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Art Nouveau Flowers & Plants
Direct Imagination
www.dimagin.com
(888) 793-8387
$139
Review by Gary Coyne
From a beautiful craftsman style house in north Pasadena,
the crew of Direct Imagination collects images from old
sources, then scan some, redraw others in Illustrator and
make them available to all on CDs. They get paid to do this.
We should all have such jobs.
They do beautiful work of beautiful work. You want to see
some? Go to their web site.
This new collection (which was premiered at MacWorld but
doesn't even show up on their web site as a completed task
yet) is a reproduction of the entire M.P. Verneuit's
Étude de la Plante and contains all 391 plates (310
pages of text) of plants in nature and the plant's design
motives which are done in Art Nouveau. Historically, Art
Nouveau used botanical images as a basis for many of the
artistic relief of the time. Looking through these images,
one is constantly reminded of images seen in old magazines,
buildings, movies, and artwork of the period.
In the book, images are often placed successively showing
a botanical drawing followed by an artistic rendition of the
same plant. As seen in the example below, on the right is
Figure #31 showing samples of Porillon (Daffodil), and on
the left is Figure 34 showing an artistic interpretation of
the same plant. (Please note that all graphics in this
review have been substantially reduced in size to speed up
page transmission over the web. The image qualities
presented here do not really do justice to the drawings
presented on the CD.)
The collection is placed on three Adobe Acrobat (pdf)
documents.
One, "Art Nouveau.pdf" is the book itself, page by
page.
From each chapter, you can click on the left and right
arrows to go from page to page or use the page controls
within Acrobat itself.
A second document, "Plates.pdf" is a collection of
all the scanned drawings from the book placed as "buttons"
on 13 pages, or plates.
Each drawing on the plate is a hot-spot allowing you to
go to a full size image of each drawing by clicking on that
drawing. These images are in pdf, in150 dpi, and the JPEG
versions are scanned at 300 dpi. Once a specific drawing is
clicked and in view, there is a button on the right side of
the screen that will open that image in Photoshop (assuming
that you have Photoshop on your computer). Each scan of the
book's material has been completed at very high resolution.
For example, the image (not the link-button shown on this
page) of the tuberculeuse in the upper left in the picture
above is 2143 x 1342 pixels.
Finally, a third document called "EPS.pdf" contains eps
(encapsulated postscript) versions of 110 drawings from the
collection.
Like the Plate.pdf, if you click on any image shown
above, you are brought to a page featuring just that one
image. On each of the one image pages, you can click on a
button called "Illustrator" and (if you have Illustrator (or
Freehand) on your computer, the image will open in
Illustrator (or Freehand). This means that each image is
editable if you want to change the colors or shape, but
mostly since you are now working with vector graphics, there
is no pixilation at any resolution. That means you could
print posters the size of your house and it would look as
nice as a postage stamp poster.
So, who is this CD for? Well, consider art historians,
artists, crafts people, interior designers, people working
with textiles, decorators, graphic designers, botanists,
students--get the idea? If looking at these images doesn't
give you ideas, you probably don't need them.
There is one other type of user for this CD I could
mention: people who speak French. I bring this up because of
the one major disappointment with the CD. The book was
originally written in French, and no attempt was made to
provide a translation for those of us who are linguistically
challenged. Interestingly, there are two areas where a
translation is provided. One is the Table of Contents
showing the names of the chapters, and second is the Index
showing the flower's names in either their French, English,
or botanical names. The former providing a hot-link to that
chapter and the latter provides hot-link page numbers where
all examples of those flowers can be found. There is a
momentary hope that if one clicks on the English name of a
chapter it will bring up an English version of the text, but
alas no. There is only a French version of the text. I can
see where a translator would have caused a price increase of
the CD and this might have caused a decrease in the
potential audience. Either way it's a loss for some group of
people.
Direct Imagination's goal is to take (otherwise)
unavailable art books and make them available to a new
audience, not to provide translation services. I understand
the decision, just wish I paid more attention to my French
in high school.
Although not clip-art in the truest sense, these items
can be used as such. Therefore, Direct Imagination has some
very reasonable guidelines as to how one can legally use
them. They have different guidelines and restrictions for
either the scanned or the eps drawings. But, as is stated in
their "Read Me" file, "DI strives to be flexible and
responsive to its customer's needs. If you have an
application that conflicts with any portion of this license,
DI urges you to contact them, Toll-Free, at their offices in
Pasadena at (888) 793-8387."
In short, even if your French is weak, there is lots to
learn and observe in this CD. If you are looking for
designs, motifs, and inspirations, you would be well served
to get this CD. But darn I wish my French was better.
Applelinks Rating
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