Brilliant color plates of Edmund Dulac's book illustrations date from 1908 to 1928 and include Shakespeare's The Tempest, The Arabian Nights, The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyam, and Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tales.
Beginners and experienced crafters alike will appreciate this expert guide to making one-of-a-kind teddy bears and their outfits. It presents... Læs mere
This wonderful survey of the famed artist's early work features 44 color plates in addition to several black-and-white vignettes and spot illustrations. Fantastic dwarfs, giants, and elves, plus many long-unavailable naturalistic illustrations.
A comics and gaming art veteran provides scores of images and step-by-step examples to illustrate how variation and experimentation lead to fresh, original designs for otherworldly beings and their environments and stories.
Thirty-one pages include illustrations from A to Z plus five additional wordmark designs — "Love," "Peace," "Dream." "Family," "Friendship" — gloriously embellished by traditional elements: woven knots, curling spirals, stylized hounds, peacocks, fiery dragons, and more.
Decorative borders and patterns characteristic of the 19th century frame these 31 clever and insightful quotes from Jane Austen novels, including "Know your own happiness" (Sense and Sensibility).
From waders such as the spoonbill to the woodland-dwelling wild turkey and wide-ranging owls and ravens, this collection portrays 46 birds. Each is identified and depicted in its natural habitat.
The illustrator of Creative Haven Creative Cats Coloring Book presents another treat for cat lovers and coloring enthusiasts, with more feline portraits and unique patterns of hearts, flowers, paisleys, other motifs.
Mistakenly assumed to have drowned, John Harmon assumes a new identity to get acquainted with the couple next in line for his inheritance and the woman his father's will stipulates he must marry.
Complete handbook by veteran instructor of the Art Students League, suitable for all: novices, students, professionals. Covers basic structure of head and body, light and shade, conveying action, depicting drapery, more.
As close to an autobiography as London ever wrote, this brutally frank memoir of a lifelong struggle with alcohol also offers insights into the author's life as an adventurer and popular writer.