Pictorial-style illustrations
Pictorial images, like this picture of the Colosseum below from the first edition, were designed to convey to a sense of understanding of technologies, places, people or objects they had never previously experienced.
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There are over 20,000 wood engraving blocks in the W. & R. Chambers Collection at National Museums Scotland. Over 7,000 of these blocks were created to print the illustrations in Chambers’s Encyclopaedia, which was first published in 1859.
Encyclopaedias are a snapshot of a particular time, place and world view. Like museums, they are curated, and their contents reflect how history, science and culture were understood at the time. Discover how Scottish publishers W. & R. Chambers pioneered the use of images as learning tools in their encyclopaedias, and how these pictures changed with the times as illustration styles and printing techniques evolved and world views changed.
The word ‘encyclopaedia’ comes from the Greek words enkyklios meaning general, and paideia, meaning education. An encyclopaedia is a work which pulls together information, either around a certain subject, or encompassing all branches of knowledge, and arranges this information so that it can be easily found.
These useful compendiums have existed in one form or another for over 2,000 years. However, the modern, printed encyclopaedia, with entries arranged alphabetically, did not appear until the 18th century, following hot on the heels of the first dictionaries.
Medieval encyclopaedias were expensive, produced by hand for wealthy, learned people. The invention of the printing press in the 14th century made information more accessible to those who could read. By the 19th century, however, with access to schooling increasing and literacy rates rising, publishers were keen to feed the Victorian population’s thirst for knowledge and self-improvement.
One such publisher was W. & R. Chambers of Edinburgh.
“Man is capable of informing himself; the means of doing this are within his power. If he were truly informed, he would not weep over his follies and errors...- W. & R Chambers, Information for the People, 1833
The firm of W. & R. Chambers was founded in 1832 by two brothers, William (1800-1883) and Robert (1802-1871). From humble beginnings as a small-time bookseller and hand-press printer, over the decades the company acquired a global reputation for its educational books, periodicals, dictionaries and encyclopaedias.
One of the firm's early weekly periodicals, Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal, contained ‘Miscellaneous articles of instruction and entertainment’, and sold at the affordable price of a penny half-penny (three halfpennies). In 1853 the title was changed to Chambers's Journal. The journal ran continuously until 1956 and numerous authors, including Charles Dickens, William Makepeace Thackeray and Margaret Oliphant, contributed to it.
During this time, W. & R. Chambers also established a reputation for publishing quality educational material on poetry, history, science, and mathematics, as well as reference books, including two dictionaries.
In 1859, the brothers published their first encyclopaedia in 520 affordable weekly parts, and then in ten chunky volumes between 1860 and 1868.
The aim of the publication is summed up in its full title: Chambers’s Encyclopaedia: A Dictionary of Universal Knowledge for the People. Firm advocates of public education, the Chambers brothers wanted to make knowledge accessible to as many people as possible.
In the preface to the first volume, they explain:
“The information given may be characterised as non-professional, embracing those points of the several subjects which every intelligent man or woman may have occasion to think or speak about.
The layout of Chambers’s Encyclopaedia, with its alphabetical arrangement of bite-sized topics and user-friendly cross-referencing system, would go on to influence reference books published in Britain and the US for decades to come.
As the brothers explained:
“One great aim in the arrangement of the work has been to render it easy of consultation… To save the necessity of wading through a long treatise in order to find, perhaps, a single fact, the various masses of systematic knowledge have been broken up… Throughout the articles, however, there will be found copious references to other heads with which they stand in natural connection; and thus, while a single fact is readily found, its relations to other facts is not lost sight of.
To further increase understanding of the text, the encyclopaedia was beautifully illustrated with over 4,000 images.
It is these blocks which are now in the National Museums collection.
Sales of Chambers’s Encyclopaedia were slow at first but eventually the project made the firm money. But time does not stand still, and twenty years on, it was revised and updated by a new editor and published in ten volumes between 1888 and 1892 as Chambers's Encyclopaedia New Edition.
The second edition was produced in collaboration with the American publishing firm J.B. Lippincott, based in Philadelphia. Again, it was generously illustrated. But the differences between the images shows how society had moved on during the past twenty years.
The illustrations were key to W. & R. Chambers’ aim to make the information in the encyclopaedias accessible to as many people as possible. The pictures covered a wide range of topics, but the subjects most likely to be illustrated were:
There are three kinds of illustrations used in the encyclopaedias: pictorial, facsimile and schematic.
From left to right, examples of pictorial, facsimile and schematic-style illustrations from the first and second editions of Chambers's Encyclopaedia.
Pictorial images, like this picture of the Colosseum below from the first edition, were designed to convey to a sense of understanding of technologies, places, people or objects they had never previously experienced.
