Studies the illustrations (probably by the workshop of Geoffroy Tory) accompanying three treatises written by the humanist Lazare de Baïf: on clothing (De re vestiaria), on vases (De vasculis), and on ships (De re navali) - all three published with illustrations in France in 1536. Considers the antique and contemporary sources for the illustrations. Argues that Sebastiano Serlio was the source for the illustrations, drawn from a large collection of drawings and tracings after antiquities (by a variety of hands) that he had himself earlier wished to publish as a compendium of things from the ancient world. Posits that Serlio served as the unnamed co-author with Baïf of a treatise on architecture written in 1531.
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