home Resources and Services, Special Collections and Archives Halloween Costume Ideas in Special Collections

Halloween Costume Ideas in Special Collections

Are you tired of wearing that same old zombie costume year after year?  Fed up with being lost in the crowd of witches and ghouls?  Special Collections is here to help, with costume inspiration by the book!  Here are a few ideas for Halloween inspired by our collections.

Go Medieval or Go Home

If you're limited on time or materials, you can't go wrong with the Middle Ages.  All you need is a long bathrobe, a large scarf or sheet, a pair of pointy-toed shoes, and a pageboy wig.  Voila!  Tell all your friends you're a character from the Roman de la Rose.  Add a red hat, a fake beard, and a book, and you could be St. Jerome.


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Find a New Trade

Forget dressing up like a doctor, firefighter or astronaut.  How about a Victorian butcher, milkman or baker – or better yet, a cat'smeat-man, park-keeper or waterman?  You could be dressed as a sixteenth-century German piscator or a French marchande de poissons.  The numerous books of occupations and street cries in Special Colllections are a field guide to the merchant and artisan classes from the sixteenth through the nineteenth centuries

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Be a Fashion Plate

Halloween and Homecoming are less than a week apart this year, so party like it's 1839.  Fashion magazines like Allgemeine Modenzeitung can give you an idea of what was in style back then. 

Dapper gentlemen from Allgemeines Modenzeitung, 1839

Dapper gentlemen from Allgemeines Modenzeitung, 1839

Dress like a Peasant…

Special Collections has numerous eighteenth- and nineteenth-century ethnographic studies of the native dress of Europe, Asia, and the Americas.  Little did those ethnographers know they were creating a treasure trove of obscure Halloween costume ideas for us early 21st-century folk.  Here are a couple of examples of Italian peasant dress.  Choose your time and place; with our collections, the possibilities are endless. 

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…or like Royalty

Of course, if you're more ambitious, you could impersonate a famous king or queen for the day.  How about Elizabeth I?  Or maybe someone from the court of Marie Antoinette

Camden-Elizabeth

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Embrace the Surreal

Perhaps you're looking for something more, shall we say, fanciful? The work of illustrators like J. J. Grandville and Walter Crane should provide ample inspiration for weird and wonderful costumes of all kinds.

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Or Dress Like your Favorite Author

How about Leonhart Fuchs?  Or Charles Darwin!  Of course, here in Missouri, we're partial to Mark Twain.

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Mark Twain 

We can't guarantee you'll win any costume contests, but it's a pretty safe bet that you'll be the only one dressed as a sixteenth-century botanist or French fishwife at your Halloween party this year.  Happy Halloween!

Do you have an ORCID iD?

Distinguish yourself with an ORCID iD. The Open Researcher and Contributor ID lets you claim all of your work as yours (and not that other Jane Doe).

More info

Open Access: What It Is, What It Isn’t

Find out more about Open Access: https://libraryguides.missouri.edu/openaccess

Six OA myths put to rest

home Resources and Services Faculty Lecture Series: Dr. Hawthorne, Nov. 7

Faculty Lecture Series: Dr. Hawthorne, Nov. 7

November 7, 2013 | 2-3 p.m.
Ellis Library Colonnade
Faculty Lecture Series presents Nanotechnology for Cancer Therapy
with Dr. Fred Hawthorne
 

Dr. Hawthorne will discuss his work with Boron Neutron Capture Therapy (BNCT) for cancer, and the remarkable progress made here at MU. In 2006 Dr. Hawthorne founded the International Institute of Nano and Molecular Medicine at the University of Missouri, where he is Institute Director and Curators’ Distinguished Professor of Chemistry and Radiology. He has been widely recognized including election to the US National Academy of Sciences and in 2013 he received the National Medal of Science.

home Resources and Services SciFinder Scholar Training Sessions at MU

SciFinder Scholar Training Sessions at MU

October 23, 2013 (Wednesday)
2:00 – 3:20 pm Basic/Introductory session
3:30-5:00 pm Intermediate/Advanced session
Location:
  125i Chemistry Building (conference room inside 125 Chemistry Building)
Trainer:  Peter Blasi, Applications Specialist, CAS

Register here to attend a SciFinder Scholar training session
 

The Basic/introductory session will cover the following topics plus questions from participants:

  • An introduction to CAS content and indexing
  • A brief overview of SciFinder features
  • Exploring references by research topic, company name, author name, journal name, and patent number
  • Sorting/Analyzing/Refining/Categorize
  • Saving/Exporting/KMPs
  • Exploring substances by chemical name and CAS RN
  • Interpreting chemical substance records
  • Commercial suppliers and regulatory information
  • Retrieving full-text

The Intermediate/Advanced session will cover the following topics plus questions from participants:

  • Structure searching
    Reaction searching
    Analyzing reaction answer sets
    Using SciPlanner
  • Specialized topics such as polymers/alloys/organometallics  

Please contact Janice Dysart if you have any questions. 

Springer eBooks!

