Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation and Gettysburg Address: See them both in their 150th year

Long Remembered: Lincoln and His Five Versions of the Gettysburg Address

Long Remembered

American history has some big birthdays in 2013. Both Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation and his Gettysburg Address are 150 years old.

Both of these documents play a major role in the Spielberg film Lincoln. The plot revolves around Lincoln’s struggle to have the Emancipation Proclamation ratified by Congress, and the movie opens with two black soldiers reciting for their president the words of Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address.

The Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., has placed Lincoln’s own handwritten first draft of the Emancipation Proclamation on public display for the first time in six years. You’ll be able to view it through February 18. Find more details here.

The Library of Congress also houses two of the five known drafts of the Gettysburg Address that Lincoln hand-wrote. The other three are scattered. One is in the White House, another is in the Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield, Illinois, and a third is at Cornell University. But you can see full-size, full-color facsimiles of all five versions of the Gettysburg Address in the Levenger Press book Long Remembered: Lincoln and His Five Versions of the Gettysburg Address.

In addition to what’s bound in the book, two of the versions of the Gettysburg Address –those that the Library of Congress owns—are reproduced as loose sheets and folded as Lincoln folded them. They are the closest you can come to holding this American history in your hands.

Mim Harrison

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Haiti PeaceQuilts iPad Sleeve

Haiti PeaceQuilt iPad Sleeve

Haiti PeaceQuilt iPad Sleeve

 

Jeanne Staples, the founder of the humanitarian group Haiti PeaceQuilts, came to visit in our Boston store last week and got to see the handiwork of some of her quilters on display. Jeanne’s quilters created iPad sleeves just for Levenger, and each artist signed her handiwork in thread. The work helps the women become economically self-sufficient, providing money for many of their children to continue schooling. Levenger also donates to the Libraries Without Borders program in Haiti, based on sales of these lovely quilted iPad sleeves

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iPad covers that have you covered when you work

So maybe we can’t have it all. But with the various iPad covers and iPad cases that Levenger offers, you can have the best of both worlds when it comes to technology: both digital and paper.

The fact is, using paper with your iPad can make you more productive. (A little like how a pinch of salt brings out the sweetness.) iPad is social; paper is personal. Let your iPad take you out into the world. Then use pen and paper to tune in quietly to your thoughts.

And we don’t mean office-supply paper. Levenger notebook paper is extra-strong, rich and thick. It’s paper worthy of an iPad.

Here are three ways to get more from your iPad by pairing it with Levenger paper:

  1. The Circa iPad Foldover Notebook offers a removable iPad holder with bulldog-strength Velcro on the left side of the notebook. On the right is the authentic Levenger Circa note paper, which moves on and off the discs as smoothly as a finger tap on your iPad screen.
  2. The Freeleaf iPad Zip Foliogives you the same dual-technology convenience of iPad-plus-Levenger-paper, this time in a handy junior size and with our traditional notepad.
  3. The Circa iPad Folio offers a tuckaway pocket for your iPad, along with the authentic Levenger Circa note paper. This pocket welcomes other tablets and e-readers as well, including the Nook and Kindle.

All three of these iPad cases are in rich full-grain leather.

And for those who are fans of Moleskine, Levenger offers the Moleskine Digital Folio for iPad, a marriage of two icons. Maybe you can have it all, after all.

 Mim Harrison

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The world’s most famous botanical engravings are in a new kind of Levenger Press book

Here’s something you can’t do with an e-book: you can’t frame it. But that’s something you can do with our new Levenger Press limited edition book, Redoute, The Grand Collection: 128 masterpieces of botanical art.

The botanical engravings of Pierre-Joseph Redoute (1759-1840) are arguably the most famous in the world. Our new, exclusive book is a collection of 128 high-resolution, true-color facsimiles of various Redoute roses, lilies, fruits and other flowers. But instead of being a bound book, this collection is a series of 128 loose pages, printed on one side only. These high-quality Redoute botanical prints are thus suitable for framing.

The sheets are housed in a beautiful beribboned portfolio box of grass-green linen. The portfolio, which is lined on each panel with a Redoute design, is another way to display these botanical prints.

