Other Categories
Art and Photography
General Architecture
Architectural Standards
Building Types and Styles
Architecture Criticism
Architecture Drawing and Modelling
Architecture Historic Preservation
Architecture History
Architecture Interior Design
International Architecture
Landscape Architecture
Materials Architecture
Project Planning and Management
Architecture Reference
Architecture Study and Teaching
Urban and Land Use Planning
General Art
Art History
Museums and Collections
Painting
Religious Art
Sculpture
Other Art Media
Art Instruction and Reference
Fashion
Graphic Design
Performing Arts
Photography
|
Art and Photography - Building Types and Styles books
Posted in Art and Photography (Friday, July 25, 2008)
Written by Ray Stubblebine. By Gibbs Smith, Publisher.
The regular list price is $75.00.
Sells new for $47.25.
There are some available for $34.02.
Read more...
Purchase Information
1 comments about Stickley's Craftsman Home: Plans, Drawings and Photographs.
- This book is a dream if you love Stickley's homes. This book has all of Stickley's plans, and I found it a fascinating read. I really loved dreaming while reading, and the pictures and info were wonderful.
Read more...
Posted in Art and Photography (Friday, July 25, 2008)
Written by Todd R. Berger. By Voyageur Press.
The regular list price is $29.95.
Sells new for $14.15.
There are some available for $8.60.
Read more...
Purchase Information
1 comments about Lighthouses of the Great Lakes: Your Ultimate Guide to the Region's Historic Lighthouses (Pictorial Discovery Guide).
- Lighthouses Of The Great Lakes is a simply fantastic showcase of historic lighthouses of the Great Lakes region. Full color photographs by Daniel E. Dempster of virtually every structure combined with Todd R. Berger's informative text revealing remarkable true stories behind each fill this amazing tour through history. A treat for lighthouse aficionados, and a joy to page through for virtually everyone else, Lighthouses Of The Great Lakes is the next best thing to driving for hours to see each great, life-saving lighthouse personally.
Read more...
Posted in Art and Photography (Friday, July 25, 2008)
Written by Bill Holm. By Minnesota Historical Society Press.
The regular list price is $19.95.
Sells new for $13.31.
There are some available for $8.85.
Read more...
Purchase Information
2 comments about Cabins of Minnesota (Minnesota Byways).
- The pictures are like something out of a dream, or a very old memory, tantalizing glimpses that one wants to attend more closely. I studied the pictures, each one a little fantasy, and turned the page hoping to see more specifics, but instead found another dreamy fragment. The text is similarly meandering, taking a leisurely pace through the idyll of cabin life.
I gave the book only 3 stars not because there's anything subpar about what's in it, but because what's in it only skimmed the surface of my interest in cabins. I wanted more technical information. I wanted floorplans or demographical statistics.
- The beautiful scenery of a MN cabin on a MN lake!
"Wow!"
Breath taking!
Mark Salinas, MN
Read more...
Posted in Art and Photography (Friday, July 25, 2008)
By daab.
The regular list price is $37.95.
Sells new for $21.41.
There are some available for $27.52.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Lounge Design (Daab Design Book).
Posted in Art and Photography (Friday, July 25, 2008)
Written by Alastair Gordon. By Princeton Architectural Press.
The regular list price is $45.00.
Sells new for $18.00.
There are some available for $10.95.
Read more...
Purchase Information
5 comments about Weekend Utopia: Modern Living in the Hamptons.
- Finally got the chance to sit and read Gordon's excellent text in Weekend Utopia. The book goes way beyond an illustrated coffee book. Gordon manages to weave together stories about the characters who shaped the place (like developer Carl Fisher who created Montauk to be the "Miami Beach of the North")with stories about the flamboyant architecture, post-war artists like Pollock and Motherwell and his own personal memories as a boy spending summers there. While the book has a large format with hundreds of illustrations it is most readable and explains so much about how a rural American landscape was transformed into a resort for show-offs. I loved it and can't comprehend what reviewers from Hong Kong and the Netherlands were talking about. It is neither trying to be a professional book on architecture nor a cheap gossip book about pseudo-celebrities. It is an intelligent cultural history that also happens to be well designed and illustrated. It warmed my soul on a chilly winter weekend and made me want to go to the beach as soon as possible.
