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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Decorative arts & crafts > Furniture & cabinetmaking
While all but gone today, Jamestown's furniture industry was once
the second-largest producer of furniture in the United States.
Manufacturing boomed from 1816, when William Breed and Royal Keyes
opened their shops, to the 1920s, when Jamestown was still one of
the top wood furniture producers in the country. In the nineteenth
century, the thriving railroad industry allowed Jamestown's quality
creations to be distributed nationwide. After the Civil War, an
influx of Swedish immigrants brought their craftsmanship and skills
to Jamestown, forming Morgan Manufacturing, Empire Furniture
Company and many others. Then, their pieces were valued for quality
and durability; today, they're coveted by collectors as beautiful
antiques. Local expert Clarence Carlson uncovers the fascinating
story of Jamestown furniture.
The movement to buy locally, which has gained momentum in the areas
of produce and food, is now spreading to arts and crafts. Through
the work of over seventy contemporary furniture makers, the role of
place in the creative process is explored and celebrated. Whether
in terms of materials, inspiration, or the interaction with
customers, these artists are rooted in their surroundings. What
springs from these roots is usually unique, often edgy, and always
beautiful furniture and accessories. Over 150 examples of their
work are shown in full color, with ample detail photographs so the
reader gets an intimate look at the skill and artistic instincts of
these makers. Essays by furniture makers and leaders in the craft
world amplify the visual feast and help the reader understand the
vision, motivation, and inspiration that give impetus to the
artists and inform their work.
Providing a complete review of cottonwood, the most commonly used
form of bark, this guide addresses the unique challenges and
benefits of carving tree bark and offers information on what to
expect from this atypical wood source, including the best places to
find it. An important section on troubleshooting teaches carvers
what to do when they encounter rot or insect damage in their bark.
One complete project, the Whimsical House, is outlined from start
to finish. Close-up photography and instructional captions are
included for added guidance. A full-color photography review offers
a glimpse at the range of projects possible for this unusual
material.
The focus of this book is on functional seating, and the key
argument presented is that functional seating needs to assist the
person using it for the performance of seated tasks, enhance rather
than detract from the person's posture and health, and it needs to
provide aesthetic features that do not limit task or health. The
book spans the period 3000BC to 2000AD and presents largely Western
seating. This book is unique in its approach to seating because it
draws together evidence that relates to seating that facilitates
health and task while also addressing aesthetic factors. This
evidence creates an understanding of how seats may be designed to
not only promote bodily health but also allow functional
optimisation of sitting and seating. This book is important to
furniture and industrial designers, interior decorators,
architects, those teaching seat design, health professionals
attending and educating those who relax or work in the seated
position, furniture historians, and members of the general public
interested in the history of seating.
Charlotte Perriand was one of great designers of the twentieth
century. A pioneer of modernism, her work was often overshadowed by
her more famous male collaborators, who included Le Corbusier,
Pierre Jeanneret and Jean Prouve. However, in recent years her
reputation as a furniture designer and architect has matched the
stature of her peers - her furniture in particular has become
highly prized by collectors. From the 1920s onwards, Perriand was
instrumental in bringing the modernist aesthetic to interiors. But
she also believed in the synthesis of the arts, and was friends
with visual artists such as Pablo Picasso and Fernand Leger. This
book will explore Perriand's journey from the machine aesthetic to
her adoption of natural forms, and from modular furniture systems
to major architectural projects such as Les Arcs ski resort.
Featuring some of her most famous interiors, as well as her
original furniture, her photography and her personal notebooks,
this book sheds new light on Perriand's creative process and her
place in design history. It will accompany the forthcoming Design
Museum exhibition of the same title, which will coincide with the
twenty-fifth anniversary of Perriand's last significant
presentation in London, held at the Design Museum in 1996.
Green products have become a key aspect of virtually all areas of
our lives. This book presents cutting-edge lighting and lamp
designs by designers from all over the world that through their use
of recycling techniques, natural materials, and new technologies
are both exceptionally environmentally friendly and highly stylish.
