As well as promoting the traditional origins of handmaking craft skills; this lavish book explains the latest techniques and opportunities that exist for todays designer silversmith. It emphasizes the importance of acquiring fundamental skills as a basis for creating stunning and innovative designs; and illustrates this with fabulous case studies from leading silversmiths. Written by two experienced designer craftsmen; this book takes a fresh and exciting approach by converting craft theory into visual language that informs; educates and inspires you to try a new technique; extend your skills and develop your own personal direction.Topics covered include: a comprehensive account of manufacturing techniques; the cultural and historical context of the making and crafting of silverware; profiles of designers in handmaking; production and technology; and practical hands-on advice throughout; with world-class examples of surface decoration and specialist aspects of the craft. An in-depth and inspirational guide to 21st century silversmithing; aimed at all craftsmen - silversmiths; metalworkers; designers and jewellers. Lavishly illustrated with 594 colour illustrations.
#2530472 in eBooks 2012-06-01 2012-06-01File Name: B00I3SKKHO
Review
20 of 22 people found the following review helpful. Fascinating and FrustratingBy CharlusA memoir of the heady days of gay writing and publishing; the 70s and 80s in New York City; which is alternating fascinating and frustrating. Fascinating in the stories Picano has to tell in his fluent; readable prose style: the development of "Torch Song Trilogy" and Harvey Fiersteins early career; the personalities behind Three Lives Bookstore and Oscar Wilde Memorial Bookstore (Greenwich Village institutions); the Violet Quill writers circle; the trials and tribulations of getting gay and lesbian literature written at all when societal prejudice continued to create obstacle upon obstacle; the devastations of the AIDS epidemic upon multiple budding careers.Frustrating in the narcissism with regard to the authors contribution to gay literature; the myopia that conflates historic significance with literary worth; the overvaluation of minor writers (his friends) and the undervaluation of major ones (not his friends):"Id begun writing what would end up being the first part of my first memoir and I was intensely aware that I believed Id accomplished a kind of breakthrough in the form". (page 166)"Today the criticism my book received then seems silly when it isnt hypocritical". (p.171)A little of this goes a long way - and there is alot of this.Picano is out to dish the dish; settle some scores and make perfectly clear how heroic his (and some others)efforts were. It isnt so much as I disagree with his assessment of some of his accomplishments as his manner of seeing them all in the same rosy glow.While I frequently found this book compulsively readable; I episodically had to slow down to step around the little piles of egocentricity.6 of 8 people found the following review helpful. Time After TimeBy Kevin KillianFelice Picano is the man who was there and who did the work. He devised SeaHorse Press and built it up into a larger agglomeration called GPNy; with a pair of other likeminded publishers and dreamers. SeaHorse was responsible for some of the very best books of the 1980s; some authentic landmarks like Dennis Coopers IDOLS and SAFE; Bob Glucks JACK THE MODERNIST; Brad Goochs JAILBAIT AND OTHER STORIES. And plays like FORTY DEUCE by Alan Bowne and the book that put SeaHorse on the map; TORCH SONG TRILOGY. Along the way; as Picano describes it; he encountered everyone from Robert Mapplethorpe to Nico and he lived to tell the tale.The subtext of the book is survival; one mans survival through the worst of the AIDS crisis in Manhattan. No sooner do we come to know a writer; an artist; a lover; a friend; than he is carried off by the disease and that which he left behind becomes more precious. This terse threnody runs all along the underside of this delicately written book like the runner of a carpet; just when it seems to be all about publishing trivia and how many printings had this or that forgotten volume; Picanos novelistic sense surges forward and real human interest takes its place on center stage.And the book has its own humor too! Gore Vidal averts Picanos overtures towards the republishing of MYRA BRECKINRIDGE with his own King Charles head; the alarming spread; even in youth; of American mens backsides; and how the Germans do these things so much better. Boyd McDonald; the notorious editor of STH; perplexed by a royalty statement; James Purdy; genius among plebes; equally baffled by niceties of copyright. SeaHorse and GPNy didnt last very long--not nearly long enough in my view--but the very compression of the period provides Picano with exactly the right amount of material for his project; a book which brings back all the glory days; and much of the terror; of a certain era in literary and artistic history.I had a great editorial experience with him even though; in the end; SeaHorse passed on my book of memoirs; and the press was running down when I sent it in. He took the trouble to read the entire thing and made one enormously sweeping editorial suggestion which actually saved the whole thing and made it hang together; rather than the ragbag of halfassed New Narrative experiments it had previously been. Im sure there are hundreds of younger writers who can attest also to Picanos generosity and; what would you call it; in Scotland it would be that he is a canny man. In the USA; hes a mensch.5 of 7 people found the following review helpful. A True Insiders Look at the Gay Literary MovementBy Salvatore SapienzaFelice Picanos Art and Sex in Greenwich Village is an informative and entertaining history on the emergence of gay literature in the 1970s and `80s from someone who was not only there; but helped pioneer it.With his own SeaHorse Press and later Gay Presses of New York; Picano published the works of then- unknown gay writers such as Harvey Fierstein; Brad Gooch and Dennis Cooper.With his no-holds-barred candor; razor-sharp memory and quick wit; Picano recollections (from visiting Fiersteins tiny Brooklyn apartment to an after-hours private photo session with Robert Mapplethorpe) are; at times; dishy and gossipy; yet always incredibly fascinating to read. Picano also settles some scores and puts a few rumors to rest along the way; too. I also enjoyed the many photos of book covers; artists and writers of the era.But I was mainly touched by Picanos stories on lesser-known writers; many who died too young to establish great literary legacies. Although never becoming big names; these writers contributions were no less important; and Picanos book reverently honors their place in gay literary history.Salvatore Sapienza; author of Seventy Times Seven