It considered one of the most important reference collections of German art drawings from that period.
[1][2] Maximilian Willibald of Waldburg-Wolfegg (1604–1667) started to collect the drawings of the Kleiner Klebeband from 1650 until his death.
In the fall of 2011 the Stiftung Preußischer Kulturbesitz and museums of the city of Augsburg bought them from the family Waldburg-Wolfegg, and that December they were shown to the public for the first time in a special exhibition.
[1][2] The Kleiner Klebeband contains drawings by German artists and a few works by Dutch and Italian masters as well.
The latter was described by the artist and academic Peter Halm as the "most perfect German drawing before Dürer".