In contrast, the idea of facsimile-style representation was to depict a subject in as realistic a way as possible, or to show how it would be encountered in the real world
Photography, popular since its invention in the 1830s, provided the best facsimile of the real world. In the 1860s, however, the technology for reproducing photographs in print was cumbersome and expensive. Yet facsimile images copied from photographs, such as this Maori Chief, were thought to convey equal authority.
A schematic illustration is used to convey abstract information, and usually incorporates graphic symbols rather than realistic pictures. Maps and diagrams are examples of schematic illustrations.
Some images do not fall neatly into any one category but show elements of two illustration styles. One of the most common combinations, especially in the second edition, is the facsimile-schematic illustration style. In these illustrations, while there is an attempt to depict an object or place in a realistic style, the labels and captions highlight specific features.
Many of the illustrations, particularly in the second edition of the encyclopaedia, look like photographs. Yet all were achieved by professional wood engravers, and no photo processes were involved in their production.
Comparing both editions of the encyclopaedia demonstrates how styles of illustration and graphic design altered throughout the 19th century. The first edition seems to favour pictorial illustration, while the second includes more facsimile-style images, with many based on photographs.
The topics illustrated also changed slightly, reflecting changes in illustration practices, but also new discoveries. For example, there are far fewer images of people in the second edition, and most of these are based on photographs, whereas pictures of microorganisms nearly doubled, as bacteriology became a new scientific area of study in the 1870s.
The preface to the second edition also states that:
“A considerable addition has been made to the number of Maps, always an important feature in a work of reference; and amongst these are a series of carefully executed Physical maps.
In the second edition, the editors also tended to prioritise tables over images, as can be seen in the entries for 'Agriculture' and 'Parasites'.
The Chambers brothers were early adopters of steam-powered printing machines, which had been installed in their Edinburgh premises before the 1840s. The first edition of Chambers’s Encyclopaedia was printed on an Applegath and Cowper Book Machine, which printed 700 sheets per hour, on one side of paper at a time.
The firm printed the second edition on a Marinoni Perfecting Machine, a much faster machine which printed both sides of a page in one run, saving a lot of time and work.
The woodblocks used for printing the illustrations are made from boxwood, a very hard, dense wood which meant the blocks could withstand many thousands of impressions.
The images were drawn by artists then engraved onto the blocks by wood-engravers. Although the artists were occasionally named, the engravers were rarely credited for their painstaking and highly skilled work.
In the early decades of the 19th century, wood-engraving was considered a good and stable profession, with apprenticeships typically lasting seven years. As the newspaper and periodical business boomed in the mid-19th century, there was such a demand for wood-engravers that apprenticeships gradually decreased from seven years down to two. Eventually, on-the-job training was provided in order for firms to keep up with the work.
Where once a master wood engraver was skilled in all aspects of the trade, from the 1870s, apprentices might only be trained in specific types of engraving. Those who specialised in botanical illustrations were known as pruners. Others specialising in animals or humans were called butchers; specialists in clothing and drapery were tailors and experts in machinery were mechanics.
Blocks were often reused in different publications. For example, an article on ‘Wood-engraving’, first published in Chambers’s Miscellany in 1845, reappeared in the first and then second editions of Chambers’s Encyclopaedia, with updated text describing the changes that had taken place in wood-cutting and engraving techniques, and referencing the influence of photography.
For the first edition of the encyclopaedia, the engraved woodblocks were printed together with the metal type making up the text. This meant that the blocks needed to be 'type high' in order to print a clear image. This could involve hours of pasting layers of paper, known as ‘make-ready’, onto the back of the blocks, to make them high enough.
By the time the second edition came out, things had moved on. For this edition, the engraved woodblocks were used as templates for the creation of stereotype or electrotype plates. Both types of plates require a mould to be taken from the engraved block, from which a metal cast is produced. Stereotypes were made from type metal (the alloy of lead, tin and antimony used for making type), while electrotypes were created by applying a thin copper plate to the mould, which was then removed and backfilled with type metal.
Both techniques produced high quality copies of the original wood engraving, and meant that the original block could be retained as a template.
The Chambers firm remained a family-run business until 1989, when the business became part of a multinational publishing company.
In the early 1980s, Anthony Stuart Chambers, the last family member to run the firm, placed the company’s archive on deposit in the National Library of Scotland. At the same time a collection of wood-engraving blocks, stereotype and electrotype plates, and other publishing-related objects were donated to National Museums Scotland.
You can see a selection of the blocks on display in the Discoveries gallery at the National Museum of Scotland. And if you go to see them, have a think about the Museum’s address – Chambers Street was named after William Chambers!
Read more about our Collaborative Doctoral Project on the Chambers Collection between the University of Reading and National Museums Scotland, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council.
Find out moreYou can explore the woodblocks in more detail in our collections search.
See the woodblocks