✨ Why and How I Curate Antique Illustrations From Forgotten Pages to Digital Treasures: A Journey Through Time and Nature


🧐 What does it mean to curate antique illustrations?  

Curating antique illustrations means carefully sourcing, researching, and preserving historical artwork—often hidden in centuries-old books—then restoring them digitally so they can be appreciated, studied, or used in creative projects today.


🌿 Why I’m Drawn to Antique Natural History Illustrations

My love of antique illustrations grew from three passions:

  • A deep respect for the natural world
  • A background in anthropology and medieval studies
  • A lifelong fascination with forgotten history

During my anthropology studies, I explored how people relate to the natural world across cultures and time. My medieval studies minor gave me a taste for illuminated manuscripts, herbals, and early scientific texts—each illustration offering a glimpse into how people once interpreted plants, fungi, and wildlife.

There’s something grounding and magical about holding an old book and knowing someone, hundreds of years ago, painted a mushroom or butterfly by hand in painstaking detail—trying to understand the world just like we are now.

I found this 1903 copy of Medicology in a tiny town in Orgeon. I was passing through on a road trip and I love searching for antiques in small towns. This text was packed with full colour medical illustrations and botanicals. 


📚 Where do I find these antique illustrations?

I source illustrations from a mix of:

  • Personal antique book collection (which I hunt for at flea markets, estate sales, and dusty bookstores)  
  • Public domain archives like:
    • The Biodiversity Heritage Library
    • Archive.org
    • Europeana
    • New York Public Library Digital Collections
  • University digitized collections, especially those focusing on botany, zoology, or early science

Each image I select must speak to me—not just visually, but historically. I ask: Who made this? Why? What purpose did it serve? Is it scientific? Symbolic? Magical?

Flat lay of an antique gem text with colourful hand drawn gem illustrations.

🧼 How do I restore and curate antique illustrations?

Once I find a piece, I:

1. Research its origin (book title, date, artist, cultural context)

2. Digitally restore it:

  • Remove discoloration, damage, or stains
  • Preserve ink and pencil textures
  • Maintain the soul of the piece—never over-editing

3. Curate by theme:

  • Sea creatures 
  • Apothecary labels    
  • Witches' gardens     
  • Fungi & lichen
  • Faeriecore flora

The final piece may be part of a scrapbook sheet, a witchy journal kit, or simply shared as a digital relic.


💡 What makes antique illustration curation meaningful?  

Vintage sun and moon illustration from the Nuremburg Manuscript

This isn’t just image restoration—it's cultural preservation.  

These illustrations were once:

  • Tools for learning
  • Objects of beauty
  • Records of folk knowledge
  • Sacred to early scientists, artists, and healers

Bringing them back into the light means giving modern creatives, students, and dreamers a direct connection to the past.

For me, curating these works honors both art and ancestry—a quiet rebellion against throwaway trends and a devotion to slowness, detail, and meaning.


🔍 Key Takeaways: Why and How I Curate Antique Illustrations

✅ I draw from my background in anthropology and medieval studies to find illustrations with historical depth.

✅ I source from antique books, public domain archives, and university collections.

✅ Each piece is digitally restored with care to retain its original character.

✅ My curation themes are rooted in the natural world, folklore, and forgotten science.

✅ This work preserves culture, celebrates nature, and connects past with present.

Vintage gnome illustration pushing a mushroom in a wheelbarrow
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