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Interior Design and Decoration

Interior Design and DecorationAuthors: Stanley Abercrombie, Sherrill Whiton
Publisher: Prentice Hall
Category: Book

List Price: $147.40
Buy Used: $70.00
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New (15) Used (53) from $70.00

Seller: Levand
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 10 reviews
Sales Rank: 160099

Media: Paperback
Edition: 6
Pages: 697
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.6
Dimensions (in): 10.8 x 8.5 x 1.2

ISBN: 0131944045
Dewey Decimal Number: 747
EAN: 9780131944046
ASIN: 0131944045

Publication Date: August 14, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Interior Design and Decoration
  • Paperback - Interior Design and Decoration (5th Edition)
  • Paperback - Interior Design and Decoration
  • Hardcover - Interior Design and Decoration
  • Hardcover - Interior Design and Decoration

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
A global and historical tour de force of interior design, this book explores the development of design from prehistoric cave paintings to the present. It looks at art from all parts of the world including India, China, Japan, Egypt, Spain, Italy, North and South America. It looks at how fashion has influenced interior design, the relationship between interior and exterior design and how developments in technologies and materials have influenced design trends. The pages are brought to life with excellent quality illustrations that demonstrate the variety of design styles and techniques presented.


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 10



5 out of 5 stars Excellent! Excellent! Excellent!   February 26, 2001
ezinteriordesign (Floral Park, NY USA)
10 out of 12 found this review helpful

As an instructor of Interior Design, I cannot praise this book enough....My students as well as fellow instructors find it an invaluable tool, not only in teaching beginning level courses, but also as a great reference manual after the student graduates....Several of us still have well-worn copies in our offices...Buy this book, you won't be dissapointed!


5 out of 5 stars Excellent! Excellent! Excellent!   February 26, 2001
7 out of 9 found this review helpful

As an instructor of Interior Design, I cannot praise this book enough....My students as well as fellow instructors find it an invaluable tool, not only in teaching beginning level courses, but also as a great reference manual after the student graduates....Several of us still have well-worn copies in our offices...Buy this book, you won't be dissapointed!


5 out of 5 stars really helpful textbook!   February 7, 2010
Anne Aristya (Issaquah, WA USA)
This book really helps me a lot in understanding the histury of furniture(I bought it as a textbook for my history of furniture classes). It covers the information well and one thing I really like is, there is a list of vocabularies related to the interior design, decoration, and furniture on couple pages at the back of the book! If I don't know a vocabulary, I don't need to figure it out through my dictionary, but I just need to see the back pages of the book:] Super booook!


4 out of 5 stars Encyclopedia-like reference book of design styles   December 21, 2007
Anne-Marie Gallagher (Chicago, IL USA)
7 out of 7 found this review helpful

This is the only textbook used for the two History of Design courses at my school. I've found the book to be useful and informative, although not especially innovative or inspiring.

The contents are divided into 7 main sections, each with 2 to 5 chapters: The Ancient World (Egypt, the Near East), The Classical World (Greece, Rome), The Middle Ages (Byzantine, Romanesque, Gothic, Islamic), The East (India, China, Japan), The Renaissance (Italy, Spain, France, England, Africa), The New World (Pre-Columnibian and Early America), and The Modern World (19th Century, 20th Century). Each chapter runs from 20-30 pages and is similarly formatted, starting with a timeline and going into the Geography and Natural Resources, the Religion, and the Political and Military Factors of the period. While this provides a context for the design innovations of each period, it also gives the book a rather characterless "voice" akin to the essays one might find in an encyclopedia.

Overall, the photos featured are very good; some, like the detail of a Neoclassical English ceiling, are amazingly beautiful. I also appreciated the sidebar information, "Tool and Techniques" that serves to explain and illustrate such topics as "Curtains and Drapery" (detailing the differences between Plain Shirring, Open Rings, French Heading, and Box Pleating, for instance). Other "Tools and Techniques" topics include Stained Glass, Frescos, and the Science of Color.

One of the things I found puzzling is not unique to this book, but involves the way things are classified in a general sense. The classifications of the sections will be familiar to most readers; many American readers will have learned history in exactly the way presented in the book--starting with the "Ancient" and moving through the "Classical" to the "Middle Ages" and "Renaissance," and so on. What I find curious about this is the rather rigid format of these categories, with poor Egypt forever sentenced to Antiquity, as if there have been no design innovations there in a few thousand years. Discussion of Italian design is relegated the Classical and Renaissance periods, again, as if that design-rich country hasn't made exciting contributions in the last 50 years. I understand that the authors were obligated to find some way to simplify and organize a vast quantity of data; the solution they chose is just a very antiquated type of categorization.

A more inexcusable problem is the lack of copyediting; there are some unfortunate typos that amount to misinformation, i.e. the definitions of yin and yang are reversed on page 211 in the Chinese section; elsewhere, the definition of rail and stile are confounded, and there are similar grave typos elsewhere.

Whatever its faults, the book is packed with information, photos, illustrations, and even quotes from famous designers. The simple, straight-forward discussions on the different styles allowed me to finally understand the difference between Louis XIV and Louis XVI, Art Deco and Art Nouveau, as well as Chinese and Japanese design prinicples, thus earning its keep on my design bookshelf as a reference book of styles.



4 out of 5 stars Classic Prinicples   December 28, 2002
6 out of 7 found this review helpful

This book is a must for anyone wishing to understand classic prinicples of design. It gives details unavailable in many standard works. I had an earlier edition while in university and when I lost it after a move, was delighted to be able to find another copy of this valuable resource. It was like Christmas to have it once again in my possession.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 10



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