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Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts

Monday, December 8, 2014

Hint #2: Books, books, books

We always give each other books at Christmas. In fact, I don't think there's ever been a Christmas in my whole life that I didn't receive books. My parents were both avid readers and showered me with books when I was a child. I grew up to be an English teacher and later a librarian, so I still love to give and receive them. Since my daughter and SIL are bibliophiles too, the tradition will go on.

Here are the top two on my list this year. My SIL is now an authorized seller of Taschen books, so I don't think it will be hard to get what I want.


taschen.com

taschen.com


Someday, I want the three-volume set. It retails for $300, so even at wholesale, it's a pricey gift. I may have to save my pennies and treat myself to this one.


taschen.com

Monday, March 3, 2014

Ads from the Mad Men era

Always an excellent source for mid-century coffee table books, Taschen has published a 2-volume set that will surely be of interest to many of you. Entitled Mid-Century Ads, the set devotes 720 pages to print ads from the age of the "Big Idea" of the 50s and 60s and recalls the fictionalized booze-and-cigarettes Mad Men era.

The editor is cultural anthropologist and graphic design historian Jim Heimann, and the contributing author is Steven Heller, co-chair of the School of Visual Arts MFA Designer as Author Program. He as art director for The New York Times for 33 years and currently writes the "Visuals" column for The New York Times Book Review.

Here are just a few of the ads you'll find in the set.

All images from taschen.com


Taschen 2-volume set

Volkswagen ad

Knoll ad

Chemstrand ad

Alcoa ad

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Indulging my inner bibliophile

I come from a long line of unapologetic book hoarders. I was one too till I bought this house and sold all my precious tomes to Half Price Books before I moved...in an effort to simplify, simplify, simplify. I readily admit that I had every literature textbook I ever used in college, plus copies of out-of-adoption teachers' editions for every literature class I ever taught, not to mention the hundreds of novels, both hardback and paperback, I thought I could never let go, even though I rarely read fiction twice.

Since I started writing this blog, my taste in print has tended toward reference books, and I just bought five more a few days ago: Danish Modern by Andrew Hollingsworth, Collector's Encyclopedia of Metlox Potteries: Identification and Values by Carl Gibbs, Jr., Fifties Furniture by Leslie Pina, Blenko Catalogs: Then and Now by Leslie Pina and Blenko Glass: 1962-1971 Catalogs by Leslie Pina. Three of the five have already come in, and I just have to share some of the great images with you.


A must for any Metlox collector

 Freeform shapes: California Freeform, California Mobile, California Contempora

The fourth Freeform shape, Aztec

Navajo/Tempo shape

A feast for the eyes of any Danish Modern lover,
the cover showing a Niels Moller armchair and Arne Vodder coffee table

A unique sofa in burled walnut by Alfred Sjkot-Pedersen

Hans Wegner's CH318 table, Czech designed chairs
 and a Robsjohn-Gibbings chair

Rungstedlund sideboard and coffee table by Ole Wanscher
A Blenko collector's companion

Amazing blues

Spectacular decanters

Stunning simplicity

And the good news is that I still have two more books to look forward to...

Monday, February 7, 2011

Required reading


Several books, both old and new, have made it onto my "Required Reading" list as I search for information about all things mid-century. Some I've had for years, and I still refer to them frequently. Some are recent acquisitions that I'm sure will be just as helpful. The ones I couldn't do without include:
  • Mid-Century Modern: Furniture of the 1950s by Cara Greenberg - This book, written by the person credited with coining the term "mid-century modern" in 1984, has proven to be one of the most valuable books I have.
  • Collector's Encyclopedia of Russel Wright by Ann Kerr - This is the final word on Russel Wright. Ann Kerr is my hero. We ran across an autographed copy last year but sold it in our booth, and I've regretted it ever since.
  • Guide to Easier Living by Mary and Russel Wright - First published in 1950, this book gives a priceless look into the mid-century concept of informal living.
  • Modern Retro: Living with Mid-Century Modern Style by Neil Bingham & Andrew Weaving - I carry the pocket edition around in my purse!
  • Modern Retro Table Style by Madeleine Marsh - Containing some of the most beautiful pictures of mid-century tableware I've ever seen, this book has something new for me every time I look through it. Today I was surprised to find several pages on Midwinter tea sets, which I'd never noticed before.
  • Retro Modern by Lisa Skolnik - The author of this book captures the architecture, the unique room design and what she calls "prime pieces" of mid-century furnishings.
  • Atomic Ranch: Design Ideas for Stylish Ranch Homes by Michelle Gringeri-Brown and Jim Brown - I love the magazine. I love the book.
Other books I never tire of looking through are Forgotten Modern: California Houses 1940-1970 by Alan Hess and Alan Weintraub, Cliff May and the Modern Ranch House by Daniel P. Gregory. Since the price has come down from $200 to $125 since Christmas, I'm hopeful that I'll eventually be able to afford a copy of the Marilyn Neuhart 2-volume book The Story of Eames Furniture.

My latest purchase was The G-Plan Revolution: A Celebration of British Popular Furniture of the 1950s and 1960s by Basil Hyman and Steven Braggs. You may be quite familiar with the other books I mentioned, but I'll share this one with you, since it might not be on your shelves yet. (I bought it because we purchased several pieces of G-Plan, Nathan and Remploy furniture not long ago, and I wanted to become more familiar with British mid-century furniture before talking to customers about it.)

An unusual book inside and out, it's a hardcover edition which has been hole-punched as if to fit into a binder. On the inside are excellent reproductions of primary sources. Instead of simply including photos from all the brochures they found while researching G-Plan furniture, they actually reproduced several of the old brochures and bound them into the book. The illustrations, for the most part, are scanned straight from magazines and newspaper ads, making the reader feel as though he's thumbing through the original pages. The format is fun, and the information is excellent. I love this book! Take a look.









I'll post more about G-Plan in a few days, and eventually we'll photograph all the furniture we've bought recently, so I'll be able to post about it too. I know some of you are still waiting for that one, since I inadvertently published an unfinished post about it that I had to pull.