black and white antique illustration shows little boy broken wheelbarrow vintage marvellous

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Black and white antique illustration shows a little boy repearing a broken wheelbarrow. Vintage marvellous illustration Royalty Free Stock Photo
Black and white antique illustration shows a little boy and a broken wheelbarrow. Vintage marvellous illustration shows Royalty Free Stock Photo
Black and white antique illustration shows a little boy and a broken wheelbarrow. Vintage marvellous illustration shows Royalty Free Stock Photo
   
   
   
   
Black and white antique illustration shows a little boy and a broken wheelbarrow. Vintage marvellous illustration shows
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
Black and white antique illustration shows a little boy and a broken wheelbarrow. Vintage marvellous illustration shows a small boy and the broken wheelbarrow. Old fabulous picture from fairytale book. Storybook illustration published 1910. From the early 1800s newspapers, mass-market magazines, and illustrated books had become the dominant consumer media in Europe and the New World. By the 19th century, developments in printing technology freed illustrators to experiment with color and rendering techniques. These developments in printing affected all areas of literature from cookbooks, photography and travel guides, as well as children& x27;s books. Also, due to advances in printing, it became more affordable to produce color photographs within books and other materials. By 1900, almost 100 percent of paper was machine-made, and while a person working by hand could produce 60-100lbs of paper per day, mechanization yielded around 1,000lbs per day. Additionally, in the 50-year period between 1846 and 1916, book production increased 400 and the price of books was cut in half. In America, this led to a golden age of illustration from before the 1880s until the early 20th century. A small group of illustrators became highly successful, with the imagery they created considered a portrait of American aspirations of the time. Among the best-known illustrators of that period were N.C. Wyeth and Howard Pyle of the Brandywine School, James Montgomery Flagg, Elizabeth Shippen Green, J. C. Leyendecker, Violet Oakley, Maxfield Parrish, Jessie Willcox Smith, and John Rea Neill. In France, on 1905, the Contemporary Book Society commissioned Paul Jouve to illustrate Rudyard Kipling& x27;s Jungle Book. Paul Jouve will devote ten years to the 130 illustrations of this book which will remain as one of the masterpieces of bibliophilia.


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