The story of Redoute is a fascinating one. He was influenced early on by a monk; he later became the artist to Marie-Antoinette and Napoleon’s Josephine; and he drew his botanicals as they’d never been done before. Two leading experts relay the Redoute story in a companion booklet that comes inside the portfolio. One expert’s perspective is on the artistic Redoute. The other’s is on the scientific Redoute.

For Redoute’s botanical prints are more than pleasing pictures: they’re also scientifically accurate. You might say that Redoute is the Audubon of botanical prints. And John James Audubon—whom Redoute once met—was, in fact, an admirer.

Redoute, The Grand Collection is available in a strictly limited edition of 1,400. This exclusive book comes with a special holiday price of $125 through December 24. At $125 for 128 prints, that’s less than a buck-a-botanical!  That’s not something available elsewhere, and certainly not at this high quality.

Sure, you can look at a picture of a Redoute print on a screen, but we think you’ll find the experience far richer on the rich, archival-quality paper we’ve used, and in a portfolio that opens panel by elegant panel, and with pages that are truly yours to have and to hold.

And don’t look for this Redoute in the bookstores. It’s available only from Levenger, making it almost as rare as a rose in winter.

Mim Harrison

 

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Three books to get a read on for National Read a Book Day

Did you know that reading makes you more empathetic? That’s according to a study at the University of Buffalo. It also gives you a boost in mental acuity, as a a number of psychologists and neuroscientists have found.

But besides making us kinder and brighter, the best reason to read is because we like to: it’s rewarding. Since September 6th has been decreed National Book Day, we thought it would be a good time to give you our reading on why these three Levenger Press books are worth cracking open (yes, they’re print books, complete with ribbon bookmarks): Don’t Quit Your Day Job, Thoreau on Cape Cod, and The Fantasia of Leonardo da Vinci.

 Don’t Quit Your Day Job: What the Famous Did That Wasn’t. Read this book if you like…

  • - Bite-size bios of famous people that are both entertaining and authoritative. Jack Lynch, the author, is on the faculty at Rutgers–and a superb storyteller.
  • - To read a chapter of a book in about 10 minutes tops (great bedtime reading)
  • - To impress your friends with little-known facts about the famous—like the cubicle number assigned to Scott Adams, the creator of “Dilbert,” before he defected corporate cubicleville for a comic strip. Or how Isaac Newton designed counterfeit-foiling coinage for the British Mint.

Thoreau on Cape Cod: His Journeys and the Lost Maps. Read this book if you like…

  • - Cape Cod. Thoreau walked the entire Cape, so if you’ve been there, chances are you’ve been where he’s been.
  • - Old maps. There are two facsimiles, pocketed loosely into the book, of maps of Champlain’s that Thoreau corrected in red ink.
  • - On Walden Pond. This is Walden with waves and salt water. Lots of the usual great epigrams from Thoreau, such as “A man may stand there and put all America behind him.” But along with the contemplative is plenty of action—Thoreau’s night spent in a lighthouse, and his encountering of a shipwreck of immigrants from Galway, Ireland.

The Fantasia of Leonardo da Vinci. Read this book if you like…

  • - Owning a book by a New York Times bestselling author, Ross King, that few others will have.
  • - Discovering a side of this famous artist that few people know about. The book contains Leonardo’s riddles, jests, fables and bestiary. (He was a great animal lover, in a time when few were.)
  • - Riddles. Try this one of Leonardo’s: “Men will speak with each other from the most remote countries, and reply.” (Find the answer here: http://www.levenger.com/LevengerPress/Excerpts/LPExcerpts_LeonardoFantasia.aspx)

You won’t find these books on Amazon or in bookstores. You’ll find them at Levenger—and we think you’ll find them a good read.

 

Mim Harrison

 

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How to connect through collecting

“Beginning a collection is like dropping a pebble in the water—the concentric rings expand and expand,” explains my friend and neighbor Roger Hurlburt. A professor of art history and former movie reviewer, Roger was a child prodigy in the collecting business, starting with birds’ nests, arrowheads and marbles when he was 8. Now 51, he blends his knowledge of fine art with appreciation for some of the quirkiest ephemera in America. In the house that he and his wife, Susan, built around their collections, Big Little Books line an entire wall of the family room. Susan’s wedding cake figurines live happily on a living room shelf. Toy ray guns from the 1930s share wall space with kitchen cabinets.

