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Böcker i Shire Album S.-serien

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  • av Stuart Hands
    117

    Featuring road signs, direction, warning, boundary, and advisory, this book covers various aspects of traffic signage and signs.

  • av Helene Alexander
    119,-

    Traces the history of fans from biblical times to the present day.

  • av Margaret Swain
    117

    This book shows the variety of subjects and techniques of embroidered pictures in the Georgian period in Britain (1714-1830).

  • av Peter Duckers
    139

    This book surveys the British decorations and medals from the origins in the Crimean War of 1854-6 up to the end of the twentieth century.

  • av Hazelle Jackson
    117

    The artificial grotto has a long and intriguing history in architecture and garden design. This book describes the origins of the grotto in Renaissance Italy, its heyday in eighteenth-century England, its decline in the nineteenth century and its return to favour in the twentieth century.

  • av Graham Robson
    119,-

    The Ford Cortina was launched in 1962, it was made for twenty years and sold well over four million.

  • av Hans van Lemmen
    117

    This book charts the history of architectural ceramics, focusing on practical and decorative applications, on architects, designers and manufacturers, and on styles and techniques of production and decoration.

  • av Roger Putman
    129

    This book explores beer's six-thousand-year history and explains how different styles emerged through the use of different materials and processing methods. The story is brought up to date with an insider's expose of the modern brewing process and an account of which processing aids are employed and why.

  • av Lynn F. Pearson
    139

  • av David Mountfield
    117

  • av Christopher St.J.H. Daniel
    129

    Sundials have played an important role in regulating the daily life of mankind throughout Europe and the British Isles. This text describes and illustrates each particular class of sundial likely to be found on buildings, in churchyards, public squares, and remote countryside locations.

  • av Geoff Hayes
    117

    The beam engine became the most used form of steam engine in factories, mines and waterworks until well into the second half of the nineteenth century. This book outlines the development of the beam engine and gives some explanation of why it was so successful.

  • av Martin Robinson
    119,-

    Although many letter boxes are ordinary, some types, such as those that survive from the 1850s, are understandably rare. This book describes some of those from the Channel Islands, where pillar boxes were first introduced in 1852, to Scotland, which has had its own design of letter boxes since the Queen's accession in 1952.

  • av Tony Conder
    129

    This new Shire Album is primarily an introduction to narrowboats. It is illustrated by modern colour photographs of boats on the inland waterways today and will act as a guide to those who want to search out the heritage of the working canals.

  • av Avril Lansdell
    129

    Narrow boat cabins were bright with paint, and the 'roses and castles' decorations of the canal boats are a true English folk art along with the embroidery of the boatwomen.

  • av Anna Hallett
    145

    Almshouses - shelter offered by religious institutions to needy elderly people - come in a variety of architectural styles and often have interesting features, including coats of arms, clock-towers and sundials, many have chapels and gardens.

  • av Susan Campbell
    135

    Walled kitchen gardens were found in the grounds of most large country houses in Britain and Ireland. They were designed to provide a continual supply of fruit, flowers and vegetables. The remains of these gardens can still be seen, some converted to other uses, some simply abandoned. This book examines the history of these old kitchen gardens.

  • av Guy de la Bedoyere
    117

  • av Mervyn Benford
    117

  • av Derek A. Rayner
    117

  • av Derek A. Rayner
    117

  • av Jonathan Wood
    117

  • av Jo Axon
    117

  • av Ken Kilby
    139

    This book seeks to preserve the memory of the coopers skills, tracing the history of the craft and describing and illustrating how a barrel was made.

  • av D.C. Davidson
    117

    Spectacles have been used since the thirteenth century, at first by the few people who needed to read, such as churchmen and clerks. This book traces the development and use of eyeglasses from the fourteenth century onwards. It is illustrated with many colour photographs.

  • av Pam Palmer
    117

    Tatting is the craft of making lace with a shuttle. Its charm lies in the repetition of simple motifs. This title traces the development of tatting from the eighteenth-century pastime of knotting, through its emergence as a craft in Victorian times, to modern innovations. It is illustrated with examples from museums and private collections.

  • av Andrew Buxton
    119,-

    Most people born before 1950 can remember visiting or working in shops that had cash carriers - cash balls that ran on wooden rails, wire systems where the carrier was catapulted along an overhead steel wire, or pneumatic tube systems where the carrier was whisked off to the cash office. This title reveals details about these devices.

  • av Adrian Fisher
    129

    Mazes and labyrinths in various forms have been a preoccupation of mankind for thousands of years. This text traces the history of mazes worldwide from the earliest known examples, and then describes those which have been created in Britain's gardens, parks and landscape.

  • av Peter Duckers
    117

    Surveys the medals awarded to British personnel for military services from the First World War to operations of British forces in the opening years of the twenty-first century. The campaign medals awarded for the military actions have become a popular field for collectors, since the majority of British awards were officially named.

  • av Hans van Lemmen
    115

    During the Middle Ages decorative floor tiles were used in abbey churches, royal palaces, parish churches and the homes of wealthy citizens. Many medieval tiles disappeared during nineteenth-century restorations but the designs lived on in the copies made by Victorian tile manufacturers. The British Museum has a collection of these tiles.

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