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Books > Arts & Architecture > Industrial / commercial art & design > Product design
Though computer rendering has been a huge boon to designers,
drawing by hand is still indispensable when it comes to developing
ideas and presenting concept art. Creative Sketching in Product
Design offers readers a square-one guide to all the skills required
to create professional, realistic product drawings: perspective,
including one-, two-, three-point and cavalier perspective; light
& shadow, including shadow boundaries and projections; and
coloring techniques, which includes material effects for wood,
plastic and metal. Step-by-step diagrams and exercises make this an
ideal resource for the classroom, while also being fully accessible
to the self-directed learner. A broad selection of existing
products, with photographs alongside the original concept
development sketches, offer a look into the ways in which sketching
can be the bridge between an idea and a usable product.
The name of Hans J. Wegner (1914-2007) is inseparable from his
unrivalled chairs, which have helped Danish design achieve
international recognition. Any fan of design has his or her
favorite among Wegner's approximately 500 creations, and there is
hardly an interior design magazine that has not included an
illustration of his elegant China Chair (1943) or Y Chair (1950).
Even John F. Kennedy sat on the Round Chair, now known simply as
The Chair (1949). Trained as a furniture maker, Wegner typically
made his prototypes by hand, using traditional joinery techniques
such as tongue-and-groove or finger joints. In the process, he
often pushed the limitations of wood, giving his designs an
unequaled elegance. Their beauty was matched by their practicality:
he considered comfort and ergonomics to be equally as important as
appearance. Despite his concern for functionality, his personality
and sense of humor also shone through his works, as evidenced by
his splendid Peacock Chair (1947) or the masculine Ox Chair (1960),
available with or without horns.
Harry Bertoia, Sculptor is devoted to the life and work of a
twentieth-century Italian-born American artist whose important
commissions are located in twenty-five American cities from New
York to Seattle and from Minneapolis to Miami. It traces the
development of Bertoia's versatile career from his youth in
Detroit, beginning with drawings, paintings, and monoprints, then
jewelry and furniture designs, to his abstract sculptures in
metals, many of architectural proportions. The book includes a
biography of the man and detailed descriptions of his methods of
working. Many major sculptures and some minor ones are described in
detail. They are critically analyzed for their aesthetic components
and the ideas they were intended to express. A large number of
photographs supplements the descriptions and analyses. Two
appendixes give chronologies of the artist's life and of his
architectural commissions, the latter virtually a catalog of
Bertoia's major works. Based on several extensive interviews with
the artist, as well as on research into his earlier writings, the
book includes Bertoia's thoughts on aesthetics and various phases
of the art processes he uses. His work is categorized into four
major aesthetic explorations that interested him most of his life.
Autodesk AutoCAD 2010 Fundamentals is designed to be used during
instructor led training in a eight week course. It is an
introductory level textbook intended for new AutoCAD 2010 users.
This book covers all the fundamental skills necessary for
effectively using AutoCAD and will provide a strong foundation for
advancement. This textbook applies the use of AutoCAD as it
pertains to mechanical drafting. Knowing how to draw a line in
AutoCAD is not the same as understanding which line type is
required when creating technical drawings. This text not only
provides the necessary information to operate AutoCAD but also
provides the skills to use AutoCAD as a tool to work proficiently
as a mechanical drafter or designer.
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