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Customer Reviews
A Life Drawing: a lovely book to dip in to, 09 Sep 2003
I decided to buy this book because I always loved Shirley Hughes's stories when I was a child. It is beautifully presented - there are so many sketches put together and photographs from Shirley Hughes’s youth. It is a warm and cosy book that is a joy to be dipped in to. Shirley Hughes is such a good author and this biography is full of more funny little anecdotes. It is interesting to see a range of pictures and sketches she has done that are not all linked to her children books.
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Lives of the Great Artists
Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days *Best price found from Amazon Marketplace seller
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*Amazon: £4.40
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Customer Reviews
A Life Drawing: a lovely book to dip in to, 09 Sep 2003
I decided to buy this book because I always loved Shirley Hughes's stories when I was a child. It is beautifully presented - there are so many sketches put together and photographs from Shirley Hughes’s youth. It is a warm and cosy book that is a joy to be dipped in to. Shirley Hughes is such a good author and this biography is full of more funny little anecdotes. It is interesting to see a range of pictures and sketches she has done that are not all linked to her children books.
lovely essential lalique! , 16 Jan 2007
A LOVELY COMPACT LITTLE BOOK!INFORMATIVE,AND WILL CATCH YOUR INTEREST IF YOU ARE INTERESED IN LALIQUE.BEAUTIFUL,CLEAR PHOTOGRAPHS,WITH SECTIONS ON THE TECHNIQUES HE USED TO MAKE THE WORK. HANDY REFERENCE FOR SOMEONE WRITING AN ESSAY(ME!),AND A NICE BOOK FOR ANYONE TO HAVE IN THEIR COLLECTION.
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Customer Reviews
A Life Drawing: a lovely book to dip in to, 09 Sep 2003
I decided to buy this book because I always loved Shirley Hughes's stories when I was a child. It is beautifully presented - there are so many sketches put together and photographs from Shirley Hughes’s youth. It is a warm and cosy book that is a joy to be dipped in to. Shirley Hughes is such a good author and this biography is full of more funny little anecdotes. It is interesting to see a range of pictures and sketches she has done that are not all linked to her children books. lovely essential lalique! , 16 Jan 2007
A LOVELY COMPACT LITTLE BOOK!INFORMATIVE,AND WILL CATCH YOUR INTEREST IF YOU ARE INTERESED IN LALIQUE.BEAUTIFUL,CLEAR PHOTOGRAPHS,WITH SECTIONS ON THE TECHNIQUES HE USED TO MAKE THE WORK. HANDY REFERENCE FOR SOMEONE WRITING AN ESSAY(ME!),AND A NICE BOOK FOR ANYONE TO HAVE IN THEIR COLLECTION. A juvenile history of Da Vinci with 21 related activites, 08 Feb 2004
I have been going through some of the books by Janis Herbert and others than combine history with 21 activities, and as interesting as I have found those volumes to be I have to say I like the ones that deal with artists even more. "Leonardo da Vinci for Kids: His Life and Ideas" combines a detailed juvenile biography of the life of the great inventor, military engineer, scientist, botanist, and mathematician who found time to be a great painter and sculptor as well. This was the man who painted the "Mona Lisa" and invented the armored tank, diving suit, bicycle and airplane centuries before they were built. He is also an important figure in what has been the novel that has been at the top of the bestseller list for like the past year. The biography is divided into four sections, focusing on Leonardo's youth in Vinci, his years as a young apprentice, his period of greatest productivity in Milan, and his final years in Venice and France. The volume is illustrated with dozens of pictures of Leonardo's paintings and sketches, and the back of the book includes a Glossary, Biographies of key Renaissance artists (Botticelli, Michelangeo, etc.) and historical figures (Cesare Borgia, Ludovico Sforza, etc.), Web Sites to Explore, places where you can see some of Da Vinci's work, a Bibliography, Credits, and an Index. The other half of the book are the 21 activities and the art lessons, because in addition to detailing da Vinci's life Herbert talks about perspective, vanishing points and the like. Some of these are just basic art lessons, such as sketching things by observing nature, painting birds, decorating a jar for holding paintbrushes, and making a small picture frame. Others are specific to the artwork of da Vinci, such as making a life mask, lute, notebook, a parachute kite, and learning to measure human bodies the way Leonardo did. You can even make a minestrone soup in honor of Leonardo the vegetarian or Salai's aniseed sweets. Still others deal with the history of the time, such as making a banner. The net result is that "Leonardo da Vinci for Kids" does more than tell the story of his life and show examples of his great artwork, but provides young readers with an opportunity to try and do the same things. This book is also of great use to teachers doing units on Leonardo, the Renaissance, or art, who will be able to find both information and activities they can use in class.
