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Hardcover Design: A Crash Course Book

ISBN: 0823009831

ISBN13: 9780823009831

Design: A Crash Course

Readers get a concise history of the field of design, learning about such issues as how form serves function or how it is inspired by whimsy, and how street style and consumer culture influence design. Topics cover everything from appliances and furniture to cars and airplanes. 400 color illustrations.

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

$4.69
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List Price $14.95
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Customer Reviews

3 ratings

A book about design that is a beautifully designed book

`Good design is intelligence made visible' said Frank Pick, he was the man who had the vision to create one of the greatest corporate identities ever, for London Transport, while he was their commercial manager. Look through this little book and you will see how true that statement is. What I like about it (and the others in this `A Crash Course' series) is the way each spread is beautifully designed with several graphic elements, a Timeline across the top, a Designer Names panel, an Every Home Should Have One panel, photos and illustrations with the headlines, captions and text, to make a visual treat.The book starts at Year Dot (the writing has a sense of fun too) and chronologically goes up to 2000 with all kinds of design references, William Morris on page 42, Barbie dolls on page 113, packaging, product design, logos, print media, electronics, transport, the text weaves them all together. As with the best reference books it stimulates questions and the `I want to know more' attitude.The back of the book has some pages on Design Classics, Design Heroes (including mine, Raymond Loewy and Dieter Rams) a Glossary and an Index. You should also check out a book (also pocket size ) called `Design: A Concise History' by Thomas Hauffe, it was originally published in Germany and covers the same ground with plenty of illustrations but doesn't have the same kind of fun as `Design'. A much more serious book is `Design of the 20th Century' by Charlotte and Peter Fiell, a big, chunky 768 page paperback with over four hundred entries of designers and design movements, plus plenty of photos. It is the only book that I have found that names Willie Fleckhaus and his work on that amazing German magazine `Twen' in the sixties. If you are interested in design all three books are worth having and they are all value for money.

cool summary of design

the book's grid is cool and entertaining. the layout is very proffesional and i had many laughs examining the different objects described. recommanded to all design lovers. and if you are interested in graphic design too, a must have title is david carson's "the end of print" -isbn 1811811999.

Review in the Bookseller (UK)of 21st. Ap[ril 2000 passed on

(I'm an author but I thought you might like to have this) "Really a most incredibly informative little title. You learn something on every page. It is witty and assumes absolutely no previous knowledge of the subject, yet it discusses akk major developments in design history. Was Toulouse Lautrec an artsist or a poster designer? The big names, William Morris, christopher Dresser et al, are all here. This book is cheap, unpompous and dense with the information need. It is also easily digestible"I can't claim $50, so it ought to go to the reviewer at the Booksller? Regards, Paul Clark
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