MU Libraries recently added over 400 ebooks from Springer's Biomedical and Life Sciences collection. Some titles of interest include:

home Resources and Services First floor renovation complete – see slideshow

First floor renovation complete – see slideshow

Slideshow: Health Sciences Library 1st Floor Renovation Fall 2013

With funding and assistance from the School of Medicine, the space has been transformed into an information commons, featuring:

  • a renovated computer instruction room
  • improved lighting
  • improved heating & cooling for the entire building
  • additional printers
  • a conference room for faculty & staff

The DoIT computer lab, Printsmart printers and help desk have moved back downstairs to the first floor.  The books in the compact shelving area are directly accessible by students, staff and faculty.

 

home Resources and Services Content Matters: An Interview with Edward McCain of the Reynolds Journalism Institute

Content Matters: An Interview with Edward McCain of the Reynolds Journalism Institute


For this installment of the Content Matters interview series of the National Digital Stewardship Alliance Content Working Group I interviewed Edward McCain, digital curator of journalism at RJI and University of Missouri Libraries.

Read more at the Reynolds Journalism Institute blog: Content Matters: An Interview with Edward McCain of the Reynolds Journalism Institute

home Resources and Services Federal government shutdown

Federal government shutdown

The bad news: Many federal government websites are offline, and links to research reports are broken. The good news: MU Libraries has a Government Documents department with specialists who may help you find what you need through alternate sites or in physical collections. Find contact information under “Reference Services” on the Government Documents home page: https://libraryguides.missouri.edu/govdocs

Has the government shutdown prevented you from getting information you need? Please fill out our Government Shutdown and Information Access form and let us know.  

The form is designed to help us determine areas of greatest need during the shutdown. The Government Documents unit will assist respondents in finding alternate sources if requested.

Happy Birthday Arthur Rackham!

Last week marked the 146th anniversary of the birth of Arthur Rackham, illustrator extraordinaire. Best known for his work on children's books, fairytales, and classics, Arthur Rackham's distinctive style continues to be recognized and admired by modern illustrators, art lovers, and readers alike.

Arthur Rackham was born on September 19, 1867 to Anne and Alfred Rackham.  One of twelve children, Arthur grew up to follow in his father's footsteps and began work as a clerk with an insurance company when he was eighteen.  He soon grew bored with that and began taking night classes at a nearby art school.  In 1892, he began work as a full time illustrator with the Westminster Budget where his drawings of everyday life in London and famous personalities were a hit.  They were so popular that he often was assigned to draw royal events, such as the wedding of the Duke and Duchess of York in 1893, who would later be known as King George V and Queen Mary.

As photography began to become more popular in the newspapers, Rackham turned to book illustrations, contributing for several travel books and developing his style by contributing to other works before his first major success in the form of the illustrated Brothers Grimm Fairy Tales in 1900.  The book that really put him on the map, as it were, was his 1905 illustrated Rip Van Winkle by Washington Irving.  In this book, Rackham's iconic style is fully developed and becomes enormously popular with each successive year seeing at least one new work published with illustrations by Arthur Rackham.

Rackham is known for various elements that combine in his work such as:

  • flowing lines
  • muted watercolors
  • backgrounds with hidden images or "surprising information"
  • a balance between sensuousness and chastity in his fairies and nymphs
  • just the right amount of ugliness to not be frightening in his trolls
  • forests filled with twisted trees
  • the juxtaposition of the frightening with the beautiful in a single image

In addition to his stunning watercolor prints, Rackham would more frequently do black and white line drawings.  Occasionally he would experiment with silhouette, and this is showcased beautifully in his illustrated The Sleeping Beauty (shown below).

The Sleeping Beauty

Rackham continued his illustrative work until his death from cancer on September 6, 1939.  His last work, completed just before his death, was an illustrated Wind in the Willows that was published posthumously in 1940.

We have a wide range of books and folios showcasing Arthur Rackham's work, including those from the Limited Editions Club and some first editions.  So if you get the chance, come celebrate the life of one of the most beloved children's/fairytale illustrators with us here at Special Collections.

Sources used:

"About Arthur Rackham." The Arthur Rackham Society. N.p., n.d. Web. 16 Sept. 2013. <http://arthur-rackham-society.org/about_the_artist.html>. 
"Arthur Rackham." Arthur Rackham. N.p., 1998. Web. 16 Sept. 2013. <http://www.bpib.com/illustrat/rackham.htm>.
"Rackham 101." Aleph-Bet Books. N.p., n.d. Web. 16 Sept. 2013. <http://www.alephbet.com/arthur-rackham-101.php>.
Scott, LaRue. "Arthur Rackham Illustrations." British Heritage 24.4 (2003): 52. EBSCOhost. Web. 18 Sept. 2013. <http://ehis.ebscohost.com/ehost/detail?sid=9321715c-f7d8-456c-a626-c6de6fb3fc32%40sessionmgr11&vid=1&hid=5&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ%3d%3d#db=f5h&AN=9676268>.

Author Self-Portrait:

http://www.art-prints-on-demand.com/kunst/arthur_rackham/self_portrait.jpg