看在大家都很喜欢的份上,就写一下评论。至少让我觉得物有所值!
沉甸甸两大本,厚的一本基本上全是图啊!
插图很好,细节丰富,全彩页。大部分是服装类的,其他还有饰品和器物及武器的图。
是本很好的参考资料书。

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前翻 后翻
Auguste Racinet the Coustume History 精装 – 2012年5月31日
法语版本
Francoise Tetard-Vittu
(作者)
Auguste Racine最早由法国人在1876-1888年间出版,本书很好保留了其中的内容,追溯了从古代到19世界末的一个服装的发展历史。其中包括道具服,长裙,各种极具传统的服装等将近500个服装类型
- 纸书页数792页
- 语言德语, 英语, 法语
- 出版社Francoise Tetard-Vittu
- 出版日期2012年5月31日
- 尺寸25.27 x 7.72 x 33.12 cm
- ISBN-103836531070
- ISBN-13978-3836531078
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基本信息
- 出版社 : Francoise Tetard-Vittu; 第一版 (2012年5月31日)
- 语言 : 德语, 英语, 法语
- 精装 : 792页
- ISBN : 3836531070
- 尺寸 : 25.27 x 7.72 x 33.12 cm
- 用户评分:
买家评论
4.2 颗星,最多 5 颗星
4.2星,共 5 星
3
买家评级
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此商品在美国亚马逊上最有用的商品评论
美国亚马逊:
4.5 颗星,最多 5 颗星
4 条评论

artgirl123
4.0 颗星,最多 5 颗星
I ordered this and it was a very good purchase. I have been fascinated with the history ...
2016年10月21日 -
已在美国亚马逊上发表已确认购买
After much deliberation, I ordered this and it was a very good purchase. I have been fascinated with the history of fashion for a very long time, and this is a great resource.

Misha Knierim
5.0 颗星,最多 5 颗星
Beautiful book
2016年1月20日 -
已在美国亚马逊上发表已确认购买
One of Tachen's treasures.

Verde Sea Glass
5.0 颗星,最多 5 颗星
Five Stars
2015年1月9日 -
已在美国亚马逊上发表已确认购买
Beautiful books. Printing is excellent.

S. Coombs
4.0 颗星,最多 5 颗星
An excellent resource, only one major flaw.
2012年8月26日 -
已在美国亚马逊上发表
This book, despite it being written in the 1800s, is impressive simply because of its scope. In my career as a costumer I have never seen another costume history book that offers a wider range of detailed and beautifully rendered images of costumes from around the world.
If you want to use this as a visual reference the only thing you have to keep in mind is that it ends in 1800 (i.e. if you're looking for the Civil War or Victorian era, you're out of luck).
My only major complaint relates to the text that accompany the images. This is a two-volume set, the first and largest volume contains all the plates, and the slimmer volume contains the descriptions that match each plate (in three languages!). These descriptions are not at all adequate to give the relevant information about all of the costumes in a given plate. For example, a page may have fifteen numbered images of different African tribesmen, but the description will only list nine, and give no indication of which is which, ignoring the number system of the plates entirely. You can generally get a good ballpark on the dates for a plate, but there's nothing for individual pieces within that plate.
Upon further research I learned that this edition is, while longer than its predecessor, still a much pared down version from them original (at least for the text, I believe all of the plates are still there). This is not what upsets me, as I understand the need to edit down what would otherwise be 1000 pages of text that would make this set twice as massive as it already is. But they could have been MUCH better about what they edited down.
For example, take a page that has 30 pieces of Celtic jewelry on it, numbered accordingly. The description would be something along the lines of "Celtic jewelry: torques, necklaces, brooches, penannular brooches, belt buckles, cloak fasteners..." etc, etc, whereas I would MUCH rather have it read "Celtic jewelry: 1. Brooch, 3rd century, Gaul. 2: torque, 2nd century, London". I do understand the need to edit down, but the anthropologist and historian in me would rather have an extra 100-200 pages and objective, useful data than the catch-all descriptions they do have. Now I feel like I need to keep an eye out for an original copy so I can have access to the full descriptions.
Now that my rant is done, however...
Would I recommend this book as a resource? Yes.
Do I think this is a good visual reference? ABSOLUTELY. The breadth of this book's content is unmatched,especially for regions like Africa that normally don't get a lot of coverage even in non-European costume books. There are even plates that are devoted to jewelry, or furniture, or the interior decorating of the period/locale (ranging from Baroque boudoirs to Mongolian tents)that further help the reader get a sense of the period and historical context. And it is a good starting point for research. The physical book is also beautifully put together.
All in all I give it four stars.
If you want to use this as a visual reference the only thing you have to keep in mind is that it ends in 1800 (i.e. if you're looking for the Civil War or Victorian era, you're out of luck).
My only major complaint relates to the text that accompany the images. This is a two-volume set, the first and largest volume contains all the plates, and the slimmer volume contains the descriptions that match each plate (in three languages!). These descriptions are not at all adequate to give the relevant information about all of the costumes in a given plate. For example, a page may have fifteen numbered images of different African tribesmen, but the description will only list nine, and give no indication of which is which, ignoring the number system of the plates entirely. You can generally get a good ballpark on the dates for a plate, but there's nothing for individual pieces within that plate.
Upon further research I learned that this edition is, while longer than its predecessor, still a much pared down version from them original (at least for the text, I believe all of the plates are still there). This is not what upsets me, as I understand the need to edit down what would otherwise be 1000 pages of text that would make this set twice as massive as it already is. But they could have been MUCH better about what they edited down.
For example, take a page that has 30 pieces of Celtic jewelry on it, numbered accordingly. The description would be something along the lines of "Celtic jewelry: torques, necklaces, brooches, penannular brooches, belt buckles, cloak fasteners..." etc, etc, whereas I would MUCH rather have it read "Celtic jewelry: 1. Brooch, 3rd century, Gaul. 2: torque, 2nd century, London". I do understand the need to edit down, but the anthropologist and historian in me would rather have an extra 100-200 pages and objective, useful data than the catch-all descriptions they do have. Now I feel like I need to keep an eye out for an original copy so I can have access to the full descriptions.
Now that my rant is done, however...
Would I recommend this book as a resource? Yes.
Do I think this is a good visual reference? ABSOLUTELY. The breadth of this book's content is unmatched,especially for regions like Africa that normally don't get a lot of coverage even in non-European costume books. There are even plates that are devoted to jewelry, or furniture, or the interior decorating of the period/locale (ranging from Baroque boudoirs to Mongolian tents)that further help the reader get a sense of the period and historical context. And it is a good starting point for research. The physical book is also beautifully put together.
All in all I give it four stars.
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