Claude Paradin - Quis Contra Nos, “Devises Heroïques”, 1557.
Oswald Wirth - Royal Star of the Initiate, 19th century.
Pedro de Medina - Sun and the Moon with Months of the Year and Signs of the Zodiac, “Compendium of Cosmography”, 1545.
Antique Lunar Calendar.
Alchemical Symbols.
Katie Scott - Serpents, “Animalium”.
Ingmar Bergman - The Seventh Seal (Det Sjunde Inseglet), 1957.
Hans Thoma - Es werde Licht, 1884.
Thomas Wright - An Original Theory or New Hypothesis of the Universe, 1750.
Death in June & Boyd Rice - Scorpion Wind (cover artwork).
Jacques Fabien Gautier d’Agoty - “Anatomie des parties de la génération de l’homme et de la femme, représentées avec leurs couleurs naturelles, jointe à l’angéologie de tout le corps humain, et à ce qui concerne la grossesse et les accouchemens” (1773).
Étienne Léopold Trouvelot - Trouvelot Figures, Electric Sparks & Negative Poles (Chromolithographs), c. 1885-1888.
Andrea Alciati - Illustrations from the Emblematum Libri, 1556.
Asa Smith - Celestial Illustrations from Smith’s Illustrated Astronomy, 1851.
Claude Paradin - Devises Héroïques, 1551.
Highgate Cemetery - London’s Most Haunted.
Highgate Cemetery is steeped in supernatural lore. Constructed out of need with six other cemeteries in the early 1800s, with London’s population nearing a million and the death toll rising, there was no more room to bury the dead. This cemetery is one of the most famous in the world, with many notable historic figures, such as Karl Marx, buried there.
The architecture of the cemetery is truly unique. In the heart of the grounds is an eccentric structure called the Egyptian Avenue which consists of sixteen vaults, entered via a great arch. Each vault fits twelve coffins, purchased and used by individual families. This avenue leads to the Circle of Lebanon which was built in the same style consisting of thirty six vaults. A separate gothic-styled catacomb, named the Terrace Catacombs, has an additional fifty five vaults.
But what lures most people to the cemetery are the legends and myths that include ghosts, a vampire and other unexplained phenomena. Spirits coming out of the mausoleums, a glowing woman who roams the paths in between the graves, a man in a top hat, and misty ghosts that hang around the tombs are just some of the the spirits that inhabit the cemetery. Its the account of the “Highgate Vampire” that makes the site legendary.
The first report was in 1970, when a young man reported that he had seen a dark figure resembling a vampire in the cemetery. Since then, hundreds of claims of suspected vampires continued to be reported. Helping the belief along was the fact that dead foxes, with their throats torn open, kept turning up on the grounds. Aside from ghosts and a resident vampire, Highgate Cemetery in London is a hauntingly beautiful place to visit, or spend eternity.
Vintage Anatomy Fold-Out Illustrations, 1901.
Three pages from a rare antique anatomy textbook published in 1901, featuring beautiful scientific illustrations by E. J. Stanley. Each fold-out consists of three layers revealing a different dimension of the body — from skin to muscle and bone to organ and tissue.
Asa Smith - Celestial Illustrations from Smith’s Illustrated Astronomy. 1851.
Wood engravings with hand highlighting, written by the principal of Public School No. 12 in New York City with the goal “to present all the distinguishing principles in physical Astronomy with as few words as possible”.
Akali Sikh warrior wearing the distinctive Akali turban, India, 1860.

