Steinberg by Elizaveta Porodina for Public Relations

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Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
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Steinberg by Elizaveta Porodina for Public Relations
Ian Miller
Tattoo Flash designs October 2023
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German armor from the 16th century
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Decorative Sunday
This week we present some plates of French, Italian, and Belgian decorative lace from La dentelle ancienne, style et technique by the German lace scholar and collector Alfred von Henneberg, with a forward by the German art historian Wilhelm Pinder, and published in Paris by the decorative arts publisher A. Calavas for the Librairie des Arts Décoratifs in 1931. Click on the images to see the captions.
The book presents 181 color and black and white plates of manufacturing techniques and lace examples from the 16th century to the early 19th century. Today we are only showing the black and white plates.
View more decorative plates published by A. Cavalas, Librairie des Arts Décoratifs.
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Typography Tuesday
Fleurons or Printers' Flowers have been a prominent element of typographic tradition at least since the early 16th century, especially those of designer-punchcutter Robert Granjon. They became less used over the 17th century, but were revived in the mid-18th century when Pierre Simon Fournier introduced an entirely new style of printers' flowers. Soon after, their use enhanced as a fashion for classical typography changed the concept of type decoration at the end of the 18th century. The revival of fine typographic design in the late 19th century spurred a proliferation of new fleuron designs in the 20th century that has not abated to this day.
Fleurons may be combined in innumerable ways to create ornate and intricate typographic patterns. Today we show a few of those patterns from Fleurons, Their Place in History & in Print, written, designed, printed, and bound in 1988 by English type and printing enthusiast Mark Arman at his Workshop Press in Thaxted, Essex, in an edition of 170 copies signed by the author/printer. This book is another from the recent of from the estate of our late friend Dennis Bayuzick. Of printing fleurons, Arman writes:
. . . they can be grouped in a variety of combinations: elaborate arrangements are possible, and great enjoyment may be had exploring their possibilities. When I realised all this I began a collection of type decorations which, in the past seven years, has grown considerably. Part of the enjoyment has been finding specific designs. . . . All my 19th century decorations have come from old printing houses which have ceased to operate, or have gone over to litho, so they make a very mixed assortment. . . . [These] are illustrated in the following pages and the text gives a brief account of the craftsmen who created the design.
View other posts on decorative type patterns by Mark Arman.
View other books from the collection of Dennis Bayuzick.
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Hilma af Klint, The Swan (1915)
f1oating:
Cymatic Donut Lattice Interior
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