This autumn The Kate Greenaway Baby Book reappears with a fresh new cover. Designed by Ting-Chung Cheng, winner of the Kate Greenaway Design Award, the new look was the unanimous choice of a distinguished panel of judges, including three artists, who convened in Kate Greenaway’s studio in Hampstead.
This will be the third edition and fifteenth printing of The Kate Greenaway Baby Book, a title that has built up a loyal and enthusiastic following around the world.
The book combines traditional design with a modern approach to child development. It has sections for parents to fill in with details of general progress as well as important information such as vaccinations and illnesses. The pages have been laid out with plenty of space for photographs, first drawings and other keepsakes of early childhood.
- 210mm x 260mm
- 60Â pages, hardback
‘It's lovely to keep a record of how your child grows and develops. And now there's a sumptuous book which will help you do just that. The Kate Greenaway Baby Book has spaces for you to record all sorts of fascinating information about your child from birth to the age of five.’ — Parents Magazine
‘A delightful, uncluttered design.’ – Rhian Harris, Director, V&A Museum of Childhood
‘Classic, clean, but still with a nostalgic warmth you would hope for in a book like this.’ – Luci Gosling, Business Development Manager, Mary Evans Picture Library
‘Beautifully presented… A delightful book, to keep forever.’ – Richard Morris, Books Review
Table of Contents
The Birth, The Family Tree, The Naming, At Three Months, Weight and Height
Charts, Vaccinations and Illnesses, At Six Months, First Christmas, Teeth, First
Words, Milestones, At One Year, From Two to Five Years, Funny Sayings and
Incidents, Favourites, First Drawing and Writing, Going to School.
Author description
Kate Greenaway (1846–1901) was one of the first illustrators to have her work
published in colour. She had a bold watercolour style and her uncanny ability to
capture the innocence of childhood won her instant popularity. Her powerful
influence can be traced in the finely detailed watercolours of Beatrix Potter
and every year her work is remembered in the award of the Kate
Greenaway Medal.