Fotografía de autor

Sobre El Autor

Thomas Hine, the author of four previous books, is a writer on culture, history, and design. He is a columnist for Philadelphia Magazine and a contributor to the Atlantic Monthly, Martha Stewart Living, Architectural Record, the Washington Post, the New York Times, and other publications. He lives mostrar más in Philadelphia mostrar menos

Obras de Thomas Hine

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
male
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugares de residencia
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Ocupaciones
writer
columnist

Miembros

Reseñas

Говорят, что самая лучшая обертка у бананов, но вот вам, какой бы замечательный продукт вы не создали, упаковка обязательно потребуется. Нынешнее изобилие форм и материалов для нее относительно недавняя роскошь. Очень часто изобретателям и предпринимателям приходилось подстраиваться под имевшиеся форматы, представлявшие собой технологические «бутылочные горлышки» производства. К слову, сперва бутылочное стекло не могло выдерживать шипучих напитков. Бум шампанского и пива случился лишь после прорыва в его изготовлении. Тюбики, придуманные для красок, позаимствовали аптекари, консервы спонсировал Наполеон, аэрозольными баллончиками изначально американские солдаты боролись с москитами в Тихом океане, а короткая длина современных песен – результат ограниченности виниловых носителей. Упаковка одновременно и незаметна, и всемогуща.… (más)
 
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Den85 | otra reseña | Jan 3, 2024 |
I Want That! is a surprisingly readable and entertaining treatise on shopping. It's a history book with humor an insight into a very basic human activity. Author Thomas Hine also explores how sales tactics and marketing emerged over time, drawing more and more shoppers into the web that is the market place.

Though it was published over a decade ago, the author is already familiar with online shopping and the invasion of privacy issues that soon follow. He also explores the economic impact of Christmas and how it has moved away from its spiritual roots to a season of shopping that has an impact on not only local, but the global economy.

Reading this book is almost like reading a sociology book. One enjoys discovering how trends in tastes emerge, affect fashions, housing, and just as quickly, render the fashionable passe' and call for something new and different.

This was one of those non-fiction book club reads that I really enjoyed...again, one I would never have picked up without a nudge from a friend. (Thanks, Jan H.!) If you see it at Half Price, its a dollar well spent!
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vcg610 | Feb 5, 2015 |
A fantastic book on the history of the concept of teenager-ness. The only bad thing I have to say about the book is also one of its biggest strengths: it moves very quickly through the historical portions, sometimes examining 30 years in one chapter. This makes the book extremely useful for beginners, but also leaves potential for concepts and movements to get lost in the shuffle. Still, HIGHLY recommended.
 
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JWarren42 | otra reseña | Oct 10, 2013 |
Need a quick test of your self confidence – try reading a book about the history of product packaging while sitting in the middle of an airport with everyone around you reading John Grisham, Danielle Steel and the Twilight series. It may make you feel a little odd…but no one wants to sit next to you, so you have plenty of room. And by the time you’ve finished, you’ll never see any of those people again – and you’ll have read a pretty interesting book.

Total Package is well written, well researched and well presented. Subjects which could easily turn dry as a dissertation were handled with care (get it? It’s a packaging book) and made for an entertaining read. Items which we see everyday are looked at in a new way, effectively analyzing them as they were analyzed at the time of their invention – have you ever really thought about how the collapsible BOX was invented??? Research data into color preferences, the shape and labeling of packaging and boxes and the importance of brand recognition and packaging changes were all topics of a multi-billion dollar industry which literally takes place in front of our eyes every day – yet you rarely notice – which the author points out is almost the point.

Although I enjoyed it immensely, I would have to say a good 30% of it could (should) have been edited out. Some parts got repetitive (I lost count of how many times we were told how wonderful the Tide logo is), and some of the research drifted a little too far into shopper psychology which was less interesting. It’s also worth mentioning that the title is more than 10 years old, so some of the references were a little dated – I don’t think the impact of WalMart on packaging practices was mentioned once. But still a worthwhile read.
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½
10 vota
Denunciada
pbadeer | otra reseña | May 27, 2010 |

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Obras
8
Miembros
766
Popularidad
#33,218
Valoración
½ 3.6
Reseñas
5
ISBNs
19

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