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Pen and ink illustration Joseph Clement Coll (July 2, 1881 – October 19, 1921) was an American book and newspaper illustrator . He was known for his pen and ink story illustrations that were used to illustrate adventure stories such as Conan Doyle's Sir Nigel .
Franklin Booth (July 18, 1874 – August 25, 1948) was an American artist known for his detailed pen-and-ink illustrations. He had a unique illustration style based upon his early recreation of wood engraving illustrations with pen and ink. His skill as a draftsman and style made him a popular magazine illustrator in the early 20th-century.
Book illustrating then became Rackham's career for the rest of his life. By the turn of the century, Rackham had developed a reputation for pen and ink fantasy illustration with richly illustrated gift books such as The Ingoldsby Legends (1898), Gulliver's Travels and Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm (both 1900).
This is the book that inaugurated the Cranford School. The 1898 Cranford, online at the British Library. This edition replacing some of the original 1891 pen and ink illustrations by Thomson with coloured illustrations by him. Hugh Thomson collection at Mount Holyoke Special Collections; Hugh Thomson collection at Coleraine Museum Archive
Throughout the late 1870s, Evans and Caldecott collaborated on 17 books, considered Caldecott's best, and to have changed the "course of children's illustrated books". [40] Caldecott drew pen and ink illustrations on plain paper that were photographed to wood. Evans "engraved in facsimile" the illustration to the woodblock. [53]
Her pretty, naturalistic illustrations were widely known and very popular, particularly in the 1920s and 1930s, [11] when she was very prolific and famous. [7] Horne notes that "Her delicately coloured and rather sentimental watercolours and pen and ink drawings have remained extremely popular to this day."
An original pen and ink illustration from one of the stories, 'The Magic Stone', has been found in Sussex, England. [ 19 ] Papé's next earliest illustrations are found in books for children from around 1908, including The Toils and Travels of Odysseus (1908), a translation of The Odyssey by Cyril A. Pease and John Bunyan 's The Pilgrim's ...
Wrightson spent seven years drawing approximately 50 detailed pen-and-ink illustrations to accompany an edition of Mary Shelley's novel Frankenstein. The illustrations themselves are not based upon the Boris Karloff or Christopher Lee films, but on the actual book's descriptions of characters and objects. [23]