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A survey of the duck decoy carvers of Louisiana with examples of their work in full color.
Artistry of Louisiana Decoy Carvers presents decoys, old and contemporary and made by Louisiana carvers, as museum-quality art. With stunning photographs and detailed descriptions, the book illustrates the three basic types of decoys in full-size as well as miniature. An informative chapter on hunting decoys carved by Louisiana's Old Masters highlights pieces from the largest and best private collection in the state, while another features miniature replicas in the style of the Old Masters made by a number of Louisiana's best contemporary carvers. Novice collectors will find guidance here, as well as an essay by Louisiana's preeminent decoy authority that offers invaluable advice to collectors of Louisiana decoys of all experience levels. Most importantly, this book discusses the existential threats to decoy carving in Louisiana and offers concrete suggestions for saving this unique and culturally important artform from extinction.
The step-by-step development of this art, with advice on carving techniques and collecting.
Detailed instructions and full-size templates for constructing 16 beautiful, marvelously practical decoys according to the time-honored South Jersey method.
"After the Hunt, Chef John D. Folse's eighth cookbook, explores man's hunting history from cave man through American colonization. Travel through time as ancient man learns to create tools, nets and traps for hunting then, cultivates a gluttonous taste for wild game delicacies and grand game banquets that continue for days. From China to Egypt from Greece to Rome, the hunt was a revered sport that prepared men for war. Visit game parks of the noblemen and review the hunting privileges that were reserved for the aristocracy alone. Through Medieval Europe to the Renaissance the hunt was immortalized in paintings, tapestries, china, furniture, symphonies and song. With every page the reader comes to understand that man's love affair with hunting is not just about the kill, but about the pursuit of an ancient, innate treasure" -- publisher website (December 2007).
The decoy factories operating in Pascagoula, Mississippi, between 1920 and 1971 produced thousands of decoys that were sold in the United States and several foreign countries.
Excerpt from Louisiana Conservationist, Vol. 25: November December, 1973 Essentially, Louisiana has never been recognized for its 'cajun decoy carvers by other areas of the United States, Charles W. Frank, Jr said as we perched on a couple of stools in what best might be described as a combination workshop, decoy storage room, trophy room, and gun room. There were power tools that he uses for his contemporary decoys and shore birds, trophies from safaris to remote places in the world, and cabinets of rifles that hold special interest because they bagged those and other trophies. The long shelves of decoys contained hundreds that he had collected in various parts of Louisiana, as well as contemporary duck decoys and other birds that he had carved. The East Coast, the West Coast, the northern part of the Mississippi Flyway around Chicago and Detroit, were the first areas to recognize decoy carving as an art form, and persons from those areas have made tre mendons productions of the existing collections as well as dissemination of information about decoys and decoy carving, he said. He had a quick explanation for the early interest in decoys and decoy carving that is now apparent in the deep South and gaining more attention with each passing V981 Down here, he said, because of the language barrier and the reluctance or reticence of the bayou people to talk with outsiders, everytime someone from another part of the country came down to Louisiana they met a brick wall. You can't imagine a man from Boston or New York going down on Bayou Lafourche and being at ease with these people. They simply don't communicate. There's no understanding of one for the other, so the visitors walk away saying there are no wooden decoys and no carvers down here ever produced any decoys that were good. About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work. Forgotten Books uses state-of-the-art technology to digitally reconstruct the work, preserving the original format whilst repairing imperfections present in the aged copy. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in our edition. We do, however, repair the vast majority of imperfections successfully; any imperfections that remain are intentionally left to preserve the state of such historical works.
This book documents the outstanding antique waterfowl and bird decoys of one of the greatest of all flyways - the Mississippi. The majority of the examples used in this book have never been illustrated before. Included are decoys of a wide range of species of ducks, geese, swans and shorebirds as well as the more unusual egrets, gulls, crows, owls and one very rare flicker. Written by a prominent collector and student of Mississippi Flyway decoys, this book clearly documents the classic decoy of the flyway and presents a broad spectrum of examples of the individual makers in every important area. Chapters are included on Canada, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Mississippi and Louisiana. The helpful carvers index gives the location and important dates for the 150 individual carvers. This book is a complete statement of the rich decoy heritage of the Mississippi Flyway. It is an indispensible reference book for everyone interested in collecting waterfowl and bird decoys of this original form of American folk art.