In the library, wide walls of books bristle with signed movie star photos and lobby cards. A plaster cast of the original Maltese falcon used on the movie set perches on a bookshelf niche. In a corner, a spin rack holds thousands of old postcards. On the huge antique table that serves as Roger’s desk, his computer is dwarfed by antique and modern bronzes, toy tops and antique fishing lures. You learn about one thing, says Roger, and that leads to another and another.

Things. As a college student, I was suspicious of things and people who collected them. Like Emerson, I felt we needed to care less about things and more about people. Now I know that caring about things can help us connect more with people.

The late Stanley Marcus, a friend and mentor, once told me how collecting had given meaning to his travels, especially after he retired from Neiman Marcus. Mr. Stanley, as he was affectionately known, joyfully gathered together several collections over the years, only to donate them later. He gave his collection of pre-Columbian folk art to the Dallas Museum of Art. His superb collection of miniature books is now at Southern Methodist University.

“There’s more fun in the hunt than the having,” says Roger. And de-collecting can be as rewarding as collecting, whether you donate your collection or sell it.

Roger once paid for a first-class trip to Europe for Susan and himself with the sale of his last remaining and exceedingly rare baseball card. Another friend made the down payment on his house with the check he received from selling his Wahl-Eversharp fountain pens. But you shouldn’t collect for the money, advises Roger. Go for what you love, even if it’s of no monetary value—like seed pods or bottle caps or smooth pebbles that form concentric rings in water.

Howard and Judy Gale, photographers at Levenger by trade, are lifelong antiques collectors. Their tiny cottage in Delray rises to grand heights with no end of artfully arranged collections. In their kitchen, a variegated cast-iron ring about 12 inches in diameter hangs from the ceiling. Once a display ring for buggy whips, today it holds Judy’s collection of buttonhooks that were used to fasten high boots and long dresses. These two now-obsolete species, one holding the other, were like two ancient ballroom dancers performing a tango for old time’s sake. They were also tactile connectors to Howard and Judy’s grandparents, links with the everyday lives of a far-off era.

To find products for our own company, my wife, Lori, and I began going to antiques shows. While our mission was finding things to reproduce, along the way I gradually became a collector myself.

I now collect 20th-century globes, along with pencil sharpeners and inkwells. These collections are business-related, but others are not. I’m drawn to strange old toasters and vintage bugles, and have a piece of trench art from World War I.

Over the years I have come to view collectors differently from what I presumed during my youth. I know now that all kinds of successful people enrich their lives through connections born of collections.

Collectors discern value where others just see stuff. They have a passion for learning and ideas, two things they’re more than willing to share with others.

One might conclude that the golden age of collecting is over, since there are now so many collectors of so many things. Yet there has been no slowdown in the production of goods that I can see.

What new objects do people take for granted today that may become tomorrow’s treasures? What objects make you smile and cause you to wonder? And what do you want to preserve for some young hands to connect with a century from now?—Steve Leveen

 

 

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Can fine art be functional? Yes, when it’s at Levenger

Pen a letter, jot a note, settle in comfortably for a read. And pursue these pleasures with fine art as your backdrop. Thanks to our partnership with the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Levenger is able to bring you functional pieces that feature fine-art reproductions you can’t find anywhere else.

Alma Thomas Rollerball

Alma Thomas Rollerball

If you are drawn to vibrant colors and bold strokes, let the Alma Thomas Rollerball blossom in your hand. Alma Woodsey Thomas (1891-1978) was the first African-American artist to have a solo show at the Whitney museum. She was also the first graduate of Howard University’s art department. Her canvas of Iris, Tulips, Jonquils and Crocusesbursts forth beautifully on this pen.

If French Impressionism is a favorite genre, you’ll probably enjoy our Berthe Morisot collection. Morisot was a contemporary of Monet and an equally fine painter, but alas, the women didn’t always receive the recognition that their male counterparts did. But Morisot (1841-1895) enjoys plenty of recognition from Levenger.

French Impressionist Ballpoint & Note Cube

French Impressionist Ballpoint & Note Cube

The green and gold palette of her painting The Cage inspired a new True Writer (fountain, roller and ballpoint). The image also graces the sides of a note cube.

