Audubon Print
Abbreviations & Numbering
"I am feted, feasted, elected
honorary member of societies, making money by my exhibition and by my
painting." John James Audubon
Many have
wondered about the abbreviations
appearing on the lower edge of Audubon
prints, and by the system of numbering for various
editions of Audubon prints. The
following may be helpful.
Abbreviations
M.W.S. (Member of the Wernerian
Society)
F.R.S.E. (Fellow of the Royal Society
of Edinburgh)
F.L.S. (Fellow of the Linnean Society)
F.R.S. (Fellow of the Royal Society)
Explanation of print numbering
(Double elephant folio)
You will find two numbers on each Audubon
print, one at the top left and another at the top right. What do these
signify?
Audubon, Lizars, and Havell produced
about 200 engravings each of 435
different images. These
engravings were
released to the public in sets (also called 'numbers') of five prints each. There
were 87 different sets (or numbers) of five
prints each that were required to publish all
435 prints. These sets usually
contained one large bird, one medium size , and three smaller
birds. The five birds in any
one set would have the same set number. It is
thus a group number.
Therefore,
the number found usually in the upper left corner of each
print is the group number for every bird print
released in that particular set of five.
The number usually found in the upper right
hand corner is the individual plate number, from 1 to 435, and it is most often in
Roman numerals.
You will sometimes find much smaller
numbers, such as 1 or 2, immediately next to a bird on many prints.
These correspond to the same number shown in the script area below the image
and designates the sex or if the bird is an adult or immature.