Modernist Architectural Toys for Kids - Creative Building Blocks & Educational STEM Play | Inspire Future Architects with Design & Construction Fun
$37.12
$49.5
Safe 25%
Modernist Architectural Toys for Kids - Creative Building Blocks & Educational STEM Play | Inspire Future Architects with Design & Construction Fun
Modernist Architectural Toys for Kids - Creative Building Blocks & Educational STEM Play | Inspire Future Architects with Design & Construction Fun
Modernist Architectural Toys for Kids - Creative Building Blocks & Educational STEM Play | Inspire Future Architects with Design & Construction Fun
$37.12
$49.5
25% Off
Quantity:
Delivery & Return: Free shipping on all orders over $50
Estimated Delivery: 10-15 days international
29 people viewing this product right now!
SKU: 24251097
Guranteed safe checkout
amex
paypal
discover
mastercard
visa
apple pay
shop
Description
Created for children but designed by adults with considerable ingenuity, architectural toys have long offered a window on a much larger world. In Architecture in Play, Tamar Zinguer explores the nearly two-hundred-year period over which such playthings have reflected changing attitudes toward form, structure, and permanence, echoing modernist experiments and stylistic inclinations in fascinating ways while also incorporating technological advances in their systems of construction. Zinguer’s history of these toys reveals broader social and economic trends from their respective periods.Focusing on four primary building materials (wood, stone, metal, and paper), Zinguer discusses a series of important architectural toys: Friedrich Froebel’s Gifts (1836), cubes, spheres, and cylinders that are gradually broken down to smaller geometrical parts; Anchor Stone Building Blocks (1877), comprising hundreds of miniature stone shapes that yield castles, forts, and churches; Meccano (1901) and Erector Set (1911), including small metal girders to construct bridges and skyscrapers mimetic of contemporary steel structures; and The Toy (1950) and House of Cards (1952), designed by Charles and Ray Eames, which are lightweight cardboard "kits of parts" based on methods of prefabrication.Used in the intimacy of the domestic environment, a setting that encouraged the eradication of formal habits and a reconceiving of visual orders, architectural toys ultimately intimated notions of the modern. Amply illustrated and engagingly written, this book sheds valuable light on this fascinating relation between household toys and the deeper trends and ideas from which they sprang.
More
Shipping & Returns

For all orders exceeding a value of 100USD shipping is offered for free.

Returns will be accepted for up to 10 days of Customer’s receipt or tracking number on unworn items. You, as a Customer, are obliged to inform us via email before you return the item.

Otherwise, standard shipping charges apply. Check out our delivery Terms & Conditions for more details.


You May Also Like

Top