Aloha’s Reviews > The Book of Books: 500 Years of Graphic Innovation > Status Update

Aloha
Aloha is finished
AbsoluFabulous! Visual feast for everything you want to know about the making of the print. If Gutenberg can only know what his invention of the printing press lead to.

Modernism:



Postmodernism:

May 06, 2013 01:19PM
The Book of Books: 500 Years of Graphic Innovation

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Aloha’s Previous Updates

Aloha
Aloha is on page 356 of 464
Hilarious web page, "You're a Comic Sans Criminal. We're here to help you."

http://comicsanscriminal.com
Apr 30, 2013 11:39AM
The Book of Books: 500 Years of Graphic Innovation


Aloha
Aloha is on page 356 of 464
I'm saying Terrific a lot today. Letting my automatic pilot take over. Glad I'm even taking the time to update my book reads because fate is taking me away from the literary world back into the visual world.
Apr 23, 2013 08:03PM
The Book of Books: 500 Years of Graphic Innovation


Aloha
Aloha is on page 326 of 464
Lithography, which greatly increased the flexibility of the printing process. Then photography and photolithography, colotype, etc. Movements of the early 20th century with the Futurists, Dadalists, Constructivists, etc.
Apr 13, 2013 07:55AM
The Book of Books: 500 Years of Graphic Innovation


Aloha
Aloha is on page 234 of 464
The 18th Century has some of the most beautiful books and types, especially from the French, Redouté's gorgeous flower prints with Didot's fonts, and the Description de l'Egypte with numerous drawings by artists detailing everything seen during the voyage into Egypt as part of Napoleon's Egyptian campaign (1798-1801).
Mar 31, 2013 04:29PM
The Book of Books: 500 Years of Graphic Innovation


Aloha
Aloha is on page 234 of 464
The 18th Century has some of the most beautiful books and types, especially from the French, Redouté's gorgeous flower prints with Didot's fonts, and the Description de l'Egypte with numerous drawings by artists detailing everything seen during the voyage into Egypt as part of Napoleon's Egyptian campaign (1798-1801).
Mar 31, 2013 04:22PM
The Book of Books: 500 Years of Graphic Innovation


Aloha
Aloha is on page 174 of 464
The Dutch Golden Age:

A tolerant attitude helped to expand printing attracting people from varying areas. Banned authors from other areas, such as Descartes and Spinoza were able to publish freely. Increase in variety of topics.

Dec 13, 2012 03:50PM
The Book of Books: 500 Years of Graphic Innovation


Aloha
Aloha is on page 140 of 464
Finished with the Decoration and Illustration chapter, and the French influence with type having more of an ornate flair. Interesting about emblem books, which contained pictures with multiple interpretations, poetry, then prose with explanation.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emblem_book

Dec 12, 2012 10:53AM
The Book of Books: 500 Years of Graphic Innovation


Aloha
Aloha is on page 98 of 464
I've seen people embed images in here. Let's see...
Luca Paciolli, Divina proportione, Leonardo Da Vinci was one of the illustrators
Dec 05, 2012 07:52AM
The Book of Books: 500 Years of Graphic Innovation


Aloha
Aloha is on page 62 of 464
We take books for granted, but during the 1400's and 1500's, a printer spends a career producing only around 100-150 books. BTW, Aldus Manutius came up with the italics.
Dec 04, 2012 09:33AM
The Book of Books: 500 Years of Graphic Innovation


Aloha
Aloha is on page 62 of 464
We take books for granted, but during the 1400's and 1500's, a printer spends a career producing only around 100-150 books. BTW, Aldus Manutius came up with the italics..
Dec 04, 2012 09:32AM
The Book of Books: 500 Years of Graphic Innovation


Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)

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message 1: by Nefariousbig (new)

Nefariousbig Absolutely beautiful.


Aloha It's an amazing look into the world of books. I'm glad I got it as soon as I saw it. The book is harder to find now. I want to see whether I can find some of the books in the examples.


message 3: by Nefariousbig (new)

Nefariousbig Old Gutenberg would definitely flip out.


Aloha Yep, considering how the printing press made reading material abundantly available. We thought it couldn't spread faster, but the digital format and the internet raised it to another level. I think that would be beyond his comprehension. We've come a long way, baby.


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