Loudon's Architectural Magazine: And Journal of Improvement in Architecture, Building, and Furnishing, and in the Various Arts and Trades Connected Therewith, Volume 1John Claudius Loudon Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green & Longman., 1834 |
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Page v
... Lines , Lights , Shades , and Colours , considered with reference to the Production of an Architectural Whole , 249 Sect 2. Forms , Lines , Lights , Shades , and Colours , considered with reference to the Principle of the Recognition of ...
... Lines , Lights , Shades , and Colours , considered with reference to the Production of an Architectural Whole , 249 Sect 2. Forms , Lines , Lights , Shades , and Colours , considered with reference to the Principle of the Recognition of ...
Page vi
... Line Preservers Descriptive Notice of the Russel Stove ; commu- nicated by Messrs . J. Sibbald and Sons of Edin- burgh with Remarks on this Stove , by a Cor- respondent resident in that City Description of an improved Roasting - Oven ...
... Line Preservers Descriptive Notice of the Russel Stove ; commu- nicated by Messrs . J. Sibbald and Sons of Edin- burgh with Remarks on this Stove , by a Cor- respondent resident in that City Description of an improved Roasting - Oven ...
Page viii
... Line Benham , S. H. , Brighton Besson , F. L. , Rue de Richelieu , Paris 392 R. 216 R. , Bayswater 328. 381 - 247 379 - 113 96 R. M. , Capel Street , Dublin 320 R. M. , Dublin - 95 - 380 - 246 R. S. , Edinburgh 95 46. 375 91.92 53. 108 ...
... Line Benham , S. H. , Brighton Besson , F. L. , Rue de Richelieu , Paris 392 R. 216 R. , Bayswater 328. 381 - 247 379 - 113 96 R. M. , Capel Street , Dublin 320 R. M. , Dublin - 95 - 380 - 246 R. S. , Edinburgh 95 46. 375 91.92 53. 108 ...
Page 9
... lines and forms , whether of nature or of art . This has not hitherto been done in any publication addressed to the general reader ; and , in attempting it , we think we shall be rendering very essential service to young men in every ...
... lines and forms , whether of nature or of art . This has not hitherto been done in any publication addressed to the general reader ; and , in attempting it , we think we shall be rendering very essential service to young men in every ...
Page 18
... line of columns , he finds their distances from each other necessarily limited by the length in which he may have been able to procure blocks to lie upon and connect their summits . Hence his intercolumniation becomes fixed at a lofty ...
... line of columns , he finds their distances from each other necessarily limited by the length in which he may have been able to procure blocks to lie upon and connect their summits . Hence his intercolumniation becomes fixed at a lofty ...
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Popular passages
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Page 385 - For, on that principle, the wedge-like snout of a swine, with its tough cartilage at the end, the little sunk eyes, and the whole make of the head, so well adapted to its offices of digging and rooting, would be extremely beautiful.
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Page 349 - Men are so inclined to content themselves with what is commonest ; the spirit and the senses so easily grow dead to the impressions of the beautiful and perfect, that every one should study, by all methods, to nourish in his mind the faculty of feeling these things.
Page 307 - It is vain for painters or poets to endeavour to invent without materials on which the mind may work, and from which invention must originate. Nothing can come of nothing.
Page 307 - But no man can be a true critic or connoisseur who does not possess a universality of mind, who does not possess the flexibility, which, throwing aside all personal predilections and blind habits, enables him to transport himself into the peculiarities of other ages and nations, to feel them as it were from their proper central point; and, what ennobles human nature, to recognize and respect whatever is beautiful and grand under those external modifications which are necessary to their existence,...