- Wonderfully written and researched. Architecturally lacking photographs, drawings, or any substance for inspiration or idea generation. Cover and size of book suggests more pictorial content, but fails to deliver.
- When i saw the cover of this book i thought this would be a great book. I wanted to find pictures of beautiful decorated houses,nice gardens and offcourse the habitants of the mansions. Well, that's not quite what's inside this book. For the most only pictures of houses taken in the 50's and 60's and a lot of text!! I want pictures of Aerin Lauder and the Miller sisters!!
- I'm a bit mystified by the comments below that seem to implicate this book and its author in what the Hamptons have become. To the contrary, Weekend Utopia celebrates happier days pre-mega mansions: when culture and architecture and some fascinating characters created some truly exceptional houses, most of them modest in scale. In fact, today's Hamptons home-builders could learn a lesson or two from this book (like small can be very beautiful), and stop the further despoilment of what the Hamptons used to be: something Weekend Utopia shows with great clarity and style. This wonderful book is certainly no apologia for the mess that awaits you at the end of I-495...
- I agree with the reviewer who said that the Hamptons were ruined long ago -- by the very succession of waves of development that this book touts. I do love looking at some of the quality design of the past that this book shows, but the new reality is overbuilding and, even worse, tasteless building. The feeling of getting away to a charming, easy-going, and low-key place with rural roots is gone forever in the Hamptons. We left because of the continuing intrusion of the nouveau riche who are more interested in showing off than in quietly relaxing-----peoplewho have now made the Hamptons a decidedly UNCOOL place to be.
Read more...
Posted in Art and Photography (Friday, July 25, 2008)
Written by Joe P. Carr and Karen Witynski. By Gibbs Smith, Publisher.
The regular list price is $39.95.
Sells new for $30.36.
There are some available for $21.38.
Read more...
Purchase Information
4 comments about Casa Yucatan.
- I love architecture and interior design and am currently in the process of designing a home thirty miles south of Cancun. In working with an architect from France and the relevant language issues (French, Spanish and English) I needed a starting point to state my ideas of what I wanted to design. I have many other books such as Casa California but needed something with specific architecture in the Yucatan Peninsula.
After our original drawings I bought this book. My architect laughed at our next visit as he had the same book with much more wear on it. His other clients had been using it to describe thoughts and just referring to page numbers. In my case our ideas were established prior to discovering this book. But the book allowed me to visualize many of the ideas incorporated by our architect. The pictures are beautiful and the author does a great job providing a historical perspective on the styles. My architect said it is worth planning a trip to view many of the homes in the book and I hope to do so in the future. My compliments to the author for successfully capturing the culture of this unique area of Mexico.
In the next year I hope to buy authentic Mexican furniture. I have heard in Guadalajara there are places to buy this furniture prior to massive mark-ups through distribution. Please email me if you know of any ideas on where I should consider shopping and also if there are internet sites to view, [...].
- We wish we had known about and read Casa Yucatán, before we had our wonderful three-week vacation in the Yucatán, in August/September, 2002. If you're planning to go to the Yucatán, be sure to take Casa Yucatán with you. We discovered (and stayed at)three of the marvellous hacienda hotels: the Temozón, Santa Rosa and San José. Each one has unique architecture, adapted from its original use with panache and refined good taste. When we saw them in the book, it was like re-visiting them. Our appetite was whetted to try to see more of the beautifully-photographed and knowledgeably-described homes on our next visit. At the back of the book, there's a 4-page Travel Guide, filled with useful information. Mexican design is beautiful and probably no non-Mexicans know more about it than Karen and Joe, having dedicated decades to studying it seriously and having visited and photographed many outstanding examples for inclusion in their books. One place we'll be sure not to miss is Hacienda Petac, the restoration of which was just completed in December 2002. Karen and Joe are partners in that enterprise, the design center of which offers a showcase for Mexican antiques, architectural elements and decorative accents. Hacienda Petac also offers accomodations to guests. We would hope that some of the architects whose projects are featured in Casa Yucatán and whose names addresses, phone numbers and e-mail addresses are shown, might be willing to arrange with the owners for interested readers to visit their beautiful homes.
