Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd, London, GB, 1952
Da: Hanselled Books, Burntisland, FIFE, Regno Unito
Membro dell'associazione: IOBA
Prima edizione
EUR 41,69
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloHardcover. Condizione: Very Good. Condizione sovraccoperta: Very Good. 1st Edition. H/B 436 pages, condition is very good, the book has been covered in paper to protect the DJ. an owners name to the flyleaf.
Lingua: Spagnolo
Editore: Labor, Barcelona, 1970
Da: MONKEY LIBROS, Salamanca, SA, Spagna
EUR 32,55
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloEncuadernación de tapa dura. Condizione: Bien. VV.AA. (illustratore). 2? Edición. Tapa dura. Buen estado. Dep. Legal: B. 20285-1970. 691 ilustraciones de ellas 222 en color. 469 fotografías, dibujos, mapas y tablas cronológicas. Dirigida por Michael Grant. Gran formato. Historia. Historia del arte.
Lingua: Spagnolo
Editore: Labor, Barcelona, 1971
Da: MONKEY LIBROS, Salamanca, SA, Spagna
Prima edizione
EUR 34,15
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloEncuadernación de tapa dura. Condizione: Bien. VV.AA. (illustratore). 1? Edición. Tapa dura. Buen estado. Dep. Legal: B. 43691-1971. 556 ilustraciones de ellas 159 en color. 397 fotografías, dibujos, mapas y planos. Asesoría iconográfica: J.M.C. Toynbee. Dirigida por Arnold Toynbee. Gran formato. Historia. Historia del arte.
EUR 22,95
Quantità: 1 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCartoné. Condizione: New. Condizione sovraccoperta: Nuevo. 01. LOS MEJORES TIMADORES, LADRONES, GRANUJAS Y RUFIANES DE LA ÉPOCA DE SHERLOCK HOLMES, REUNIDOS EN UN SOLO VOLUMEN. GRANT ALLEN, GUY BOOTHBY, E. W. HORNUNG, ROBERT BARR, ARNOLD BENNETT, WILLIAM LE QUEUX, O. HENRY, GEORGE RANDOLPH CHESTER, FREDERICK IRVIN. LIBRO.
EUR 29,90
Quantità: Più di 20 disponibili
Aggiungi al carrelloCondizione: new.
Editore: Bungalow Publishing Co., Inc.; Otis Publishing Co., Oct., 1913-March, 1918., Seattle, WA:, 1913
Da: Zephyr Used & Rare Books, Vancouver, WA, U.S.A.
Prima edizione
Sixteen vols. Tall 8vo. 7.5 x 10.5 in. 80; 4-A, [747]-812, 5-A - 14-A (w/ large folding "Supplement Bungalow" plan 24 x 36 in.); 4-A, 67, 6-A-14-A (w/ Plan); 4-A, [65]-132, 5-A - 12-A; 4-A, 133-200, 5-A-12-A (w/ Plan); 4-A, [201]-266, 5-A - 14-A (w/ Plan); 4-A, [207]-332, 5-A - 12-A (w/ Plan); 4-A, [333]-398, 5-A - 14-A (w/ Plan); 4-A, [399]-451, 6-A - 12-A; 4-A, 451-506, [9-A]-12-A; 4-A, 507-560, 5-A - 10-A; 4-A, [629]-697, 6-A - 12-A (w/ Plan); 4-A, [697]-765, 6-A - 12-A (w/ Plan); 80 (w/ Plan); 80 (w/ Plan); 64 pp. With 100's of photo illustrations, diagrams, floor plans, 10 issues include the large Supplement folding working plans sized 24 x 36 in. Colour-illustrated softcovers, all w/ colour photos of bungalows (minor dustsoiling, edgewear, some occasional chipping at Head & foot of spine, creasing, a couple w/ folds at corners, toning to plans, occasional offset toning), still a VG set of original periodicals, from the library of Millard Armstrong (1874-1958), longtime Portland, Oregon millwright, carpenter, home builder, and later high school teacher, and Albany, OR dairy farmer. First editions of 16 original issues of this Craftsman bungalow promotional magazine issued by noted Seattle entrepreneur and real estate developer, Jud Yoho (1882-1968), known as "The Bungalow Craftsman" in Seattle's active market prior to World War I. Bungalow Magazine had been originally launched 1908-1912 by Henry Wilson in Los Angeles, but Yoho took over the magazine, moved the publishing to Seattle, and during its 6 year run attracted a nationwide audience. With the slogan of "an illustrated monthly magazine devoted exclusively to artistic bungalow homes" modeled on Gustav Stickley's Craftsman magazine, this glossy periodical featured Seattle bungalows, and articles about California residences, Eastern Craftsman homes, and occasionally lifted articles directly from the Craftsman. The Bungalow Magazine attracted a nationwide audience, included feature articles on a variety of Craftsman style homes, their technology and mechanical systems, and amateur projects in furniture design and construction to enhance the prospective home owner's bungalow. At the time, Yoho and his firms were actively constructing speculative houses in Seattle's northern neighborhoods, served as new advertising for many of the Pacific Northwest's builders, small architects, and real estate developers. The innovative inclusion of "Supplement Bungalow Plans" not only presented the potential reader and home owner with a sample home, but Yoho, and other connected "Craftsman" home builders pioneered a technique of easy home financing, and extended home ownership to many who could not otherwise have purchased a home. As the Craftsman bungalow craze waned in Seattle during World War I, Yoho divested his interest, and began producing his "Colonial Homes" plan books, and during the severe post-World War I recession moved to Arkon, OH where he opened an architectural and building firm with D.E. Hooker, former editor of The Bungalow Magazine. Original individual issues seldom appear in the market, and almost never with the original large folding plan supplements, and this archive includes nearly all of the last two years of magazines (14 of 15). No copies or runs located in Worldcat (Seattle Public Lib. houses nearly a complete run). See: Lawrence Kreisman & Glenn Mason, The Arts and Crafts Movement in the Pacific Northwest (2007), pp. 159-167; Jud Yoho, "The Bungalow Craftsman," and the Development of the Seattle Suburbs, Perspectives in Vernacular Architecture, Vol. 6 (1997), pp. 231-243; Erin Doherty, Jud Yoho and the Craftsman Bungalow Company: Assessing the Value of the Common House (1997); Jud Yoho & Dennis Andersen, Craftmsan Bungalows, Edition de Luxe, Book Club of Washington (2007).