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Customer Reviews
A Life Drawing: a lovely book to dip in to, 09 Sep 2003
I decided to buy this book because I always loved Shirley Hughes's stories when I was a child. It is beautifully presented - there are so many sketches put together and photographs from Shirley Hughes’s youth. It is a warm and cosy book that is a joy to be dipped in to. Shirley Hughes is such a good author and this biography is full of more funny little anecdotes. It is interesting to see a range of pictures and sketches she has done that are not all linked to her children books. lovely essential lalique! , 16 Jan 2007
A LOVELY COMPACT LITTLE BOOK!INFORMATIVE,AND WILL CATCH YOUR INTEREST IF YOU ARE INTERESED IN LALIQUE.BEAUTIFUL,CLEAR PHOTOGRAPHS,WITH SECTIONS ON THE TECHNIQUES HE USED TO MAKE THE WORK. HANDY REFERENCE FOR SOMEONE WRITING AN ESSAY(ME!),AND A NICE BOOK FOR ANYONE TO HAVE IN THEIR COLLECTION. A juvenile history of Da Vinci with 21 related activites, 08 Feb 2004
I have been going through some of the books by Janis Herbert and others than combine history with 21 activities, and as interesting as I have found those volumes to be I have to say I like the ones that deal with artists even more. "Leonardo da Vinci for Kids: His Life and Ideas" combines a detailed juvenile biography of the life of the great inventor, military engineer, scientist, botanist, and mathematician who found time to be a great painter and sculptor as well. This was the man who painted the "Mona Lisa" and invented the armored tank, diving suit, bicycle and airplane centuries before they were built. He is also an important figure in what has been the novel that has been at the top of the bestseller list for like the past year. The biography is divided into four sections, focusing on Leonardo's youth in Vinci, his years as a young apprentice, his period of greatest productivity in Milan, and his final years in Venice and France. The volume is illustrated with dozens of pictures of Leonardo's paintings and sketches, and the back of the book includes a Glossary, Biographies of key Renaissance artists (Botticelli, Michelangeo, etc.) and historical figures (Cesare Borgia, Ludovico Sforza, etc.), Web Sites to Explore, places where you can see some of Da Vinci's work, a Bibliography, Credits, and an Index. The other half of the book are the 21 activities and the art lessons, because in addition to detailing da Vinci's life Herbert talks about perspective, vanishing points and the like. Some of these are just basic art lessons, such as sketching things by observing nature, painting birds, decorating a jar for holding paintbrushes, and making a small picture frame. Others are specific to the artwork of da Vinci, such as making a life mask, lute, notebook, a parachute kite, and learning to measure human bodies the way Leonardo did. You can even make a minestrone soup in honor of Leonardo the vegetarian or Salai's aniseed sweets. Still others deal with the history of the time, such as making a banner. The net result is that "Leonardo da Vinci for Kids" does more than tell the story of his life and show examples of his great artwork, but provides young readers with an opportunity to try and do the same things. This book is also of great use to teachers doing units on Leonardo, the Renaissance, or art, who will be able to find both information and activities they can use in class.
Introducing youngsters to the creative insanity of Dali, 25 May 2004
It is hard to do justice to the imaginative insanity of Salvador Dali, but Angela Wenzel does a pretty good job for this volume in the Adventures in Art series. "The Mad, Mad, Mad World of Salvador Dali" introduces young readers to the Surrealist artist who knew how to put himself in the limelight in ways other than his paintings. One of things that Wenzel does is that she provides some of Dali's own comments about his art, such as the 1937 painting "Sleep," where a heavy face that looks like the film director Luis Bunuel is propped by my crutches and explaining the link between the writings of Sigmund Freud on dreams and Dali's painting "The Burning Giraffe" (1936-37), where drawers are coming out of a tall woman's body. Also included are the famous melting clocks of "The Persistence of Memory" (1931), the fried eggs of "The Sublime Moment" (1938), and the multiple pictures within "The Metamorphosis of Narcissus" (1937). What I especially like about this volume is how it looks at the origins of some of these paintings. For "The Endless Enigma" (1938) we have the original sketches of the six different paintings that Dali hid in the finished painting, while a postcrd showing an African village became a face turned on its side in "Paranoid Faces" (1931). Then there was the "Portrait of Mrs. Isabel Styler-Tas" (1945), which Dali based on Piero della Francesca's "Battista Sforza and Federico de Montefeltro" (circa 1465) by way of Giuseppe Arcimboldo's "Winter," a marvelous example of how the old becomes new in the hands of a talented artist. Young readers will also be exposed to some prime examples of Dali's imagination with regards to other types of art beyond paintings, such as his infamous "Lobster Telephone" (1936) and the "Mae West Lips Sofa" (1937), although I miss seeing the harp covered with silverware that he made for his friend Harpo Marx. There are also some choice photographs of "Dali the superstar" engaging in the art of self-promotion. Just showing young readers examples of Dali's artwork is enough to get them interested in the artist, but Wenzel takes pain to explain how Dali created his masterpieces and what he was trying to do with some of these pieces. This is one of the more truly educational books I have seem about a great artist written for young readers.