- This is another marvelous book on Mexican & Spanish Architecture, furnishings, & landscaping. The colors & textures used are exceptional. The lush landscaping is something we are trying to recreate in our our home.
This book & their others have inspired us to do some very creative things with our desert property.
- Casa Yucatan is yet another example of the brilliance of this creative duo who inspire and educate. Makes one want to leave manaña por la manaña for the beautiful Yucatan Peninsula. I have all five books they have written and am anxiously awaiting the relase of their sixth entitled "Mexican Details".
Read more...
Posted in Art and Photography (Friday, July 25, 2008)
Written by Richard Krautheimer. By Princeton University Press.
The regular list price is $39.95.
Sells new for $26.37.
There are some available for $17.18.
Read more...
Purchase Information
1 comments about Rome.
- Too many histories jump lightly and quickly from the grandeur of pagan Rome to the grandeur of Renaissance and Baroque Rome --ignoring the thousand year artistic and architectural history in between. This book fills in a long and fascinating gap in the history; and brings to our attention works of art that, if they are outshone by the splendours before and after, are not to be despised. The only problem with this book is the relative paucity of pictures and plans, and the absence of any in colour. If printing photographs or reproductions is expensive, why can't they provide a DVD to go with the book?
Read more...
Posted in Art and Photography (Friday, July 25, 2008)
Written by Simon Bradley. By Profile Books.
The regular list price is $17.95.
Sells new for $10.43.
There are some available for $18.68.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about St Pancras Station (Wonders of the World).
Posted in Art and Photography (Friday, July 25, 2008)
Written by Lawrence O. Houstoun. By Urban Land Institute.
The regular list price is $68.95.
Sells new for $51.71.
There are some available for $50.45.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Business Improvement Districts, Second Edition.
Posted in Art and Photography (Friday, July 25, 2008)
Written by David King Gleason. By Louisiana State University Press.
The regular list price is $49.95.
Sells new for $32.91.
There are some available for $13.94.
Read more...
Purchase Information
3 comments about Plantation Homes of Louisiana and the Natchez Area.
- This was purchased as a Christmas gift for my son-in-law who is originally from Louisiana. He loves it. From the narrative history to the beautiful pictures.
- First of all, I love the South, and love plantation homes. The photographs in this book are very good. I personally didn't enjoy the photos of the rundown and derelict plantations. I bought this book because I thought it contained BEAUTIFUL pictures of the finest homes. And most of them are very nice, BUT...First of all, this is a pricey book.I once had a slim volume offerred by the Travel bureau that was better than this book. If all you want is to have a pretty coffee table book, it's fine. I personally would have preferred they leave out the aerial photos high above the homes...and the photos of derelict, rundown plantations and included more interior shots or different angles of the really beautiful plantations. I found that I looked through it once, but will probably rarely look through it again. Though it is well done for what it is, when reading the reviews before purchasing, I had a different impression of what this book is.
- This book just takes your breath away. The houses are so beautiful and the photographs so vivid. Louisiana is perhaps the most blessed with homes from the old south and this book does them such a great service. It's nothing short of amazing that so many of them have survived, it's a testement to the quality of the builders, mostly slaves, the cypress wood used so often and benign neglect. Thank God these wonderful homes where not burned during the Civil War or torn down by short sighted developers. It's really lucky for us that this part of Louisiana has been virtually asleep for 150 years, but in the last 30 years it has awaken like a Pheonix and these houses have been restored and cared for, I am so grateful to Mr. Gleason for having created this book and for the preservationists that saved the homes themselves. I have visited many of these grand plantations and you can't help but be in awe of the beauty and saddened at the same time about the cruel institution that created them. I most appreciate the homes that have maintained their slave quarters, everyone should have to see the way these people lived, it was not all zippidy do da zippidy aye, I assure you...one must always view the historic south through this prism to understand the struggle to overcome. I highly recommend this book to anyone with a love for all things beautiful.
Read more...
|
|
|
|