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The sales of organic products have increased significantly over the
last five years in Europe and the USA. This, along with the EU's
definition of organic in 1993, has prompted the publication of a
practical guide which describes what is involved in the processing
and production of organic food ingredients and products. This
handbook emphasizes technological, economic and regulatory issues,
and includes a directory of companies which sell and produce
organic foods and ingredients. It should interest organic food
manufacturers, retailers, wholesalers, organic farmers and growers,
and those in academic research institutions.
This book reveals a great untold story of enterprise and innovation
based on the relationship between the Victoria and Albert Museum,
and Elkington & Co., the renowned industrial art and design
manufacturer of the 19th-century. The Birmingham-based company
pioneered and patented the industrial art of electro-metallurgy to
create original artworks, perfect replicas, and mass-reproduced
luxury consumer goods that used electricity to 'grow' metal into
shape at a molecular level. This technological revolution created a
profound legacy, which continues to influence the way modern
material culture looks and operates today. Elkington's syntheses of
science and art into industrial manufacturing processes
revolutionized the design and production, replication and
reproduction of precious metalwork, metal sculpture, and ornamental
art metalwork. Elkington & Co. gained huge public acclaim at
the Great Exhibition of 1851. They subsequently produced artworks
and luxury goods, including world-renowned sports trophies like the
Wimbledon Singles Trophies, as well as luxury dining services for
great steamships and railways, including tableware that sank with
the Titanic. Elkington played a crucial role in shaping and
building the V&A's permanent collection from its foundation in
1852 (following the Great Exhibition) until the First World War.
The V&A's collections in turn had a profound influence on
Elkington's output. The great success of their relationship
cemented both the museum's status as a leading cultural
institution, and the E&Co 'makers-mark' as one of the world's
first truly multinational designer brands. Elkington's electrical
alchemy helped spark the electrical revolution that founded the
modern world.
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