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Customer Reviews
A Life Drawing: a lovely book to dip in to, 09 Sep 2003
I decided to buy this book because I always loved Shirley Hughes's stories when I was a child. It is beautifully presented - there are so many sketches put together and photographs from Shirley Hughes’s youth. It is a warm and cosy book that is a joy to be dipped in to. Shirley Hughes is such a good author and this biography is full of more funny little anecdotes. It is interesting to see a range of pictures and sketches she has done that are not all linked to her children books. lovely essential lalique! , 16 Jan 2007
A LOVELY COMPACT LITTLE BOOK!INFORMATIVE,AND WILL CATCH YOUR INTEREST IF YOU ARE INTERESED IN LALIQUE.BEAUTIFUL,CLEAR PHOTOGRAPHS,WITH SECTIONS ON THE TECHNIQUES HE USED TO MAKE THE WORK. HANDY REFERENCE FOR SOMEONE WRITING AN ESSAY(ME!),AND A NICE BOOK FOR ANYONE TO HAVE IN THEIR COLLECTION. A juvenile history of Da Vinci with 21 related activites, 08 Feb 2004
I have been going through some of the books by Janis Herbert and others than combine history with 21 activities, and as interesting as I have found those volumes to be I have to say I like the ones that deal with artists even more. "Leonardo da Vinci for Kids: His Life and Ideas" combines a detailed juvenile biography of the life of the great inventor, military engineer, scientist, botanist, and mathematician who found time to be a great painter and sculptor as well. This was the man who painted the "Mona Lisa" and invented the armored tank, diving suit, bicycle and airplane centuries before they were built. He is also an important figure in what has been the novel that has been at the top of the bestseller list for like the past year. The biography is divided into four sections, focusing on Leonardo's youth in Vinci, his years as a young apprentice, his period of greatest productivity in Milan, and his final years in Venice and France. The volume is illustrated with dozens of pictures of Leonardo's paintings and sketches, and the back of the book includes a Glossary, Biographies of key Renaissance artists (Botticelli, Michelangeo, etc.) and historical figures (Cesare Borgia, Ludovico Sforza, etc.), Web Sites to Explore, places where you can see some of Da Vinci's work, a Bibliography, Credits, and an Index. The other half of the book are the 21 activities and the art lessons, because in addition to detailing da Vinci's life Herbert talks about perspective, vanishing points and the like. Some of these are just basic art lessons, such as sketching things by observing nature, painting birds, decorating a jar for holding paintbrushes, and making a small picture frame. Others are specific to the artwork of da Vinci, such as making a life mask, lute, notebook, a parachute kite, and learning to measure human bodies the way Leonardo did. You can even make a minestrone soup in honor of Leonardo the vegetarian or Salai's aniseed sweets. Still others deal with the history of the time, such as making a banner. The net result is that "Leonardo da Vinci for Kids" does more than tell the story of his life and show examples of his great artwork, but provides young readers with an opportunity to try and do the same things. This book is also of great use to teachers doing units on Leonardo, the Renaissance, or art, who will be able to find both information and activities they can use in class.
