michaelmoonsbookshop:Original 19th Century Poster In the latter part of the 19th Century, Mayson’s o
michaelmoonsbookshop:Original 19th Century Poster In the latter part of the 19th Century, Mayson’s of lake Road Keswick, had a model made of the lake district, this poster was the advertisement for that model..According to the poster ‘The Model has been constructed mathematically from the Ordnance Survey, after great labour and at a heavy cost. It contains 120 square feet, the horizontal and vertical scales being 6 inches to one mile and coloured to nature. All the Mountains, Lakes, Tarns, Waterfalls, Rivers, and their tributaries; Woods, Roads, Villages, Villas, etc are all correctly delineated.’‘Parties visiting the Model will see the correct topography of the Lake District, and can thereby readily plan either long or short excursions as time will permit. They will also gain a better idea of the whole of the Lake Country than is to be obtained from any other source. Open at 8am and lighted during the summer months admission one shilling each' This Poster was a printed advert for the model and is a very scarce survivor in fine bright original condition undamaged by exposure to sunlight. Printed by McFarlane & Erskine Lithogrs Edinburgh - the lettering is highlighted in gold ink. The design shows style shows the Victorian ‘Fern Craze’ known as Pteridomania; a phrase that was coined by Charles Kingsley. This Design and given some of the the other information we have re the model’s construction dates the poster to be in late 1870’s/early 1880’s. A precursor to the later art nouveau style which tends to be asymmetrical, the ferns appear to be both inside (at the top) and outside (at the bottom) an imagined border giving a feeling of three dimensions.In the days following the original ‘picturesque movement’ early tourists flocked to new destinations like Keswick to explore the beautiful scenery - before the increasingly common use of the ordnance survey maps by members of the public - (made much more popular by the new bicycle’s), what better way to plan an excursion than to visualise it in three dimensions. -- source link