Sure, that one's free. Please send me a Github URL as you get started, as usual.
There's a lot of verse in this one, but nothing that looks outrageously complex. There's a few strange formatting issues, like how to format sums (probably a <table> might work, but I'm open to suggestions). It seems that the big blocks of multiple asterisks are meant to be stylized <hr/>s, but you should confirm that in the print scans.
Have fun!
I'd like to work on Through the Looking-Glass next, if that one is free.
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I used to be more enthusiastic about including images back when the project was brand-new. But over time I've gotten much less interested in the idea, with perhaps the narrow exceptions for literature of which the images are an integral part of the work. (For example, The Book of Wonder by Dunsany; he had the artist draw the illustrations *first*, and then he wrote the stories about those illustrations; or some Agatha Christie books, where the illustrations are floor plans of the murder scene.)
The problem is that a lot of books might have had different illustrators throughout the years, and since we only want to host one edition of any book we'd have to wind up picking a "best" illustrator, which is obviously a pretty subjective judgment. (In the Dunsany example, since the book was written around the images, there would never be a different set of illustrations for them.)
Then the process of including images themselves is error-prone and has poor ereader support.
Finally it can be hard to find high-res images of a lot of this stuff. For example in the link you sent, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:78hattas_tea.jpg is a mere ~500x400 compressed JPG with atrocious artifacting. I wouldn't want such low-quality scans in our ebooks, they just look crappy. If we did decide to do that, then you'd have to find high-res uncompressed PNGs or BMPs, and convert them to have a transparent canvas instead of a white one.
If you can make the argument that there are no other PD
illustrations for Alice, that they're an integral part of the
work, and if you can find very high-res scans and you're willing
to go through the trouble to put them on a transparent canvas,
then maybe, maybe, we could do it.
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I'm still pretty meh on those high-res scans... if you zoom in it looks like they ran it through some kind of strong edge-sharpener filter because all the curves have very jagged pixelated edges. I'm pretty unimpressed by the quality of those scans.
I don't have a good definition of "suitably high res" but the idea is that to support retina screens, the pics should be, at the very least, double size to accommodate being shrunk down 2x for retina. If we assume a reading area of 1024px wide then for full-page images that'd mean a minimum width of 2048px. Of course the higher the better, since we can always shrink images down to fit but we can't blow them back up.
Something I've been casually exploring for these kinds of B&W
line cuttings is using a tracer like Inkscape to convert them to
SVG. I haven't played around with that too much yet but it's an
avenue to explore. That would solve the retina issue, and would
make low-res images look much better; problem is SVG support for
ereaders is very poor and we'd be converting to PNG during the
build process anyway.
Here's a better link for Looking-Glass illustrations: https://medium.com/alice-s-adventures-in-wonderland/sir-john-tenniel-s-classic-illustrations-of-alice-in-wonderland-2c3bbdca3a77 The few I looked at for Alice's Adventures were fairly decent size, but after going through more of them some of them are still a bit small. I'm not exactly sure how big they'd need to be.
Anyway, no matter. I'll start without worrying about the images for now.
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These links look like they might be worse than the Wikipedia
scans... for example
http://www.gallery.oldbookart.com/main.php?g2_itemId=28417 says
"Full size: 501x584" but the Wikimedia equivalent is 1023x1197:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/7d/Alice_and_kitten.jpg/1023px-Alice_and_kitten.jpg
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That's a real pity, the "Studio Mirror" painting would have been perfect, but you're right they're not the same.
I wonder if colorizing the B&W scan from Hathi would be in the realm of possibility? I don't have much experience with that.
I'd really like to use Studio Mirror if we could somehow colorize
it to an acceptable level of quality, or find a scan of the
specific copy of the painting in the book.
For "Las Meninas", I'm a little hesitant because that specific
painting is important-with-a-capital-I in the art world and has a
lot of historical and artistic baggage. For example Wikipedia says
"Las Meninas has long been recognised as one of the most important
paintings in Western art history." Which begs the question, is it
appropriate to use one of the most important paintings in Western
art history, for the cover of a fairly silly children's book?
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Yeah, I think that would look really good. Let us know how it
goes!
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Hey that looks fantastic! Great work!
Can I make two small requests?
1. Can you smooth out the clone brush that you used to extend the canvas at the bottom? That way, if we later decide to change the box style or move it around, we'll have a clean bottom to work from.
2. Alice's right foot has a claw, and the shoe color is light grey vs the dark shadow which looks a touch off. Blending the color to be a darker black against the shadow, and cleaning up the claw with a clone brush, might be a subtle improvement.
Also, if possible you should save as a PNG so that it's a lossless file, in case we want to edit or update it later. That will be ./images/cover.source.png, and we'll do a direct jpg conversion for use as ./images/cover.jpg.
Again, really great work. I'm so happy we were able to use this
image after all :)
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Do you still have a copy of the source image you took from the page scan, as well? If not I can extract it from the page scan myself.
Re. well-known paintings for covers, yeah I've thought about that a little too. Generally I think that using extremely famous works would probably be inappropriate, only because people already have their own emotional and contextual predispostions to them. So for example using the Mona Lisa or Van Gogh's Starry Night for a cover would be too jarring, because they're part of the modern cultural lexicon. But that doesn't mean we can't use other, lesser-known Van Goghs (and in fact we have, like in Secret Garden), and so on.
Like a lot of this stuff, it's an editorial call, a lot of it is
shades of grey.
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You can include Jared as a contributor in the metadata with the MARC relator "clr" (which is "colorist")
Ready for review. Is there a guide to adding credit for someone who edited the cover art?
As for the art itself, I couldn't find a WP link for the painter, nor am I sure of the date it was painted (the version from the page scan, that is).
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OK great. I've opened a few Github issues for you to review, please let me know when you're all done.
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Looks fine to me, not sure why it wouldn't work on Edge since margin: auto is the ancient way to center block-level elements.
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Looks great, thanks!
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I'm also proposing to add Carroll's "Authors Preface" with the chess game.
I'm running behind on things David but I'll try to look at this
later this week :)
I've finished with the illustrations and made a pull request.
I've created a couple of figure classes to try to get a more balanced look to the size of the illustrations, but iBooks among others ignore such CSS, it seems :-(
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OK, everything looks good and I've merged the changes. Really
excellent work with the SVG scans. I made some minor tweaks to CSS
and swapped out the `<table>` for two `<ol>`s in the
preamble, but that's about it. I'm glad you made the point about
mirrored text in the Jabberwocky poem as that hadn't crossed my
mind. There isn't really a good Unicode equivalent for truly
"mirrored" text (vs. simply reversing the text) so let's keep the
image scan. Maybe in the far future we can revisit this and see if
the situation has changed.
I've finished with the illustrations and made a pull request.
I've created a couple of figure classes to try to get a more balanced look to the size of the illustrations, but iBooks among others ignore such CSS, it seems :-(
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