Resultaten (4)
Nobody sits like the French
2025 || Paperback || Charles Pappas || Luster Uitgeverij
STORIES ABOUT HOW
THE WORLD EXPOS OF 1855–1937
SHAPED PARIS,
FROM ITS ARCHITECTURE TO CULINARY INVENTIONS,
AND WHERE TO FIND THE TRACES
A Paris travel guide and history book about how the World Expos of 1855-1937 shaped the city, from its architecture to its (culinary) customs
Paris is the physical memory of seven World Expos that took place in the city from 1855 to 1937. These Expos left behind monuments like the Eiffel Tower, the Musée d'Orsay, the Grand and Petit Palais... But many tra...
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Place
2020 || Hardcover || Philippe Viérin || Luster Uitgeverij || met inkijkexemplaar
‘The great-grandfather I never knew has gradually become closer to me as I read what was written about him and discovered the circumstances in which he must have lived and worked. It has become Jos’s story, following his path from budding architect to the one who has the age I have now. For me it also became an act of looking back.’
Architect Jos Viérin (1872-1949) played a prominent role in the reconstruction of the Destroyed Regions. After World War I, it was decided to reconstruct i...
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The web is a gift
11 principles on how you can make the Web a better place
2023 || Hardcover || Wieni e.a. || Luster Uitgeverij
Belgium-based agency Wieni delivers digital products that people actually need, use and love. In doing so, Wieni honours one important ethos: they want to leave the web a better place than it was when they arrived. To achieve this goal, Wieni holds on to 11 key principles – in this book, you’ll find out what those are all about.
For example:
"The uglier the baby, the better" - About how you should look at the first drafts of your work when you start sharing it. Don’t let yourself get lo...
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Shosa
Meditation in Japanese handwork
2025 || Hardcover || Ringo Gomez || Luster Uitgeverij
When visiting Japan, one of the first things that stand out is the calm and respectful way the Japanese behave. A weaver meditatively repeats the exact same movement a thousand times a day, while the tea master dedicates every serene gesture to the harmony of the room. Although in the West we might find it hard to explain this mindful way of moving, the Japanese have a word for it: shosa.
In this book, design journalist Ringo Gomez and photographer Rob Walbers, who share a long-standing fasci...