In this follow-up to her sensational Sensual Home, Ilse Crawford is once again breaking new ground in her study of the individual's search for the perfect home. Continuing the theme of 'one eye sees, the other feels', the book moves beyond the senses into an investigation of our basic human drives for survival, safety, love, respect, and self-fulfilment. This is then expanded to how we live, our homes and our daily activities. Despite our increasing reliance on technology to bring ease and comfort to our lives, Ilse says, 'we still want a sense of humanity, of home - a space that speaks to us radically and emotionally'. A unique flow of thought-provoking text, evocative photography, and state of the art design combine to produce a reaction in the reader which is as emotional as it is intellectual.
A solid 3.5 stars for me. Love the philosophy of design in this book, that home is about more than design, it's about being human too. Resonated with Ilse Crawford's comments on feeling ourselves at home (reminds me of Christopher Alexander's work, which is a must read). Found myself flipping through the book more than reading it in detail though - lovely photos - skipping the more general sections, because they're so general as to be obvious (we enjoy being outside, it's important to get enough sleep, etc). Interspersed with those obvious general comments though, is some real wisdom on what it means to really live in physical space.
I could have sworn I've read this before, but for some reason it's not showing on Good Reads. The hardcover version is luxe as the book is covered in a red silk like fabric with gold tooling. Ultimately, the gold tooling doesn't work as it slides off the fabric with each handling of the book.
An oversized book which studies the aspects of how we create a home and what we might need to be our happiest there. The chapters are: Survival, Protection, Love, Respect, Self and Detail. It's a handsome book and one you could return to, over time, to contemplate how your house and environs are meeting your needs leading into what you would need to change to seek some better principles out--your need for privacy, for example. Basic, timeless aesthetics, really.
Forerunner to A Frame For Life, covers some of the same ideas, even uses some of the same photos! Still worth reading whether all-the-way-through or inspirational browsing, & beautifully illustrated. Loosely based around Maslow's hierarchy of needs, so thematic not room-by-room so much.
Very timely read as I was planning out & decorating my new home. Loved the first few essays, it gave a sense of serenity about our everyday lives and encouraged to look at home design with more freedom and play. I was already leaning towards this philosophy intuitively but it helped to get encouragement from the outside, with well put arguments of why some modern trends aren't what's best for us.
It read like a meditation on what home ought to mean to us. Easy and nice read, poetic photography and very beautiful cover, could work as a coffee table book.
Oh, my, I love this book. It's really quite light on both text on imagery, which makes its capacious size more than a bit ridiculous, but what is there is packed with meaning and visual poetry. It's the sort of book I've been looking for: one that talks about the concept of home from an emotional perspective, on a personal level. I'm adding it to my to-buy list...
I really liked the idea of the book. I agreed with a lot of what I thought she was trying to say, I just think it wasn't organized as well as it could have been. Additionally, I think she tried to touch on too many topics without going deep enough into them. Such potential.
Here is someone who understands what 'home' can AND should be - or become. Whether I like her 'decorating style' is neither here nor there. What HiWtHI does is broaden our ideas about the possibilities of our homes and even individual rooms. There is lots to mull over from this book.