Truslove and Hanson

Truslove & Hanson was a minor independent publishing firm that ran a number of fashionable bookshops in the West End of London.

They also printed personalized stationery and bookplates, offered a bookbinding service, and acted as London agents for the State Library of New South Wales.

They published several editions of Frederick Litchfield's Illustrated History of Furniture (7 editions, 1892–1922) and the same author's Pottery and Porcelain (1900, 1912); Fred Miller's Art Crafts for Amateurs (1901); W. G. Paulson Townsend's Embroidery or the Craft of the Needle (1899, 1907), and Plant and Floral Studies for Artists and Craftspeople (1901); and, as Truslove, Hanson and Comba, the American edition of William Millar's classic Plastering Plain and Decorative (1897).

From 1899 to 1901 Truslove, Hanson and Comba also published the American edition of The Artist, a monthly review of art and design.

Other notable publications include Henry Ling Roth's, The Natives of Sarawak and British North Borneo (1896) and Oriental Silverwork (1910); John Henry Cardwell's, Men and Women of Soho: Famous and Infamous (1904); and Joseph Shaylor's The Pleasures of Bookland (1914).