The Complete Book of Fruit Carving

The Complete Book of Fruit Carving
Author: Rie Yamada
Publisher:
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2018-11-20
Genre: Fruit carving
ISBN: 9784865051452

This is the definitive guide for fruit carving for all occasions. All the techniques are illustrated with easy-to-follow instructions and step-by-step photos. From the basics to the impressive works at advanced level, this book includes more than 60 carving works for all special occasions like birthday, wedding, and more.

Great Book of Spoon Carving Patterns

Great Book of Spoon Carving Patterns
Author: David Western
Publisher: Fox Chapel Publishing
Total Pages: 352
Release: 2021-04-13
Genre: Crafts & Hobbies
ISBN: 1607658801

· Learn the traditional language of carving lovespoons · Details the symbolic meaning of 75 wooden lovespoon designs, from asking someone on a first date and courting spoons to wedding spoons and more · Features 5 distinctive bowl patterns and 75 original handle patterns for hundreds of customizable, mix-and-match design opportunities to express your one-of-a-kind love · David Western is a lovespoon expert and the author of Fine Art of Carving Lovespoons and History of Lovespoons

Kamakura

Kamakura
Author: Burritt Sabin
Publisher: Partridge Publishing Singapore
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2021-08-30
Genre: History
ISBN: 1543764320

Kamakura rose as the first samurai capital in the 12th century. Shogun Yoritomo chose for the seat of his military government a natural fortress far from the intrigues of the court in Kyoto. He summoned from the capital carpenters to build grand temples and sculptors to carve images for their halls. His successors, the Hj, built the great Zen monasteries Kench-ji and Engaku-ji. Religious figures including Nichiren, Ippen, and Ninsh established temples of their respective Buddhist sects in the new city. Kamakura: A Contemplative Guide introduces the dramatic and often violent lives of these figures and walks you through shrine and temple precincts, illuminating the features of their halls, gardens, and statuary. It takes you over the passes cut sheer through rock to give entrance to the city. It shows Kamakura through the eyes of the writers and artists drawn to the seaside city by its laid-back pace, rich history, and abundant greenery. Rare photographs complement the text. Lucid maps pinpoint places of interest. Finally, Kamakura: A Contemplative Guide explains how the establishment of the first samurai capital, from whence the ethic and spirit of the Eastern warrior spread nationwide, was of significance in the formation of Japan.

Carving Watermelon Sculptures

Carving Watermelon Sculptures
Author: Lonnie T. Lynch
Publisher: AuthorHouse
Total Pages: 118
Release: 2008-08
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1434378330

The goal of Emotional Waves is to encourage the reader to explore their surrounding elements, matter and meet a physical relationship with nature and the beauty exhibited in its many details.

The Outline of History

The Outline of History
Author: Herbert George Wells
Publisher: Jazzybee Verlag
Total Pages: 430
Release: 1925
Genre: History
ISBN:

No book is provoking a more animated discussion among students of the social sciences at the present time than H. G. Wells' Outline of History. The author's task, as he himself sets it, is to tell, "truly and clearly, in one continuous narrative, the whole story of life and mankind so far as it is known today." But while these two volumes are plainly for the general reader rather than for the special student of history, it does not follow that they contain nothing beyond an endless parade of names and dates. Their chief value, indeed, is in the author's interpretation of what he writes about. Events are appraised and men are weighed in the balance as he goes along. Historians in general will not agree with some of these appraisals, nor will they credit Mr. Wells with an approach to infallibility in his judgment of the men who flit across his pages; but his estimates of the relative value of facts and forces can scarcely be brushed aside because they do not command general indorsement. On some matters, unhappily, Mr. Wells has allowed his iconoclastic proclivities to run away with him. Napoleon I, for example, cannot be disposed of as a second-grade "pestilence" because "he killed fewer people than the influenza epidemic of 1918" (II, p. 384); nor will the world believe, so long as it retains its senses, that Napoleon III was " a much more intelligent man" than his uncle (II, p. 438). Even the pinchbeck himself would have rebuked this insinuation. But when all is said, these two stout volumes embody a remarkable achievement. They contain astonishingly few historical inaccuracies of the customary type. The author's advisers, and a competent galaxy of scholars they are, have kept him clear of the pitfalls. The style is terse and forceful. Mr. Wells certainly has the gift of cogent exposition.