101 Design Classics
Why some ideas become true design icons and others don't, 1920 until Today
(Autor) Silke PfersdorfWhich designer pieces should you definitely know? How did the XY lamp or the Y chair have a lasting influence on further development? Who were the people behind these innovations? And: What does a new development have to have in order to be successful on the market? These and many other questions are answered in the book 100 and ư Design Things That Make Our Lives More Beautiful. It deals with 100 and 1/2 design objects that have had a great influence on the respective product world or design history in general by virtue of their design and/or function.00The accomplished author Silke Pfersdorf, a well-known columnist on this very topic in Living at home, guarantees that the products have been knowledgeably curated and the texts are as substantial as they are entertaining. She knows the connections very well and provides the reader with an overview of the seemingly impenetrable flood of designer pieces: What should one know? What is better to forget? Which classic piece can still be found in the design of every other piece? And which piece has perhaps unjustly fallen into oblivion?00In addition, there is a lot of attractive picture material including design sketches, portraits of many well-known and some unknown designers as well as numerous exciting anecdotes from the sewing box of design history. Spotlights are cast, but cross-connections are always drawn, thus providing an en passant overview of the history of design.