A full reproduction can be found on our reader’s pillow—lovely to look at, and with a handy magazine pocket in back. These pleasing palettes also perform.

 

Mim Harrison

 

 

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Dear readers: Do you leave footprints?

Les Standiford, teacher, author and book lover, wouldn’t dream of writing in the hardcover books in his library. “I won’t underline or even dog-ear pages. The books have become important to me as artifacts.”

Tom Morris, philosopher, author and book lover, wouldn’t dream of not writing in them. “I underline and write and dog-ear like crazy. A book should never be just read; it should be used.”

Do you write in the hardcover books you own? Few questions polarize serious readers as much as this one.

The Preservationists

Les Standiford belongs to the group I call Preservationists. For them, the mere expression “writing in books” is akin to running fingernails down a chalkboard. Books are cherished objects, they say. Even if you intend to keep the book for your lifetime, eventually it will be passed on to others, so you shouldn’t contaminate it with your thoughts of the moment.

Preservationists are also quick to point out that besides being an affront to future readers, any writing in a book lowers its value dramatically.

The Footprint Leavers

Tom Morris belongs to the group I call Footprint Leavers. For them, books are like food to be heartily enjoyed, and if need be, consumed in the interest of a healthy diet. Writing in the margins and underlining are healthy interactions and make the book more valuable to them, which is their concern. There are plenty of unmarked books to go to posterity, they say; this one book will give its all to them.

Preservationists scoff at this. They may well take notes from a book, which they claim is more meaningful than merely underlining anyway. “Underlining is a fool’s way of absorbing knowledge,” says one accomplished Preservationist. Several others say that underlining can actually become a disservice to the underliner when, years later, he returns to the book and finds it difficult to read passages not underlined, or is forced to see the book the same way she did years ago, instead of with more mature eyes.

The Footprint Leavers will counter that if they wish to read a pristine copy, they can almost always buy another copy or get one from the library. And they like seeing how they previously viewed the book. It gives them insights into their viewpoints at an earlier age, and all-important self knowledge.

Famed Footprint Leavers

Alexandra Stoddard, the author of some 22 books on design and good living, is a devoted Footprint Leaver. She showed me her much-loved copy of Anne Morrow Lindbergh’s Gifts From the Sea. It was laden with colorful underlines, highlights and various triangles and rectangles in the margin. Alexandra could point to her original marks, when she first read the book as a girl, and then subsequent readings as the years went by and she matured. The book had transformed into a diary of sorts, imbued with her own visible testimony to the meanings she extracted over the years. “Books are food for me. I put them in my mouth,” she beams.

Studs Terkel, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author and interviewer, reportedly wrote all over the books written by the authors he interviewed, filling the margins with possible questions.

Will Provine, a historian of science and collector of rare books, has examined the libraries of many scientists, including Nobel Prize winners. He says that most scientists didn’t write in their books, yet Charles Darwin almost always did so. “A book is generally worth more if written in by an important person,” Will says. Darwin’s comments are considered of enormous historical significance.

Samuel Johnson was an even earlier luminary who wrote in books (often to the annoyance of the friends he borrowed them from), as he selected words for his famous dictionary of 1755.

Tom Morris, who has written a score of scholarly and popular books on philosophy (including Philosophy for Dummies), yearns for his books to be abused. “When I see one of my books in someone’s home, I want to open the dog-eared pages and see comments on nearly every page, and maybe some suntan oil and jelly smears as well. I want to know it was used!”

Are you a Preservationist or a Footprint Leaver?

For all these accomplished Footprint Leavers, my inquiries suggest there are far more Preservationists. Perhaps the world is better for this, since future readers will have more pristine books to inherit. Although even dedicated Footprint Leavers will not ruin an obviously valuable book. If it’s a costly first edition, they will probably not read it at all—thus ensuring they won’t be tempted. It’s the ordinary hardcovers they write in with abandon. It’s live for today and read as if no librarian were watching.

In case you’re wondering, I leave footprints. How about you?—Steve Leveen

 

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Advance to GO—Go Directly to GO with Levenger

It pays to be on the move—not just while playing Monopoly, but in life as well—and Levenger is here to keep you organized, chic, comfortable, and ready to GO. Check out the uber-useful and lightweight travel bags of Levenger’s Staff Bags Collection, including the Levenger Staff Go-Bag,

Levenger Staff Go-Bag

Levenger Staff Go-Bag

the Levenger Staff Tech Tote (available with or without handy accoutrements), and the original Levenger Staff Bag. They’re built tough and low-maintenance, with gray canvas and black glove leather trim. They’re the perfect everyday bags for anywhere and anything.

