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This year (2000) I was introduced to a very unusual book in UWM's Special Collections. As a person who has
been working with wood, I found this book very intriguing. Printed in 1957, Hough's
Encyclopaedia of American Woods by E. S. Harrar, Ph.D., is a sixteen-volume
set presenting actual samples of woods. Each page contains three different
paper-thin slices of different trees in transverse section, radial section, and
tangential section cuts. When I opened the first volume I was amazed by the
lace-like, thin-cut wood sheets. To me the book was representing the beauty as
well as the fragility of nature. Since I was just getting into the experimentation
of veneer in my work, this book felt particularly close to me. I was also intrigued
by the beauty of the pattern on the surface of each sheet.
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Harrar, S. Elwood. Ed. Hough's Encyclopaedia of American Woods.
New York: R. Speller, 1957. 16 volumes.
Call Number: (SPL) SD 536 .H832
Special Collections, Golda Meir Library.
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