www.Danielmitsui.com
In 2012, I received six commissions for bookplate designs. The original drawings for these were done with black technical pens on white Bristol board. The drawings were scanned at a high resolution, and transferred via a photo chemical process to copper plates for letterpress printing.
Exlibris Kevin G. Rooney: In this one, the central image shows the Saced Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary. The coats of arms in the corners represent the Rooney family, the Priestly Fraterity of St. Peter, the Crowley family, and the Carmelite Order.

Exlibris Andrew Lohrum: This bookplate depicts an incident from the life of St. Francis of Assisi, in which one of his novices asked to possess his own psalter:
Blessed Francis told him: After you have a psalter, you will desire and want to have a breviary; after you have a breviary, you will sit in a fancy chair, like a great prelate telling your brother: Bring me the breviary! And speaking in this way with great intensity of spirit, he took some ashes in his hand, put them on his head rubbing them around his head as though he were washing it, saying, I, a breviary! I, a breviary!
I thought that this was a particularly clever choice of subject, as it shows a man being rebuked for his pride about the prospect of owning a book.
I used millelfleur decorative patterns in many of my drawings last year. This is an ornamental fill composed of tiny plants and animals, inspired by 15th century tapestries. Frogs, rabbits, snails, rats, a snake and a genet can be seen in the border of this bookplate. It is formatted like a page in an illuminated manuscript, with wide borders on one side and on the bottom. The bas-de-page shows the famous story of St. Francis meeting the Wolf of Gubbio.
Note from Lew Jaffe- If you wish to contact Daniel Mitsui his email address is
Danmitsui (at) hotmail.com
See you next Sunday-
The clock is ticking. If you want to enter the Humorous bookplate contest stop procrastinating.
Only a few weeks left until the contest ends on February 13th
Please submit one bookplate from your own collection. I am not expecting many entries because humorous bookplates are atypical. That works in your favor if you have something to submit..
Send a scan of your entry to
Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com
At the end of the contest the judges ( Mary & Lew Jaffe) will select the winner. .
The winner will receive an inscribed hardbound copy of all blog postings for 2012
Send a scan of your entry to
Bookplatemaven@hotmail.com
At the end of the contest the judges ( Mary & Lew Jaffe) will select the winner. .
The winner will receive an inscribed hardbound copy of all blog postings for 2012
1/28/2013 Entry # 6 for humorous bookplate contest , sent by Evan Sullivan
Hello Lewis,
I'm not sure if the attached fits into the humour category, but considering
humour is pretty subjective . I will submit it for your delectation. This ex libris
was made for me by an artist / collector in Israel. His name is Leonid Kuris. He
knows I am from Australia. It's humorous, to me, because of the age old myth
that kangaroos bound down Sydney streets (ie near the Opera House). Also
hilarious/ironic is the fact that a kangaroo has a 'pocket' and in that pocket
is a book. My pocket book is often empty because of ex libris collecting. One
more bit of humour is the fact that I'm Australian, but living in Saudi Arabia
and this ex libris was designed by an Israeli.
Regards,
Evan
1/29/2015 Entry # 7 received from Anthony Pincott
Dear Lew
Here is a small contribution if you would like
it.
Rgds, A.
The design pictured here may not be the most beauteous
exlibris ever conceived, but it was created both in tribute and pleasure, and
deserves to rank high in the present selection of amusing bookplates. Its owner,
Brian North Lee (1936-2007), gave a description in his booklet entitled “My
Personal Bookplates” (2001) as follows:
“A bookplate just for fun was drawn for me in 1983 by Benoit
Junod, showing a diminutive BNL, with pipe in mouth – customary in those days –
hand in hand with a rather Amazon Minerva, a big, busty and smiling lass who is
opening the door to lead me into “BOOKPLATE PARADISE”. I drag behind me an
enormous Chippendale wagon, which is almost as much of an extravaganza as the
Duke of Wellington’s funeral carriage, and soon the door’s height will surely
deny it entry, but no matter. The Bookplate abounds in personal references,
including the titles of my first books; I find it engaging; it needed a shape as
exuberant with the strange creatures accompanying; and I fear that Minerva is
going to take me on her knee and mother me as soon as we’re on the other side of
the door” with admission reserved to only serious collectors.
It’s now six years since Brian, sadly missed, passed through
that door, but his extensive contributions to bookplate literature live on. A
few copies of this bookplate remain available and can be obtained, priced at
£7.50 (UK addresses) or £8.50 (elsewhere), by sending payment to PayPal account
“members@bookplatesociety.org”.