The elements of style : an encyclopedia of domestic architectural detail / general editor, Stephen Calloway.
Publisher: London : Mitchell Beazley, 2012Edition: 4th ed. revised and updated by Alan PowersDescription: 1 v. ill. (some col.); 28 cm001: 14586ISBN: 184533695X; 9781845336950; 184533695XSubject(s): Interior architecture -- Great Britain -- History | Interior architecture -- United States -- History | Architecture -- Great Britain -- Details | Architecture -- United States -- Details | Architecture, Domestic -- Great Britain | Architecture, Domestic -- United StatesDDC classification: 728Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | MAIN LIBRARY Book | 728 ELE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 089218 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
An in-depth chronological survey of the key styles and periods of architectural design in the UK and US over the past 500 years, with over 4,000 images. This new edition brings the book up to date with a fully revised chapter on contemporary style and an updated directory of suppliers. Each chapter begins with a broad introduction to the era, summarizing its key style features. Within the chapter there follows a clearly presented guide to the features appropriate for every part of a building, from the major components such as doors, windows, walls, floors, ceilings, and staircases to embellishments such as mouldings and door furniture. A system of colour-coded tabs enables the reader to compare specific features as they have evolved over time. Additional information on restoration and maintenance, biographies of key architects, and a detailed glossary is included.
Previous ed.: 2005.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Reviews provided by Syndetics
Library Journal Review
Calloway (curator of prints, Victoria and Albert Museum), assisted by a dozen other style experts from both sides of the Atlantic, addresses the concerns of amateur and professional preservationists with the new edition of this guide to period styles in Great Britain and the United States from the Renaissance to the present. Each chapter begins with a concise overview of a period style (e.g., Colonial, Baroque, Edwardian Beaux Arts) and is followed by pages teeming with illustrations of representative doors, windows, fireplaces, and other structural/decorative elements. The stylistic analyses are sometimes questionable-e.g., Wright's Robie House as Art Nouveau?-but generally succeed in capturing each period in lively and penetrating detail. Reviews of the first two editions acclaimed Elements as an exhaustive, brilliantly illustrated handbook and this new edition differs but slightly from the earlier two. Its directories of British and North American suppliers are updated and the coverage of post-1920 Modernism, the weakest and most problematic subject in all three editions, has been revised and expanded. An excellent reference for libraries serving active historic preservationists, but other libraries owning earlier editions need not splurge.-David Solt?sz, Cuyahoga Cty. P.L., Parma, OH (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.CHOICE Review
Readers will find no shortage of encyclopedias, dictionaries, and glossaries that define, illustrate, and chronicle the world of architecture. Elements of Style, however, is singular in its presentation, scope, and comprehensiveness. Devoted to fashionable British and American domestic architecture from 1485 to the present, this reference book depicts the development of the interior environment. The richly illustrated chapters depict architectural features such as doorways, staircases, fireplaces, walls, and windows. Original line drawings, images from trade catalogs, and photographs illustrate details of woodworking, tiling, wall treatments, and light fixtures. Chapters are organized chronologically; each features a short essay on overarching themes and influences, written by a museum professional or academic. Each architectural feature is assigned a color tab; someone interested in, for example, the development of doors across time may flip through all the orange tabs. First published in 1991 and revised in 1996 and 2005 (CH, May'06, 43-4997), this volume now has a new chapter, "Contemporary Era," that covers 1975 to the present; it does not significantly update the other chapters. Buying the new edition is not necessary for libraries that own the previous one(s); overall, though, this book is a staple for any university library with an architecture or interior design department. Summing Up: Recommended. Libraries lacking the previous editions; lower-division undergraduates through professionals/practitioners. A. H. Simmons National Gallery of ArtThere are no comments on this title.