Rare first edition of the famous book of Venetian embroidery by Vecellio.
The most beautiful book about Venetian embroidery and lacework from the 16th century.
Rahir, Bibliothèque de l’amateur, p. 668; Brunet, V, 1105; Lotz, 116 d, 117 d, 118 b.; Mortimer, Italian, 520; Vecellio's Renaissance costume book, 1977, p. 3; Pizzi Antichi nei Disegni di Cesare Vecellio, 1980, p. 6 ("La sua opera pubblicata piu volte dall'anno 1591 (I edizione) si ricorda in una rara edizione, si dice la IV, benche nulla si sappia della II e III, della Biblioteca Marciana del 1593").
The 3 books were printed for the first time in 1591 and because of the success of the work, the first two parts were reprinted twice, starting in 1591.
“This little-known work contains three parts, each of them has besides the title,a dedication signed by Cesare Vecellio, presumed author of the plates […]. Each of these parts has been published separately and reprinted many times” (Brunet).
The first part is illustrated with 27 models of laceworks in full-page and with an engraving representing an embroidery workshop. The second part includes 26 models of embroidery, which are also in full-page, as well as an engraving of Vesta in Medallion, circled with a pattern of embroidery at the end of the 2nd book. The third part presents 25 lacework models, a medallion and an emblem, also framed with embroidery pattern. The illustration is also composed of an engraved vignette repeated on the three title leaves.
According to Edouard Rahir, it is “one of the most important collections of lacework models”.
“Cesare Vecellio (1530-1606) studied painting with Francesco Vecellio and had lessons by Titien, of whom he skillfully seized the style […]. He is mainly known or one of the two collections he left behind. The second, very rare nowadays, is ‘Corona delle nobili e vertuose donne’, composed of a series of plates displaying examples of various kinds of engraved works” (Biographie universelle, 45, 1055).
The collections of drawings by Vecellio are considered by Lotz as the most beautiful embroidery books of the time. His models include grotesque figures, animals, hunters, allegorical and mythological patterns.
“The appeal of European-wide fashion was exploited as a lure to buyers of pattern books, too, such as Cesare Vecellio's La Corona delle Nobili et Virtuose Donne, which includes 'cuffs worn by French ladies,' 'Flemish-style rosettes,' and bedspread designs 'used by Greek ladies'” (Ann Rosalind Jones, Renaissance Clothing and the Materials of Memory, Cambridge UP, 2000, p. 137).
Precious copy preserved in its contemporary limp vellum binding.
Provenance: from Sir John Sterling Maxwell’s collection (ex-libris on the 1st paste-down).