Introducing youngsters to the creative insanity of Dali, 25 May 2004
It is hard to do justice to the imaginative insanity of Salvador Dali, but Angela Wenzel does a pretty good job for this volume in the Adventures in Art series. "The Mad, Mad, Mad World of Salvador Dali" introduces young readers to the Surrealist artist who knew how to put himself in the limelight in ways other than his paintings. One of things that Wenzel does is that she provides some of Dali's own comments about his art, such as the 1937 painting "Sleep," where a heavy face that looks like the film director Luis Bunuel is propped by my crutches and explaining the link between the writings of Sigmund Freud on dreams and Dali's painting "The Burning Giraffe" (1936-37), where drawers are coming out of a tall woman's body. Also included are the famous melting clocks of "The Persistence of Memory" (1931), the fried eggs of "The Sublime Moment" (1938), and the multiple pictures within "The Metamorphosis of Narcissus" (1937). What I especially like about this volume is how it looks at the origins of some of these paintings. For "The Endless Enigma" (1938) we have the original sketches of the six different paintings that Dali hid in the finished painting, while a postcrd showing an African village became a face turned on its side in "Paranoid Faces" (1931). Then there was the "Portrait of Mrs. Isabel Styler-Tas" (1945), which Dali based on Piero della Francesca's "Battista Sforza and Federico de Montefeltro" (circa 1465) by way of Giuseppe Arcimboldo's "Winter," a marvelous example of how the old becomes new in the hands of a talented artist. Young readers will also be exposed to some prime examples of Dali's imagination with regards to other types of art beyond paintings, such as his infamous "Lobster Telephone" (1936) and the "Mae West Lips Sofa" (1937), although I miss seeing the harp covered with silverware that he made for his friend Harpo Marx. There are also some choice photographs of "Dali the superstar" engaging in the art of self-promotion. Just showing young readers examples of Dali's artwork is enough to get them interested in the artist, but Wenzel takes pain to explain how Dali created his masterpieces and what he was trying to do with some of these pieces. This is one of the more truly educational books I have seem about a great artist written for young readers.
Design dictionary, 26 Sep 2003
This book gives you an A to Z of design. It is easy to use and full of information. It has a timeline of events from design history for a variety of countries, including the UK and the USA. It is useful for learning about who designed what, but less useful for design ideas. The book is informative but is not helpful tips, just history. This could of course lead to ideas of your own in a variety of design, including products and interiors.
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A Gardener's Life
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Marchioness of Salisbury;
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Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days *Best price found from Amazon Marketplace seller
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*Amazon: £21.29
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Customer Reviews
A Life Drawing: a lovely book to dip in to, 09 Sep 2003
I decided to buy this book because I always loved Shirley Hughes's stories when I was a child. It is beautifully presented - there are so many sketches put together and photographs from Shirley Hughes’s youth. It is a warm and cosy book that is a joy to be dipped in to. Shirley Hughes is such a good author and this biography is full of more funny little anecdotes. It is interesting to see a range of pictures and sketches she has done that are not all linked to her children books. lovely essential lalique! , 16 Jan 2007
A LOVELY COMPACT LITTLE BOOK!INFORMATIVE,AND WILL CATCH YOUR INTEREST IF YOU ARE INTERESED IN LALIQUE.BEAUTIFUL,CLEAR PHOTOGRAPHS,WITH SECTIONS ON THE TECHNIQUES HE USED TO MAKE THE WORK. HANDY REFERENCE FOR SOMEONE WRITING AN ESSAY(ME!),AND A NICE BOOK FOR ANYONE TO HAVE IN THEIR COLLECTION. A juvenile history of Da Vinci with 21 related activites, 08 Feb 2004
I have been going through some of the books by Janis Herbert and others than combine history with 21 activities, and as interesting as I have found those volumes to be I have to say I like the ones that deal with artists even more. "Leonardo da Vinci for Kids: His Life and Ideas" combines a detailed juvenile biography of the life of the great inventor, military engineer, scientist, botanist, and mathematician who found time to be a great painter and sculptor as well. This was the man who painted the "Mona Lisa" and invented the armored tank, diving suit, bicycle and airplane centuries before they were built. He is also an important figure in what has been the novel that has been at the top of the bestseller list for like the past year. The biography is divided into four sections, focusing on Leonardo's youth in Vinci, his years as a young apprentice, his period of greatest productivity in Milan, and his final years in Venice and France. The volume is illustrated with dozens of pictures of Leonardo's paintings and sketches, and the back of the book includes a Glossary, Biographies of key Renaissance artists (Botticelli, Michelangeo, etc.) and historical figures (Cesare Borgia, Ludovico Sforza, etc.), Web Sites to Explore, places where you can see some of Da Vinci's work, a Bibliography, Credits, and an Index. The other half of the book are the 21 activities and the art lessons, because in addition to detailing da Vinci's life Herbert talks about perspective, vanishing points and the like. Some of these are just basic art lessons, such as sketching things by observing nature, painting birds, decorating a jar for holding paintbrushes, and making a small picture frame. Others are specific to the artwork of da Vinci, such as making a life mask, lute, notebook, a parachute kite, and learning to measure human bodies the way Leonardo did. You can even make a minestrone soup in honor of Leonardo the vegetarian or Salai's aniseed sweets. Still others deal with the history of the time, such as making a banner. The net result is that "Leonardo da Vinci for Kids" does more than tell the story of his life and show examples of his great artwork, but provides young readers with an opportunity to try and do the same things. This book is also of great use to teachers doing units on Leonardo, the Renaissance, or art, who will be able to find both information and activities they can use in class.
