Description: (Home Design) Coleman, Oliver (Pseudonym Of Eugene Klapp) : Successful Houses: Hardcover. Herbert & S. Stone & Company, Chicago, IL. 1899. 1st Edition, 1st Printing. Very Good This book is in Very Good condition and is lacking a dust jacket. The book is in generally clean bright condition, but has some light bumping, rubbing, and beginning fraying to the spine ends and corners. There is some light ground-in dirt. The text pages are generally clean and bright. There is a previous owner's inked gift notation on the front endpaper. The author, Oliver Coleman is a pseudonym of Eugene Klapp, the founder of the magazine House Beautiful. "Just as nineteenth-century women’s service magazines had not hesitated to advocateconcerns over a flurry of issues involving women, children, and families, House Beautiful was launched with an agenda of its own, namely, to tackle the great disparity between the haves andhave-nots in American society, and to attack the excesses of the rich that had so characterized theVictorian era. Founders Eugene Klapp and Henry Blodgett Harvey made it clear from the first issue that while House Beautiful catered to middle- and upper middle-class homeowners, it has far less regard for the wealthiest elite who could afford their own decorators and architects. In December 1896, the magazine’s premiere issue stressed homemaking on a budget and moderation in design, telling its readers: “A little money spent with careful thought by people of keen artistic perception will achieve a result that is astonishing. ”30 The issue included halftone images of rooms and residential exteriors. Like so many other magazines in the 1890s, it sold for ten cents, with a year-long subscription offered for a dollar. This first “number” (as magazine issues were commonly called well into the first half of the twentieth century) was printed in a compact 6-by-9-inch format, with fifty-two interior pages and a yellowish-brown paper cover wrap." (from a theses by Mark Mayfield: AT HOME: SHELTER MAGAZINES AND THE AMERICAN LIFE 1890-1930) 2 132 #46650 $125
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Author: Coleman, Oliver (Pseudonym Of Eugene Klapp)
Book Title: Successful Houses
Cover: Hardcover
Language: English
Publisher: Herbert & S. Stone & Company
Publication Year: 1899
Place Published: Chicago, IL
Pages: 165
Topic: Home Design
Format: Hardcover
Edition: 1st Edition
Printing: 1st Printing
Book Condition: Very Good
Defects: This book is in Very Good condition and is lacking a dust, jacket. The book is in generally clean bright condition, but, has some light bumping, rubbing, and beginning fraying to the, spine ends and corners. There is some light ground-in dirt. The, text pages are generally clean and bright. There is a previous, owner's inked gift notation on the front endpaper. The author,, Oliver Coleman is a pseudonym of Eugene Klapp, the founder of, the magazine House Beautiful. "Just as nineteenth-century, women’s service magazines had not hesitated to advocateconcerns, over a flurry of issues involving women, children, and, families, House Beautiful was launched with an agenda of its, own, namely, to tackle the great disparity between the haves, andhave-nots in American society, and to attack the excesses of, the rich that had so characterized theVictorian era. Founders, Eugene Klapp and Henry Blodgett Harvey made it clear from the, first issue that while House Beautiful catered to middle- and, upper middle-class homeowners, it has far less regard for the, wealthiest elite who could afford their own decorators and, architects. In December 1896, the magazine’s premiere issue, stressed homemaking on a budget and moderation in design,, telling its readers: “A little money spent with careful thought, by people of keen artistic perception will achieve a result, that is astonishing. ”30 The issue included halftone images of, rooms and residential exteriors. Like so many other magazines, in the 1890s, it sold for ten cents, with a year-long, subscription offered for a dollar. This first “number” (as, magazine issues were commonly called well into the first half, of the twentieth century) was printed in a compact 6-by-9-inch, format, with fifty-two interior pages and a yellowish-brown, paper cover wrap." (from a theses by Mark Mayfield: AT HOME:
Binding: Hardcover
Subject: Home Design
Place of Publication: Chicago, IL
Year Printed: 1899
Special Attributes: 1st Edition