The Picturesque Atlas of Australasia was a significant undertaking by the Picturesque Atlas Publishing of Sydney & Melbourne who produced a large folio format (about A3 sized) Atlas published in Australia the late 1880s.
Unlike a modern atlas [a] the main part of the work, was composed of descriptive text rather than solely a book of maps. The total page count was around eight hundred and it was printed black and white on heavy quality paper especially manufactured, and on a printing press especially imported for the project.
Included were some eight hundred steel and wood engravings as illustrations.[1][2][3] The general Editor was Andrew Garran and had contributions from historians, geographers, and natural historians of the time. The engravings were created by prominent and well-known artists. The Atlas was first issued in forty-two monthly parts and sold only by subscription.
The company and their agents managed to sell some 50,000 subscriptions considering the population of Australia at the time.[4] Each part usually had eighteen numbered pages plus an un-numbered full page engraving and the whole was issued with a card cover. Some parts included coloured maps as well, often double sized. Each part was priced at five shillings making the full set ten pounds, ten shillings or ten guineas. In the money of 2024, this equates to approximately Aus$45.00 a part or $1900 for the set.[according to whom?]
It was expected that buyers would have their parts made into Volumes and many did so at their own expense, although the individual parts are still to be found on the second-hand market.[according to whom?]
Effectively the publication was designed to fall into three large and heavy volumes:-
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