City Colors
Autor Zoran Milichen Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 aug 2006 – vârsta de la 2 până la 5 ani
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781553379812
ISBN-10: 1553379810
Pagini: 24
Dimensiuni: 254 x 229 x 3 mm
Greutate: 0.12 kg
Ediția:Reprint
Editura: Kids Can Press
Colecția Kids Can Press
ISBN-10: 1553379810
Pagini: 24
Dimensiuni: 254 x 229 x 3 mm
Greutate: 0.12 kg
Ediția:Reprint
Editura: Kids Can Press
Colecția Kids Can Press
Notă biografică
Zoran
Milich
is
an
award-winning
photojournalist.
He
lives
in
Toronto,
Ontario.
Recenzii
Boldly
designed
and
photographed
...
[a]
satisfying
mix
of
recognizable
scenes
and
mysterious
close-ups.—Horn
Book
Photojournalist Zoral Milich's previous books for children, The City ABC Book, and City Signs, were masterful, intriguing demonstrations of elementary concepts executed in a minimalist way, and in a way that never undercuts the graphic elegance of the page. These are sophisticated books that give small folk a taste of something quite fine. In his newest book, City Colors, Milich moves from ABC's to red, white, and blue, and beyond. Milich's modus operandi is to use a double-page spread to ?illustrate? a colour. Take the colour red, for instance; One the left-hand page, a small square frames a photograph of a part of something red. The right-hand page shows the whole thing - or enough of it to determine that what we've got is a red double-decker bus speeding down the tarmac. Black - not a colour for some - is presented as a photograph of a square of blackness interrupted by an interesting piece of shiny chrome. A black stretch limonsine slithers across the black asphalt street on the right-hand page. Lots of aha! Moments here dressed up in pink, purple, and yellow, too.—Globe & Mail
Milich complements his powerful The City ABC Book and City Signs with a dazzling new concept book.—School Library Journal
Good picture books capture children and adults alike, neither too complicated to confuse a child trying to negotiate meaning nor to simple to turn off a parent from the requisite repeat reading. City Colors by Toronto photojournalist Zoran Milich does just that, with his striking images of London's red double-decker buses and Rio's multi-coloured playgrounds simultaneously providing parents with fodder for their great urban reveries while perfectly conveying to children the meaning of these bold colours. Both generations leave these children's books richer for the experience of it.—National Post
Photojournalist Zoral Milich's previous books for children, The City ABC Book, and City Signs, were masterful, intriguing demonstrations of elementary concepts executed in a minimalist way, and in a way that never undercuts the graphic elegance of the page. These are sophisticated books that give small folk a taste of something quite fine. In his newest book, City Colors, Milich moves from ABC's to red, white, and blue, and beyond. Milich's modus operandi is to use a double-page spread to ?illustrate? a colour. Take the colour red, for instance; One the left-hand page, a small square frames a photograph of a part of something red. The right-hand page shows the whole thing - or enough of it to determine that what we've got is a red double-decker bus speeding down the tarmac. Black - not a colour for some - is presented as a photograph of a square of blackness interrupted by an interesting piece of shiny chrome. A black stretch limonsine slithers across the black asphalt street on the right-hand page. Lots of aha! Moments here dressed up in pink, purple, and yellow, too.—Globe & Mail
Milich complements his powerful The City ABC Book and City Signs with a dazzling new concept book.—School Library Journal
Good picture books capture children and adults alike, neither too complicated to confuse a child trying to negotiate meaning nor to simple to turn off a parent from the requisite repeat reading. City Colors by Toronto photojournalist Zoran Milich does just that, with his striking images of London's red double-decker buses and Rio's multi-coloured playgrounds simultaneously providing parents with fodder for their great urban reveries while perfectly conveying to children the meaning of these bold colours. Both generations leave these children's books richer for the experience of it.—National Post