Introducing youngsters to the creative insanity of Dali, 25 May 2004
It is hard to do justice to the imaginative insanity of Salvador Dali, but Angela Wenzel does a pretty good job for this volume in the Adventures in Art series. "The Mad, Mad, Mad World of Salvador Dali" introduces young readers to the Surrealist artist who knew how to put himself in the limelight in ways other than his paintings. One of things that Wenzel does is that she provides some of Dali's own comments about his art, such as the 1937 painting "Sleep," where a heavy face that looks like the film director Luis Bunuel is propped by my crutches and explaining the link between the writings of Sigmund Freud on dreams and Dali's painting "The Burning Giraffe" (1936-37), where drawers are coming out of a tall woman's body. Also included are the famous melting clocks of "The Persistence of Memory" (1931), the fried eggs of "The Sublime Moment" (1938), and the multiple pictures within "The Metamorphosis of Narcissus" (1937). What I especially like about this volume is how it looks at the origins of some of these paintings. For "The Endless Enigma" (1938) we have the original sketches of the six different paintings that Dali hid in the finished painting, while a postcrd showing an African village became a face turned on its side in "Paranoid Faces" (1931). Then there was the "Portrait of Mrs. Isabel Styler-Tas" (1945), which Dali based on Piero della Francesca's "Battista Sforza and Federico de Montefeltro" (circa 1465) by way of Giuseppe Arcimboldo's "Winter," a marvelous example of how the old becomes new in the hands of a talented artist. Young readers will also be exposed to some prime examples of Dali's imagination with regards to other types of art beyond paintings, such as his infamous "Lobster Telephone" (1936) and the "Mae West Lips Sofa" (1937), although I miss seeing the harp covered with silverware that he made for his friend Harpo Marx. There are also some choice photographs of "Dali the superstar" engaging in the art of self-promotion. Just showing young readers examples of Dali's artwork is enough to get them interested in the artist, but Wenzel takes pain to explain how Dali created his masterpieces and what he was trying to do with some of these pieces. This is one of the more truly educational books I have seem about a great artist written for young readers.
Design dictionary, 26 Sep 2003
This book gives you an A to Z of design. It is easy to use and full of information. It has a timeline of events from design history for a variety of countries, including the UK and the USA. It is useful for learning about who designed what, but less useful for design ideas. The book is informative but is not helpful tips, just history. This could of course lead to ideas of your own in a variety of design, including products and interiors.
FOR THOSE WHO LOVE GARDENS, NATURE, AND ALL THINGS BEAUTIFUL, 01 Jan 2008
Leafing the pages of this beautifully wrought gardener's diary is very much like drawing open curtains on a summer morning and finding your room filled with sunlight. The photographs by Derry Moore are incredibly beautiful from Jeff Koons' Puppy to the protective shadows and dappled greens of a terrace border on a cloudless afternoon. There are some 150 color photos in the 224 pages, and each is a feast for the eyes.
Lady Salisbury, we learn, has always been drawn to gardens. As a youngster she tended to small areas in her parents' gardens. From this initial interest grew an abiding love and enormous responsibility as she later became chatelaine of England's Cranborne Manor and Hatfield House, where she brought these great groundss to renewed life.
In a description of her childhood gardens she writes, "From my earliest consciousness, I have noticed plants..." She was, she says, awakened by her mother's roses and the instructions she received as to how to cut a rose for a vase and how to prune roses to encourage reflowering. Little did she dream then that she would become a professional garden designer with commissions from throughout the world and count among her clients the Prince of Wales and the New York Botanical Garden.
Lady Salisbury has spent her life doing what she loved, and to this writing actively continues although she is in her 80s. She is the woman the New York Times called "The Green Goddess of English Gardens," while others refer to her as the "greatest gardener of the twentieth century."
In photographs and words A Gardener's Life is her biography, and a joyous one it is. This volume serves not only as a chronicle of her work but as a guide for us, sure to be relished by those who love gardens, nature, and all things beautiful.
- Gail Cooke
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Icons of Design: The 20th Century
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Volker AlbusReyer KrasJonathan M. Woodham;
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Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days *Best price found from Amazon Marketplace seller
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*Amazon: £6.43
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