- Fine. = Newland/ Perrée/ Schaap S33.2.
- Fine. = Newland/ Perrée/ Schaap S11.7. SEE ILLUSTRATION PLATE LIX.
- A hardly noticeable strengthened spot (on verso) on the assistant's face
AND a mediocre copy of a col. woodcut ôban by KUNISADA (Warrior killing a snake) (wormholed and sl. cut short).
= From the series Baiko Hyakushu no Uchi (One Hundred Roles of Baiko), showing the actor Onoe Kikugorô V (Baiko) in various roles).
- Yellowed.
= Print 27 of the series Kaika ninjô kagami (Mirror of the flowering of manners and customs).
- Vertical old fold w. wear in left margin. Paper tape around borders on verso.
= Station no. 51 of the series Tôkaidô gojûsan tsugi no uchi (Fifty-three Stations of the Tôkaidô Road).
- Tipped onto mount; both prints waterstained; sm. wormhole in right margin of righthand print; possibly originally a triptych, the middle section lacking.
- Sm. hole (paper flaw) in fence.
= Central part of the triptych with actors Iwai Kumesaburô III as the Weaver (Shokujo, one of the Paired Stars), on the right, Ichikawa Kodanji IV as the Night-crawling Star (Yobaiboshi no sei) (centre), and Kawarazaki Gonjûrô I as the Cowherd (Kengyû, one of the Paired Stars) on the left. Part of the play Jitsugetsusei Chûya no Oriwake, performed in the Ichimura theatre in Edo.
= Perhaps an unused hanshita-e.
- Sl. yellowed and fingersoiled.
= Plate no 13. from the series Edo no hana meisho-e awase (The Flowers of Edo Matched with Famous Places), which is a collaborative harimaze series. A group of three scenes: Sawamura Tanosuke as the Apprentice Chokichi by Kunisada, Masks by Kyosai and the Miyato River in Group North by Hiroshige II.
- Prob. part of diptych or triptych.
- Sl. yellowed?
= From the series Honcho kendo ryaku den (Abridged Stories of Our Countrys Swordsmanship). Robinson S37.19.
- Fine copy. = Unsigned print.
= With the orig. accomp. flimsy with letterpress information on the print (in English and Japanese).
= From the series Kisokaido.
- Mounted on board; edges cut/ trimmed; sl. agetoned.
= Depicted is probably Pratap Singh I, popularly known as Maharana Pratap, a 16th century king of Mewar, who is said to have covered the face of his horse Chetak with an elephant mask in order to confuse the elephants in the army of his adversary Raja Maan Singh, during the battle of Haldighati. SEE ILLUSTRATION PLATE LX.