Furniture Studio explores the origins, methods, results, and
influence of the unique and highly successful furniture design and
fabrication studios offered by the University of Washington
Department of Architecture. The furniture program, initiated by
Andris Vanags, is an immersion into the role of materials, design,
and making in architectural education. Students directly engage the
physical properties of materials, and the knowledge gained through
this engagement enriches the design and fabrication process. The
experiences of its graduates reveal that the studio fosters
creative thinking that truly integrates design and making. Ochsner
presents historical background to shop-based courses, including
furniture studio; traces the careers of four representative
graduates of the program; and suggests implications from this
program for architectural education and individual achievement
beyond the University of Washington. Eleven students and the
projects they created in the winter 2009 studio are profiled, and
the book contains a fully illustrated catalogue of exemplary
student projects from 1989 to the present. Illustrations and
descriptions throughout the book showcase the heirloom-quality
projects created by the students, many of which won awards in
competitions.
A visual analysis of the colours used in furnishing fabrics and
wallpapers from the 15th century to now, providing inspiration for
designers. This simply structured and highly original book analyses
the palettes that have been used by designers in the creation of
furnishing fabrics and wallpapers from the 15th century to the
present. The colours used in each pattern are presented in a simple
proportional grid, giving a clear understanding of hues that have
been expertly combined at different periods to create the designs
we continue to admire and emulate. Spectrum opens with a brief
introduction by interior design expert Ros Byam Shaw, exploring the
history of colour as used in interiors. The fabrics and wallpapers
that follow are arranged chronologically. Each is reproduced on its
own double-page spread, and is accompanied by a brief
narrative-style caption that provides information about each fabric
or wallpaper and its significance in the context of interior
design. Unique in such a book are the colour grids shown beside
each pattern, in which the colours in the original piece are shown
in proportion to their use, and with their CMYK references to
enable designers to replicate these colours in their own work.
'Loving Lebus' encapsulates the changing styles of furniture over
time. With comprehensive notes placing Lebus furniture in context
the author has selected the best of the firm's advertisements,
catalogue images, photographs and Lebus furniture pieces today.
Antique and vintage - Lebus furniture is enjoying a resurgence. We
are once again, 'Loving Lebus'. Paul has nurtured a passion for all
things Lebus. His first book 'Harris Lebus: A Romance with the
Furniture Trade' went behind the scenes to look into how Lebus
furniture was made. Now the Lebus story is complete - 'Loving
Lebus: Looking into Harris Lebus Furniture' is another labour of
love.
From Alvar Aalto to Marco Zanuso, Chairs introduces over 1,000
groundbreaking innovations by the world's greatest designers.
Tracing the history of the modern chair from 1800 to the present
day, revered experts Charlotte and Peter Fiell comprehensively
guide you through the fascinating world of seating design - from
the functional office chair to the limited edition art piece. With
more than 1,000 exquisite images alongside fascinating insights
into the conception, design and production of these masterpieces,
this definitive collection includes design classics such as Josef
Hoffmann's Sitzmaschine, Robin Day's Polyprop and
computer-generated masterworks by Zhang Zhoujie, amongst many more.
Wallpaper's spread across trades, class and gender is charted in
this first full-length study of the material's use in Britain
during the long eighteenth century. It examines the types of
wallpaper that were designed and produced and the interior spaces
it occupied, from the country house to the homes of prosperous
townsfolk and gentry, showing that wallpaper was hung by Earls and
merchants as well as by aristocratic women. Drawing on a wide range
of little known examples of interior schemes and surviving
wallpapers, together with unpublished evidence from archives
including letters and bills, it charts wallpaper's evolution across
the century from cheap textile imitation to innovative new
decorative material. Wallpaper's growth is considered not in terms
of chronology, but rather alongside the categories used by
eighteenth-century tradesmen and consumers, from plains to flocks,
from China papers to papier mache and from stucco papers to
materials for creating print rooms. It ends by assessing the ways
in which eighteenth-century wallpaper was used to create
historicist interiors in the twentieth century. Including a wide
range of illustrations, many in colour, the book will be of
interest to historians of material culture and design, scholars of
art and architectural history as well as practicing designers and
those interested in the historic interior.
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