Airport Necessities

Levenger customers travel not just across town but around the world, so Levenger’s travel collection includes compact go-to carriers for holding your passport, ID and boarding pass, such as the Leather Airport Escort, Road Scholar, Departures Case, and the International Pocket Briefcase (and the corresponding International Phone Pocket Briefcase). There’s also the deep and wide Bomber Jacket Passport Wallet, which is a full wallet with a deeper-than-usual cash pocket for traveler’s checks and international currency, as well as a flap pocket that’s perfect for your passport; and the similar Passport Jacket in smooth black leather, which is a bit slimmer.

Because when you’re at the airport going through security, the last thing you need is to have to quickly rifle through multiple places for your travel documents. Levenger helps you keep them all in the same spot for quick access.

Just in Case

When you travel, you basically live somewhere else for a small amount of time—so everything you need to live your daily life needs to come with you. Levenger has thought of that, too: You can carry it all with the Cambridge Explorer, the Baggallini Rome Duffel Bagg, SoHo Travel Cases, Carezza Jewelry Roll, and Bomber Jacket Expandable Brief.

Keep Your Tech ProTech-ted

The iPad tends to get lost amid files and paperwork, but the pebbled mocha leather and thick padding of Levenger’s Bomber Jacket iPad/Travel Pack

Bomber Jacket iPad/Travel Pack

Bomber Jacket iPad/Travel Pack

is a throw-over-the-shoulder carrier for your tablet with an extra flap pocket and zip pocket out front for cell phone and maps…built for travel. Other iPad holder options include the St. Tropez iPad Tote, the Collega iPad Case, the Higher Ground Profile iPad Case, the Rickshaw iPad Messenger, and the new Belmont iPad Messenger. No more worries about where to store your tablet to keep it safe and easily reachable.

Smooth Sailing with Levenger

When you must stay organized through a busy itinerary to keep every day as smooth as possible, Levenger is by your side, over your shoulder, and holding your passport—from port to port, gate to gate, and safely back home with everything in its place.

— Heather Collins Grattan

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Simple Pleasures—Courtesy of Levenger

The technology boom of the late 1900s and early 2000s has made us all more aware of, and appreciative of, the simpler things. And when you think of simplification and problem-solvers around your home or office, think Levenger: Browse their delicious assortment of simple necessities to keep you productive and organized during your daily life—even when technology fails!—such as:

  • Desk accessories such as the new Chestnut MyMela Desk Box, which offers safekeeping of your pens, accessories, or even jewelry and mementos

    Chestnut MyMela Wooden Desk Box

    Chestnut MyMela Wooden Desk Box

  • The Cubi Desk Bookcase, organizing your desktop paperwork and files while still keeping them in ready view—and it can be positioned vertically or horizontally per your preference
  • Journals of all sorts, from blank journals to the 5-year and 10-year journals
  • The Levenger Book Buggy wheeled bookcase moves huge stacks of books at once from room to room, and has casters that lock in place if you want to keep it stationary
  • Crayons—specifically, rollerball pens that are designed like large versions of the colorful waxy writing instruments that hearken back to your youth
  • The Levenger BookBox bookcase collection is a stackable set of bookcase components, so you can configure the pieces to fit your space perfectly
  • 3 x 5 card holders, from Pocket Briefcases for carrying to the Nantucket Note Card Box for storing
  • The Tibet Almond Stick Scratch Remover, which wipes away nicks and scratches on wooden furniture pieces, so you’ll save money on furniture repair

    Tibet Almond Stick Scratch Remover

    Tibet Almond Stick Scratch Remover

It doesn’t get any simpler than that.

Levenger to the Rescue, Bringing Back Simplicity

Technology is complicated, but the basic necessities in life don’t change—and frankly can’t change. And for successful people of the 21st century, necessities extend beyond food and shelter—they include Levenger tools that keep you at your peak of productivity and organization…in classic simplicity.

— Heather Collins Grattan

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