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Most Expensive Pop-Up Books

After my post on the PC pop up book took off, I decided to look around for other interesting pop-up books I could find and write about.  Looking around on Amazon I found lots of interesting ones, but they have been covered over and over again by other bloggers.  Eventually I decided to sort by price and found all sorts of interesting books.

The most expensive pop-up book on Amazon is The Wizard Of Oz Pop Up Limited Edition.

oz-cover.jpg

Here is an image of the inside of the commemorative re-release, which I believe is the same as the original:

oz-inside.jpg

You can find many other images and videos online, and it is obvious that this is a very beautiful and well-designed book.  I would love to have it, but it is listed at $1655.29 on Amazon.

The next most expensive is The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon (Limited Edition): A Pop-up Book for $1400, which is apparently a pop-up edition of a book by Steven King and Kees Moerbeek.  I’m not sure what makes this worth so much - the images on Amazon show rather dull pop-ups.

gordon-cover.jpg

Next up is the very long-titled Buck Rogers 25th Century Featuring Buddy and Allura in Strange Adventures in the Spider Ship, The Illustrated Pop-Up Edition.  The pop-ups aren’t fancy, but I love the style of the artwork.

It is listed for $1070.18 on Amazon, but the pictures are from this eBay auction, which is listed at $675.

buckroger-cover.JPGbuckroger-inside.JPG

The next book, is a 1930’s Disney pop-up, The Pop-up Silly Symphonies Containing Babes in the Woods and King Neptune for $1059.73.  I found images here.

disney-cover.jpg

disney-inside.jpg

The last entry in my list is another Disney book, Mickey Mouse in King Arthur’s Court , listed at$874.71.  The images are from an eBay auction.

mickey-cover.JPG mickey-inside.JPG

2009-05-08 22:23 by Jon, Filed under:Pop Up, Books, Pictures     2 Comments

Pop Up Guide to the Personal Computer

Corrin and I dropped some stuff off at Goodwill the other day, and when we were looking around inside I made an amazing find.  For only two dollars, I purchased a pop-up book describing the internals of a 1980’s PC!  I’ve uploaded pictures of most of the book.  I left out a few of the more boring features, such as opening a floppy disk to see the mylar disc inside.  Sorry about the datestamps - I always forget to turn them off.

Cover

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This pop-up computer greets you when you first open the book.  The text on screen says “Insert disk and close door.”  When you do, the text changes to a welcome message describing the purpose of the book.

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When the tab at the bottom is pulled, the M key is depressed and the binary signal sent by the keyboard is shown.  The next two pictures are a binary and an ASCII decoder that are also on this page.

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This page doesn’t have any interesting interactions.  There is a chip in a pocket on the opposing page that can be placed in the slots on the lower right.

dsci0536.JPG

The disc can be slid in, showing how it lines up with the read/write heads.

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This is one of my favorite pages.  The electron ray is made of string, and pixels appear behind it as it shoots down the scan line.

dsci0538.JPG

This is the last page of the book.  Pulling the tab on the right moves the print head across the screen to reveal the word “Goodbye.”

Inside the Personal Computer: An Illustrated Introduction in 3 Dimensions on Amazon

Books by Sharon Gallagher - This Amazon search might find you some better priced copies than the one linked to above. It is only sold through Amazon partners, and they all seem to enter it in a little differently.

Welcome, StumbleUpon, reddit, Gizmodo and anyone else who ends up here!  If you liked this post, you might like the Most Expensive Pop-Up Books post I just made.

2009-04-28 13:16 by Jon, Filed under:Pop Up, Computers, Books, Pictures     48 Comments

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