Schuyler Stridon NASB, Full Yapp Firebrick Red Goatskin Bible
Original price was: $230.00.$215.00Current price is: $215.00.
In stock
Full Yapp Firebrick Red Goatskin cover with Dark Red Calfskin liner
3 red ribbons and red under gold art gilt
Page size: 6.1″ x 9.1″ x 1.3″
10 pt. font with words of Christ in black
Cross references and Concordance
See Description below for more details.
Description
Description
The Schuyler Stridon is a new and unique presentation of the NASB text. Here is a PDF sampler. Here are pictures. This single column, verse-by-verse typesetting is framed with wide outer margins. Cross references and footnotes are separated at the bottom of the page for ease of use.
Full Yapp Firebrick Red Goatskin Covers with Dark Red Calfskin Lining
10 point font
NASB 2020 text
Trim size: approximately 6.1″ x 9.1″ x 1.3″ (156 mm x 232 mm x 33 mm)
Line Matching
Single column, verse by verse layout
28 GSM Indopaque Paper
~1 inch outer margins
3 x 1 cm ribbons (Red)
Art-Gilt edging (red under gold) with gilt line (gold line inside the cover)
Smyth Sewn
Black letter text
More than 95,000 cross references and the full set of translation footnotes
Presentation and Family Records Pages
Concordance
Exclusive Schuyler Bible Maps
Nicholas Pfister (verified owner) –
Perfection. I have owned a number of Allan and Cambridge Bibles, but Schuyler is unrivaled when it comes to the whole package; beautiful leather and craftsmanship, wonderful paper/printing, and design/formatting that makes the inside as beautiful as the outside.
The firebrick red is a beautiful color, and goes well with the red ribbons and red accents on the text inside (chapter and verse numbers, etc.). It is just so classic in every way imaginable.
The Stridon itself is great for reading. I thought this layout would be better for preaching but honestly I think it will make a lot of people happy that just want to enjoy reading their Bibles (and that comes from a single-column, reader’s Bible kinda guy!).
Anyway, black may be beautiful, but maybe boring; at least in contrast to the equally classic – yet undeniably less common – red?