesser extent Ptolemy. Morris originally planned to design a type based on Pannartz and Sweynheim's work, but abandoned the project. Hornby, who didn't consider himself a designer, paid for the project to be completed, named the font Subiaco, and used it in the Ashendene Press for more than 20 years. The original Pannartz and Sweynheim type had rather gothic characteristics but the Ashendene version eliminated the Long s, long "s" and completely redesigned the "k," "w" and "y." The font Ptolemy was created for the press' edition of ''Don Quixote'' and was based on the type used for a printing of Ptolemy's Geography (Ptolemy), Geographia in 1482. Ptolemy was cut mechanically, unlike Subiaco which had been made by Edward Prince. Of the two types, Subiaco was darker but Ptolemy was more readable. Today, both Subiaco and Ptolemy are owned by Cambridge University Press. Many Ashendene books featured printer's marks. One of Hornby's marks depicted two men working a printing press and read "Les hommes sont meschants mais leurs livres sont bons." The books also featured handwritten initials by Graily Hewitt and other artists. Some Ashendene books, such as that by St. Francis of Assisi, were illustrated with wood-engravings, but the majority were printed solely using type.


Works


''Tutte le Opere di Dante Alighieri''

Hornby dedicated almost a decade to printing Dante's works. The first appearance of the Subiaco type was in 1905 when the press printed Dante's Inferno. The Ashendene Inferno received high praise in the The New York Times, New York Times from Theodore Low De Vinne, Theodore de Vinne, who said that Subiaco was "the most satisfactory reproduction of a fifteenth-century face that has yet appeared." Four years later, the Ashendene Press published the complete works of Dante under the title ''Tutte le Opere di Dante Alighieri'', also in Subiaco, which is considered to be one of the greatest works by an English private press along with the Kelmscott's Kelmscott_Press#Kelmscott_Chaucer, Chaucer and the Doves' Bible for its precision, clearness, readability, and artistry. The press printed 6 copies on vellum and 105 copies on paper. The text on each page was divided into two columns and featured red print for initials, headings, and notes. Paper copies were printed on Batchelor's paper with Ashendene's bugle watermark.


''Poems Written in the Year MCMXII by Robert Bridges Poet-Laureate''

Robert Bridges had previously published his works with the Daniel Press, but in 1915 he reached out to the Ashendene Press with twelve new poems. Hornby had a reputation for excellent printing that Bridges trusted enough with his new work. This publication was the press' only work of literary significance since it was the original printing of these poems. Some copies featured blue initials, some red, others only black. The book was printed in quarto size and bound in blue paper boards with linen backing. Eighty-five copies were printed on paper and six on vellum, but none were for sale. Bridges had requested only enough copies for him to give to his friends.


''Daphnis et Chloé''

The press experienced ruin when their first attempt at printing ''Daphnis et Chloé'' on Japanese vellum was folded before the ink had dried completely. The ''Descriptive Bibliography of the Ashendene Press'' featured a leaf from this ruined printing. ''Daphnis et Chloé'' was reprinted on Batchelor paper in 1933. This edition featured blue initials by Hewitt, wood engravings by Raverat, and Monotype Pastonic italic, a typeface not used by the Ashendene Press elsewhere. Two hundred and ninety copies were printed on paper and bound with green paper boards while twenty copies were printed on vellum and bound in blue or green pigskin.


Bibliography

This is a list of books printed, published, or sold by the Ashendene Press. The years listed refer to the year the book was printed by the Ashendene Press, not necessarily the year it was initially published. * ''The Journal of Joseph Hornby, February-March 1815'' (1895) * ''La Vita Nuova'' by Dante (1895) * ''Ye Minutes of ye CLXXVIIthe Meeting of ye Sette of Odd Volumes'' (1896) * ''Three Poems of John Milton'' (1896) * ''Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam'' (1896) * '' The Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus'' (1897) * ''Ecclesiastes, The Book of Ecclesiastes'' (1897) * ''Essays (Francis Bacon), Two Essays of Francis Bacon, Francis Lord Bacon'' (1897) * ''The Prologue to the The Canterbury Tales, Tales of Caunterbury'' by Geoffrey Chaucer (1897) * ''Three Elegies: Lycidas, Adonais, Thyris'' (1899) * ''Aucassin and Nicolette, The Song-Story of Aucassin and Nicolete'' translated by Andrew Lang (1900) * ''Book of Revelation, The Boke off the Revelacion off Sanct Jhon the Devine'' (1901) * ''Inferno (Dante), Inferno'' by Dante (1902-1905) * ''Song of Songs, The Song of Solomon'' (1902) * ''Quinti Horati Flacci Alcaica; Carmina Sapphica'' (1903) * ''A Treatyse of Fysshynge wyth an Angle'' (1903) * ''A Book of Songs and Poems from the Old Testament and the Apocrypha'' (1904) * ''Un Mazzetto Scelto di Certi Fioretti di San Francesco'' (1904) * ''Purgatorio di Dante'' (1904) * ''Paradiso di Dante'' (1905) * ''Utopia (book), Utopia'' by Thomas More (1906) * ''The Story without an End'' (1909) * ''Tutte le Opere di Dante Alighieri'' (1909) * ''Publii Vergilii Maronis Opera'' (1910) * ''Le Morte d'Arthur, Morte Darthur'' by Sir Thomas Malory (1912) * ''T. Lucreti Cari de Rerum Natura'' (1913) * ''Poems Written in the Year MCMXII by Robert Bridges Poet-Laureate'' (1915) * ''Il Decameron di Giovanni Boccaccio'' (1920) * ''Refugees in Chelsea'' by Henry James (1920) * ''Vita di S. Chiara Vergine'' by Ugolino Verino (1921) * ''Little Flowers of St. Francis, I Fioretti di S. Francesco'' by Francis of Assisi, St. Francis of Assisi (1922) * ''The Faerie Queene, The Faerie Queen'' by Edmund Spenser (1923) * ''The Golden Asse of Lucius Apuleius'' (1924) * ''The Young King & Other Tales'' by Oscar Wilde (1924) * ''The Minor Poems'' by Edmund Spenser (1925) * ''Don Quixote, The History of Don-Quixote'' by Miguel de Cervantes (1927-1928) * ''Thucydides: History of the Peloponnesian War'' translated by B. Jowett (1930) * ''Book of Sirach, The Book of Ecclesiasticus'' (1932) * ''Daphnis et Chloé'' by Maurice Ravel (1933) * ''A Descriptive Bibliography of the Books Printed at The Ashendene Press'' (1935)


References


See also


Image of Ashendene's edition
of ''The Faerie Queene'', located at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee. *Double Crown Club, The Double Crown Club
Bridwell Library's Special Collections
located at Southern Methodist University {{Authority control Small press publishing companies Book publishing companies of the United Kingdom Publishing companies established in 1895 Publishing companies established in 1920 British companies established in 1895 British companies established in 1920 Publishing companies disestablished in 1915 Publishing companies disestablished in 1935 Publishing companies based in London Re-established companies Harold B. Lee Library-related rare books articles