Wood block for printing carved in the shape of a female. Figure is clothed in robes with a halo, holds arms out slightly from sides, and stands above a serpentine figure. Wood block is carved into separate pieces to used for inking different colors.
Woodblock illustration for p. 11 of Canticum Canticorum (Cranach Press, 1931). Gill #284, Gill Notebook II. Image of a man in a forest with a goblet. A bird flies overhead.
Proof and block of an unused design for the St. Dominic"s Press, Ditchling, Sussex, 1916. Incorporates the numbers 2, 7, 3, 0, 2, 8, 2, 9, 2, 8, 3, 1, the date A.D. MDCCCCXVI, a pen, graver and printer"s dabber. D73, E28, CLC5. Physick 77.
Woodblock depicting the hands of St. Thomas. First used on title page of Work & Leisure, 1935 (Gill #31). Used many other times as well, and a variant of 102. No pull. 889, GILL579.
Woodblock illustration of St. Thomas" Hands first used on title page of "Work & Leisure," 1935. Used many other times subsequently. Gill #31, Physick 889, 579, and variant of 102. No pull.
Woodblock originially used as frontispiece for “Lenten Lessons and Gospels,” produced by Rene Hague. Also used for Gill’s “In a Strange Land,” 1944 (Gill 51), p. 8, and “Essays,” 1947 (Gill 53), p. 92.