Actualités Antiquarian Booksellers' Association
The popular Chelsea Rare Book Fair opens Friday in London
The fair offers an opportunity to browse a huge variety of rare books, maps and prints with prices ranging from less than £100 to five figure sums from British and international exhibitors. The annual fair opens on Friday, 1st at 2pm (until 7pm) and runs from 11am to 5pm on Saturday, 2nd November.
The Chelsea fair is always known as a very friendly fair, where established and new collectors feel equally at home as dealers are happy to guide them and also ably assist in finding the perfect birthday or Christmas gift for a loved one.
Among this year's highlights is a signed copy of Noel Coward's The Queen was in the Parlour at Graham York Rare Books with an asking price of £60, while the famous Len Deighton's Action Cookbook at Beaux Books costs £95. An early 19th century devotional work by school head and priest Johann Aloys Hassl with an attractive biding incorporating embroidered samplers carries a price tag of £150 at Leo Cadogan Rare Books Ltd, while a Vanity Fair print of Newmarket, Tattersall's from 1887 is priced at £260 at Grosvenor Prints. Lee Miller's war-time photography of Wrens is available for £300 at Beaux Books.
Art Nouveau Design Plates by Paul Grohmann at Janette Ray Bookseller costs £385 and Clare Leighton's Four Hedges: A Gardener's Chronicle at York Modern Books £425. Views of London by the London Stereoscope & Photographic Company at Harrison Hiet Livres Rare can make a great start to a new collection at £500, while French miniature books will sell in the region of £650 at Librairie Ormara.
A first edition of A Manual of Astrology or the Book of the Stars with a dedication to Walter Scott if offered for £750 by the Bibliophile Bindery and A Childhood by Francesca Allinson and Enid Marx, published by the Hogarth Press, costs £795 at Ashton Rare Books.
For tickets and more information, go to the website: https://chelseabookfair.com/