1126) The great book of seals: Contains drawings of royal seals and seals of office of anybody who was somebody over the last roughly 3 generations (up to 2 years ago, the book does not update). Also contains examples of seals of lower offices, for instance what the seal of an average mid level bureaucrat from a certain city state would look like, they use it for instance for sealing the gates at night so the city knows nobody has come sneaking in through those gates. The drawings are all quite nice sketches, but sketches nonetheless, and a trained eye looking for a forgery can always tell the difference between the real thing and a forgery based on just these drawings, whether they're looking at the seal itself or its print in wax.