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- ΑΣΤΡΟΛ. ΤΥΧΗ - ΠΕΠΡΩΜΕΝΟ
- ΒΙΒΛΙΑ ΓΙΑ ΕΚΠΑΙΔΕΥΤΙΚΟΥΣ
- ΒΙΒΛΙΑ ΓΝΩΣΕΩΝ
- ΒΙΒΛΙΑ ΙΣΤΟΡΙΚΑ
- ΒΙΒΛΙΑ ΠΕΡΙΠΕΤΕΙΑΣ
- ΒΙΒΛΙΟΘΗΚΗ ΤΗΣ ΟΙΚΟΓΕΝΕΙΑΣ
- ΚΟΙΝΩΝΙΚΗ ΖΩΗ - ΣΧΕΣΕΙΣ
- ΛΕΞΙΚΑ
- ΛΕΥΚΩΜΑΤΑ
- ΛΟΓΟΤΕΧΝΙΑ
- ΜΑΓΕΙΡΙΚΗ
- ΜΟΥΣΙΚΗ
- ΟΔΗΓΟΙ ΥΓΕΙΑΣ
- ΠΑΙΔΙΚΑ
- ΕΚΔΟΣΕΙΣ TASCHEN
- COMING SOON
- "FOR THE POOR"
- ARCHITECTURE & DESIGN
- BASIC ARCHITECTURE SERIES
- BASIC ART SERIES
- BASIC FILM SERIES
- BASIC GENRE SERIES
- BIG ART SERIES
- COLLECTOR'S EDITIONS
- DELUXE CALENDARS
- DIARIES
- EVERGREEN
- ICONS
- KLOTZ
- LARGE CALENDARS
- MID-SIZE TITLES
- MIDI TITLES
- PHOTOGRAPHY
- PORTFOLIOS
- SMALL ART SERIES
- SMALL DELUXE CALENDARS
- T25 BASIC ART
- TEAR-OFF CALENDARS
- VARIA
- WALL CALENDARS
- XL TITLES
- ΣΥΝΕΡΓΑΖΟΜΕΝΟΙ ΕΚΔΟΤΕΣ
- Κατηγορία / Εκδότης
- JUMBO
- ΙSBN
- 978-3-8365-1463-7
- Barcode
- 9783836514637
- Γλώσσα
- Πολύγλωσσο
- Σελίδες
- 480
Wheels of History From Model T to DB5 and VW Beetle to Hummer Henry Ford jump-started the age of the automobile with the first assembly-line car in 1908: the Model T. Over the next century the automobile evolved from chugging workhorse to tailfin-era showboat to sleek status symbol, complete with sleek hood ornament. Initially a novelty item, the car grew into a necessity of the modern age, and a vector of freedom on the open road. 20th Century Classic Cars offers a lush visual history of the automobile, decade-by-decade, via 400-plus print advertisements from the Jim Heimann Collection. Using imagery culled from a century of auto advertising, this book traces the evolution of the auto from horseless carriage to rocket on wheels–and beyond. With an introduction and chapter text by New York Times automotive writer Phil Patton, as well as an illustrated timeline, this volume highlights the technological innovations, major manufacturers and dealers, historical events, and influence of popular culture on car design. Here are car trends as reflection of the zeitgeist, from the thrifty VW Beetle to the lumbering, gas-guzzling Hummer. Time-travel through the Automobile Age, with a collection that puts you in the driver's seat. The author: Phil Patton writes about car design for The New York Times and is a contributing editor to ID magazine. He was a consultant for Curves of Steel: Streamlined Automobile Design at the Phoenix Art Museum, and Different Roads: Automobiles for the Next Century at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The editor: Cultural anthropologist and graphic design historian Jim Heimann is Executive Editor for TASCHEN America, and author of numerous books on architecture, pop culture, and the history of the West Coast, Los Angeles, and Hollywood. His unrivaled private collection of ephemera has been featured in museum exhibitions around the world and dozens of books.