- Left Hand holding a card
- Left hand pointing
- Left Hand Pointing - Fine detail
- Left Hand Pointing Coarse detail
- A Son of Pan
“A Son of Pan,” by William Padgett. Example of outline drawing, put in solidly with a brush. If this had been done with pencil or autographic chalk, much of the feeling and expression of the original would have been lost. The drawing has suffered slightly in reproduction, where (as in the shadows on the neck and hands) the lines were pale in the original. Size of drawing 11½ × 6½ in. Zinc process. - Silhoette - Right Hand pointing
- Hand holding Card
Hand holding Card - Right Hand Pointing - Coarse Detail
- Man looking at woman
- Right Hand Pointing - Fine detail
- Silhoette - Left Hand pointing
- Tiresome Dog
“Tiresome Dog,” by E. K. Johnson. - Three girls and an old man
- The Rose Queen
by G. D. LESLIE, R.A. (From “Academy Notes,” 1893.) - Man and Woman talking
- Little girl with a clock
- Daniel Webster
- Samuel Adams
- Right Hand Pointing
- Henry Clay
- Badminton in the studio
From the painting by R.W. MacBeth, A.R.A. - Alexander Hamilton
- Benjamin Franklin
- William H. Seward
- George Washington
- The finding of the infant St. George
CHARLES M. GERE. (From his painting in the New Gallery, 1893.) - Young lady
- Ashes of Roses
This careful drawing, from the painting by Mr. Boughton, in the Royal Academy, reproduced by the Dawson process, is interesting for variety of treatment and indication of textures in pen and ink. It is like the picture, but it has also the individuality of the draughtsman, as in line engraving. Size of drawing about 6½ x 3½ in - John Hancock
- An Odd Volume
A seated man reading a book - Older boy doing a magic trick
- Thomas Jefferson
- Happy little boy in the rain
- Advice to the mentally feeble
Keep the mouth closed. - John Quincy Adams
- John Jay
John Jay - Boy climbing a tree
- Robert Burns
- Another case of trying to keep neutral
Couple sitting on a park bench not really communicating - Are you going to volunteer
She: Are you going to volunteer? He: If yes, no. If no, yes. - Aren’t there a couple of young men in there with Clara
“Aren’t there a couple of young men in there with Clara?” “No, only one. There isn’t a sound.”