David Usborne
Foreword by Thomas Heatherwick
Thames & Hudson, New York, 2010, English
Nonfiction, Product/Industrial Design
8.3 x 8.2 inches, paperback, 192 pages, 400+ color illustrations
ISBN: 9780500288719
Suggested Retail Price: $24.95

From Publisher. If you have ever thatched a roof, measured a baby’s skull, or castrated a bull, you will recognize some of these objects. If you haven’t but admire the work of, say, Warhol, Duchamp, or Cornell, you will appreciate these accidental masterpieces of daily life.

Some tools were developed to satisfy basic human needs, some for less obvious ends, and still others are the relics of vanishing trades, yet all display a beauty and meaning beyond their function.

More than 400 objects, ancient and modern, are presented in sections that broadly characterize their use: hitting, cutting, holding, shielding, molding, spreading, gripping, rubbing, and testing. From a nineteenth-century fruit picker to Czech military food-mixing blades, from variations on the kitchen whisk to medical instruments that, thankfully, are no longer in use, there is something in these objects that will touch the inventor, designer, artist, or collector in all of us.

David Usborne is a London-based architect. Thomas Heatherwick is one of Britain’s most innovative designers.

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