Nautical Illustrations: 681 Royalty-Free Illustrations from Nineteenth-Century Sources

Nautical Illustrations: 681 Royalty-Free Illustrations from Nineteenth-Century Sources

Nautical Illustrations: 681 Royalty-Free Illustrations from Nineteenth-Century Sources

Nautical Illustrations: 681 Royalty-Free Illustrations from Nineteenth-Century Sources

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Overview

While this book is intended is intended for all who love boats, ships, history, and nautical lore, it is also designed as a definitive source of high-quality, royalty-free images for use by artists, graphic designers, desktop publishers, ad agencies, and more. This collection of 681 wood engravings includes striking examples of some of the world's most beautiful boats and ships. Among the many famous vessels in this volume are Columbus's ships, the Nina, Pinta, and Santa Maria; King Henry's VIII's Great Harry; the Pilgrim Fathers' Mayflower; Henry Hudson's Half Moon; King Charles I's Sovereign of the Seas; Captain Cook's Discovery; the HMS Bellerophon; Fulton's Clermont; and the Great Eastern. Among famous naval battles shown are the conflict at Actium, the invasion of the Spanish Armada, Dutch-English engagements in the 17th century, Anson's Centurion capturing a Spanish treasure ship, Nelson's victory at Trafalgar, Perry's triumph at Lake Erie, and the Civil War ironclad contest between the Monitor and the Merrimac.
This volume includes a wide variety of vessels: rowboats, funeral barges, Venetian gondolas, catamarans, Native American canoes, Chinese junks, tugboats, canal boats, barges, yachts, brigs, barks, sloops, skiffs, catboats, various kinds of vessels used for fishing and whaling, ships in distress, and more. There are also examples of nautically related material: navigational instruments, diving suits and helmets, lighthouses, canal locks, dry docks, the Suez Canal, helmsmen, ship captains, seamen at work, deck scenes, and interiors of boats. taken from rare sources — depict primitive canoes, a Roman galley, ship figureheads, naval battles, dock scenes, lighthouses, pirate ships, steam-powered battleships, and a wealth of other subjects. Brief captions identify pictures, which are arranged chronologically. Features over 600 black-and-white illustrations from rare sources, arranged chronologically.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780486174471
Publisher: Dover Publications
Publication date: 06/25/2014
Series: Dover Pictorial Archive
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 128
File size: 42 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Jim Harter is a successful artist and editor of several Dover Pictura CD-ROM Books, including Harter's Picture Archive for Collage and Illustration, Landscapes and Cityscapes for Artists and Craftspeople, Nautical Illustrations, and more.

Read an Excerpt

Nautical Illustrations

681 Permission-Free Illustrations from Nineteenth-Century Sources


By Jim Harter

Dover Publications, Inc.

Copyright © 2003 Dover Publications, Inc.
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-486-17447-1



INTRODUCTION

While this book is intended for all who love boats, ships, history, and nautical lore, it is also designed as a definitive source of high-quality, royalty-free images for use by artists, graphic designers, desktop publishers, ad agencies, and more. This collection of 681 wood engravings includes striking examples of some of the world's most beautiful boats and ships. Among the many famous vessels in this volume are Columbus' ships, the Nina, Pinta, and Santa Maria; King Henry VIII's Great Harry; the Pilgrim fathers' Mayflower; Henry Hudson's Half Moon; King Charles I'sSovereign of the Seas; Captain Cook's Discovery; the HMS Bellerophon; Fulton's Clermont; and the Great Eastern. Among famous naval battles shown are the conflict at Actium, the invasion of the Spanish Armada, Dutch-English engagements in the seventeenth century, Anson's Centurion capturing a Spanish treasure ship, Nelson's victory at Trafalgar, Perry's triumph at Lake Erie, and the Civil War ironclad contest between the Monitor and Merrimac.

In this volume one can find many different types of vessels: rowboats, funeral barges, Venetian gondolas, catamarans, Native American canoes, Chinese junks, tugboats, canal boats, barges, yachts, brigs, barks, sloops, skiffs, catboats, various kinds of vessels used for fishing and whaling, ships in distress, etc. One can also find examples of nautically related material: navigational instruments, diving suits and helmets, lighthouses, canal locks, dry docks, two views of the Suez Canal, helmsmen, ship captains, seamen at work, deck scenes, and interiors of vessels.

I have organized this material in both a chronological and categorical manner. One could say that it is arranged first of all vertically, and later horizontally. The vertical arrangement is a continuous time-line from the earliest vessels of antiquity to the mid-nineteenth century. Thus the unfolding sequence of pages reveals examples of ancient Egyptian vessels; galleys, biremes, and triremes from ancient Greece and Rome; fierce Viking ships; vessels of the Middle Ages; stouter ocean vessels that allowed the Spaniards to discover the New World; elegant Venetian galleys; galleons; pirate vessels; men-of-war; and battles spilling the blood of the major contending naval powers: Spain, France, Holland, Britain, and later, America. This vertical movement culminates with the beautiful frigates and clippers of the mid-nineteenth century.

We then return to the late eighteenth century to begin a parallel movement. This time we are following the time-line of steam technology. The illustrations begin with the earliest experiments with steam power. Fulton's Clermont (1807) provided the breakthrough, adequately demonstrating the practicality and potential that lay ahead for this new mode of power. Steamboats went through different evolutions depending on whether paddle wheels or screw propellers were used. The massive giant, Great Eastern, which laid the Atlantic Cable, used both types of propulsion. After commercial and passenger steam vessels are explored in some detail, examples are shown of new military applications. Notably important was the development of ironclads during the American Civil War. This inspired a swift revolution in the design of naval craft worldwide, and also created an interest in submarines and fast torpedo boats. Steam also powered more specialized vessels, including dredges, tugboats, ferryboats, yachts, and launches.

From this point on, our exploration moves horizontally, examining the remaining spectrum of the nineteenth-century nautical world. We look at contemporary sailing yachts, fishing and whaling vessels, various types of small boats, vessels in difficult weather or distress, Arctic exploration, peripherally related images such as lighthouses, sea mythology, diving, sailors and seamen, etc. The last pages in the book are devoted to traditional styles of vessels that have evolved in localized settings such as Venice, the Nile Valley, the Arab world, India, China, Indonesia, and Micronesia.

The vast portion of this material has been culled from engravings that were produced as early as the 1850s and extends through the beginning of the twentieth century. Also included are a few early-twentieth-century line drawings. These pictures, which come from many different, often rare, sources, were primarily published in the United States, Britain, France, and Germany. Among the sources used for compiling this volume are the following periodicals: Illustrated London News, L'Illustration, Harpers Weekly, Harper's Monthly, Leslie's, Scientific American, La Nature, Engineering, and The Engineer. Other volumes helpful to this enterprise included The Sea by F. Whymper; Merveilles de la Science by Louis Figuier; and Meyers Konversations Lexikon. However, probably over a hundred other publications have contributed to this work as well. It is our hope that the many beautiful engravings in this book will be a revelation to all and a source of inspiration for artists, illustrators, and perhaps even boat builders.

Jim Harter


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Nautical Illustrations by Jim Harter. Copyright © 2003 Dover Publications, Inc.. Excerpted by permission of Dover Publications, Inc..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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Table of Contents

Contents

Introduction,
Images,

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