Ernest Nister

Ernest Nister (1841–1906) was a publisher and printer of movable books for children and paper ephemera such as greeting cards, post cards, and calendars. He was born in Darmstadt, Germany and later had an office in London.[1] He refined the techniques used in the design of "magic windows," "dissolving picture," and pop-up books, publishing them from his firm based in Nuremberg, a toy-making center of the nineteenth century.[2][3]

Nister, Airship-00

Types of books

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Although not the first to invent pop-up books, he was the first to invent automatic pop-up books. Before Nister, pop-ups had to be manually maneuvered into an upright position.[4] "Pop-up books" is a term sometimes applied to other movable books, volvelles, tunnel books, pull tabs, and other varied forms of paper engineering; similar techniques such as die cutting and embossing are often also used in greeting cards. Children's books with movable parts are subject to the play of children and may not work properly after heavy use. Older mechanical books in library or personal collections can be preserved by professional conservators.[5] The older original first edition books by Ernest Nister can be found in antiquarian book stores and the archives of Library rare book collections.

Editing

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It is not known exactly how much of his own drawing he contributed to the illustrations of the books he edited and printed, but he would sometimes remove an artist's name and replace it with his own.[6] Louis Wain, known for his anthropomorphic cats, was one of the illustrators who worked for Nister. In 1894, Beatrix Potter sold a series of verses and illustrations to Nister for his Changing Pictures series.

Marketing

In addition to the German books, an English version was produced for Nister's London office and an American version, working with Edward Payson Dutton, for Dutton Publishing, his American publisher.[7] Vintage chromolithographically printed postcards of Father Christmas by Nister are now sold on Etsy, Amazon, AbeBooks and eBay.

gollark: I had actually expected codegen to take way longer before looking into this stuff in much detail (pre-Codex).
gollark: Employment-ly.
gollark: I aim to go into computer things in some way.
gollark: I guess text to image might ultimately delete artists or something.
gollark: Voice synthesis would be way more havoc-y.

References

  1. "Ernest Nister: Maker of Movable Books |". www.pigtailsinpaint.com. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  2. "Pop Goes the Page". University of Virginia Library. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  3. Texas, Rare Books and Texana, University of North Texas Libraries, State of. "UNT Libraries: Pop-up and Movable Books: A Tour Through Their History, Ernest Nister". www.library.unt.edu. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  4. "Ernest Nister: Maker of Movable Books |". pigtailsinpaint.org. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  5. "Preservation of Pop Up and Movable Books, Conserving the Past (Baldwin Library Exhibit)". 1 October 2008. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  6. "Pop Goes the Page". University of Virginia Library. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  7. Texas, Rare Books and Texana, University of North Texas Libraries, State of. "UNT Libraries: Pop-up and Movable Books: A Tour Through Their History, Ernest Nister". www.library.unt.edu. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
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