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Sim Greene (Hardcover)
Richard T (Richard Taylor) 1 Wiley, John C. Winston Company
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R795
Discovery Miles 7 950
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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A comprehensive and practical guide full of advice and inspiration
for anyone wishing to capture the beauty of the urban landscape.
The wonderful thing about drawing buildings is that, wherever you
travel around the globe, you will never be short of subjects to
inspire you. From the most elaborate of Renaissance cathedrals,
through to the humble garden shed, you will always be able to
practise your skills and learn a few techniques in the process.
This hands-on and inspirational book will encourage you to meet the
exciting challenges of drawing and painting buildings using a
variety of media and a wide range of techniques, including pencil,
pen, graphite powder, watercolour, water-soluble pencils and Indian
ink. As you work through this book, you will look at materials and
their qualities then move on to explore how to put these materials
to best use when drawing specific types of building. You will be
led gently through levels of learning, with easy and more
challenging exercises progressing your knowledge and developing
your skills. As the book is divided into discrete sections, you can
dip in to a particular type of building that you wish to draw, and
use the information and illustration provided, while extended
teaching exercises take you through the way the author approaches
composing and completing a drawing. Fully annotated paintings,
working drawings and extended projects reveal how each effect was
achieved. Detailed artworks in a range of styles and media are
thoroughly annotated to demonstrate key techniques and important
details and there are invaluable exercises for understanding
perspective, negative and positive space, tone, choosing details
and constructing large-scale images. The book includes thorough
studies of a wide range of different architectural styles, from
town houses to rural cottages and barns, from churches and
classical architecture to continental cafes and street scenes.
Taylor's exquisite drawings and paintings demonstrate the quality
of the results that can be achieved by following his helpful
guidance and advice.
This monograph has arisen out of a number of attempts spanning
almost five decades to understand how one might examine the
evolution of densities in systems whose dynamics are described by
differential delay equations. Though the authors have no definitive
solution to the problem, they offer this contribution in an attempt
to define the problem as they see it, and to sketch out several
obvious attempts that have been suggested to solve the problem and
which seem to have failed. They hope that by being available to the
general mathematical community, they will inspire others to
consider-and hopefully solve-the problem. Serious attempts have
been made by all of the authors over the years and they have made
reference to these where appropriate.
British Second World War tanks performed so badly that it is
difficult to bring to mind any other British weapon of the period
that provokes such a strong sense of failure. Unfortunately, many
of the accusations appear to be true - British tanks were in many
ways a disgrace. But why was Britain, the country that invented
them, consistently unable to field tanks of the required quality or
quantity throughout the conflict? This perceived failure has taken
on the status of a myth, but, like all myths, it should not be
accepted at face value - it should be questioned and analysed. And
that is what Dick Taylor does in this closely researched and
absorbing study. He looks at the flaws in British financial policy,
tank doctrine, design, production and development before and
throughout the war years which often had fatal consequences for the
crews who were sent to fight and to be murdered' in mechanical
abortions'. Their direct experience of the shortcomings of these
machines is an important element of the story. He also considers
how British tanks compared to those of the opposition and contrasts
tank production for the army with the production of aircraft for
the RAF during the same period. His clear-sighted account goes on
to explain how, later in the conflict, British tank design improved
to the point where their tanks were in many ways superior to those
of the Americans and Germans and how they then produced the
Centurion which was one of the best main battle tanks of the
post-war era.
This book (hardcover) is part of the TREDITION CLASSICS. It
contains classical literature works from over two thousand years.
Most of these titles have been out of print and off the bookstore
shelves for decades. The book series is intended to preserve the
cultural legacy and to promote the timeless works of classical
literature. Readers of a TREDITION CLASSICS book support the
mission to save many of the amazing works of world literature from
oblivion. With this series, tredition intends to make thousands of
international literature classics available in printed format again
- worldwide.
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