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Arts and Crafts ( Collector's Guides) The Complete Visual Reference and Price Guide

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A lavish visual reference on the Arts & Crafts movement features a history of the period's furniture, textiles, ceramics, jewelry, metalware, prints and posters, and other collectibles, along with information on the era's stylistic development, profiles of leading designers, up-to-date values, tips on buying and selling, and more than one thousand full-color photographs.

240 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2005

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About the author

Judith H. Miller

212 books24 followers
Judith Henderson Miller began collecting in the 1960s while a student at Edinburgh University in Scotland. She had since extended and reinforced her knowledge through international research, becoming one of the world’s leading experts in the field. In 1979 she co-founded the best-selling Miller’s Antiques Price Guide and has since written more than 100 books, covering antiques, collectibles, architecture and interior design.

Judith was an expert on the BBC’s Antiques Roadshow, and had also appeared on The Martha Stewart Show and CNN. She was a regular contributor to newspapers and magazines, including Financial Times, The Telegraph, BBC Homes & Antiques and House & Garden. She lectured extensively, including at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London and the Smithsonian in Washington.
She died in April 2023

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Profile Image for Michael Smith.
1,935 reviews66 followers
November 25, 2014
I first became aware of the Arts & Crafts movement of William Morris and his circle back in the late 1960s, when Art Nouveau (an outgrowth of Arts & Crafts) was enjoying a renaissance. I ended up with several pieces of Arts & Crafts-style furniture (replicas, naturally, on my graduate school budget), some poster (reprints) and a couple of affordable ceramics (original). And I made a point thereafter of searching out museum collections and galleries specializing in this stuff. I still have a preference for the clean lines of furniture and the luminescent glazes on pots, especially those by Pilkington and Rookwood. Miller has brought together in this beautifully produced volume more than a thousand examples of design and craft, with detailed descriptions and notes and a list of “Key Features” for various artists and studios. Approximate values also are included, though I’m happy just to look at the pictures. If you’re trying to learn about the Arts & Crafts movement, this would be a good visual textbook.
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