Kickstarter-funded 'Bibliotheca' version is available as five volumes in a solid walnut slipcase for $298.00:
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct...lion-dollar-bible-is-finally-fin.html?start=1
Crossway has a similar product The ESV Reader's Bible (free of verse numbers and footnotes), six volumes in cowhide with walnut slipcase for $499.99:
http://www.readersbible.org/production-2/
This ESV Reader's set is some Bible. Specs:
"TYPFEFACE
typeface Trinité was inspired by the ideal harmony found in Renaissance incunabula
Type | Trinité No. 2 Roman
Designer | Bram de Does
Foundry | Enschedé Type Foundry
Size | 12 point
PRINTER
Legatoria Editoriale Giovanni Olivotto
Founded | 1900
Printing Location | Comune di Lavis, Trentino, Italy
Binding Location | Comune di Vicenza, Veneto, Italy
PAPER
Imported from Sweden
Stock | Munken Premium Cream uncoated paper
Weight | 80 gsm
Thickness | 104 microns
Bulk | 1.3
COVER MATERIAL
Cowhide over Board
Manufacturer | Gruppo Dani S.p.A., Comune di Arzignano, Veneto, Italy
Material | Fine grain Dani Panama cowhide leather
Color | 5300 Black
SLIPCASE
Handcrafted by Amish craftsmen in northern Indiana
Wood species | American Black Walnut (juglans nigra)
Tree size | 100–120 ft tall
Tree diameter | 2–3 ft
Wood hardness | 1,010 lbf"
Luxury Bibles All the Rage: Million Dollar Bible Finally Finished
Discussion in 'Bible Versions & Translations' started by Jerome, Dec 6, 2016.
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I see the need for a Bible that will stand up to hard knocks, rest easy in the hand and be easy on the eye, for decades. Not cheap.
Not for me. I'm hard on books of all types: stains, broken spines, etc. Alas, I love books but can't seem to take care of them. So I usually buy something affordable — a $5 Holman, a $30 ESV, a $20 NET. Not to mention a number of paperbacks.
Truth is, I use digital almost exclusively now. Much better searching and comparing one text to another. I still have my beloved printed editions, but they are much safer when I don't handle them.
But if you're a person who wants to hold a Bible in his hand, I don't begrudge someone for spending a bit of money on a Bible that will, perhaps, last for generations. Even pricey Bibles of today pale in comparison to what a Geneva or King James would have cost four centuries ago. It doesn't seem out of line to pay for a Bible what a few pair of high-end basketball shoes cost. -
Bible Thumpin n Gun Totin Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
I got me one of them $300 dollar Bibles. The reasons being are as follows:
1. I'm very young (22) and I want to have the same Bible, with all my notes, for my whole life.
2. When I die, I want my future kids/grandkids/great-grandkids, and my future wife (whoever that is) to have those notes, and to have their daddy's/husband's Bible to guide them when they need it.
In order to accomplish both items I need a Bible that lasts a long time, therefore I went for a Bible that was bound rather than all the cheap ones today, which are glued. These bound Bibles are excellent quality, but not cheap. When a bound Bible wears out, a Book Binder can rebind it, and it's good as new (had this done to one of my 1850s Hymn Books). Therefore my $300 Bible will outlast myself, my children, and my grandchildren. Then, when the binding breaks, my great-grandchildren just rebind it :)
All of that is worth the $300, and then some, to me....but I'm a bit odd for my age I suppose ;) -
You're just weird BTnGT!!! :D My hubby got an Allan Bible when he was ordained and that thing is gorgeous!! I'm jealous just a little bit. :D
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John of Japan Well-Known MemberSite Supporter
I can understand paying generously for a Bible that will last. But a "luxury Bible" for huge bucks? Ridiculous. Send the money to a missionary. There was never a time in our decades in Japan that we had enough funds to do what we wanted to do for Christ. But back in the homeland, many believers were living in luxury. Remember, we all have to face Jesus someday.
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About 20 years ago, I paid $150 for a genuine Cambridge Edition KJV with leather cover. (I dunno what kind of leather; the facts about leather are unknown to me.) I have read it through several times, handling it CAREFULLY as I did so. It remains pretty well pristine.
I'm happy that it's COPYRIGHTED. Thus, I know my copy is authentic, straight from the press of Cambridge U. or whoever their printer was at the time, unaltered by anyone, just as the scholars at Cambridge drew it up. you KJVOs out there who holler about copyrighted Bible translations should be JUST THE OPPOSITE, not trusting any NON-COPYRIGHTED Bibles, as someone mighta altered it.