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Architecture and Ornament - by Margaret Maliszewski-Pickart (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- For architects, historians, preservationists, students or homeowners, this richly illustrated two-part dictionary makes it easy to identify a specific architectural detail.
- About the Author: Architectural historian Margaret Maliszewski has worked with the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission and with architectural and planning firms in Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C.
- 208 Pages
- Architecture, Reference
Description
About the Book
"The present work is a reprint of the illustrated case bound edition of Architecture and ornament: an illustrated dictionary, first published in 1998 by McFarland"--Copyright page.Book Synopsis
For architects, historians, preservationists, students or homeowners, this richly illustrated two-part dictionary makes it easy to identify a specific architectural detail. This work allows you to visually identify a particular building element in a series of illustrations. Once the visual identification is made, the name of the term is given, making it simple to look up in the traditional architectural dictionary section of the book.
The illustrations are arranged by main categories with common labels--windows and doors; walls; roofs; columns; stairs; ornament and moldings; and arches, vaults and domes. This broad range of architectural illustrations allows the work to function not only as a traditional architectural dictionary, but also as a design source or as an overview of architectural ornament and detailing.
Review Quotes
"excellent...fills a gap in the popular reference book market"-Reference Reviews; "easy-to-use...succeeds admirably"-ARBA; "useful"-College & Research Libraries; "a more useful source [than the competition]"-Reference Reviews; "interdependent two-part organization and clarity of definitions makes this a more useful source...defines more terms and illustrates them more effectively [than the competition]"-Rettig on Reference; "serves as a field guide to many of the elements seen in American architecture"-C&RL News; "an intriguing blend of full-page, clear illustrations of everything from columns to walls, combined with a separate dictionary section of definition and detail"-Midwest Book Review.
About the Author
Architectural historian Margaret Maliszewski has worked with the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission and with architectural and planning firms in Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C. She currently manages the work of Albemarle County's Architectural Review Board and Historic Preservation Committee in Charlottesville, Virginia.