

Buy anything from 5,000+ international stores. One checkout price. No surprise fees. Join 2M+ shoppers on Desertcart.
Desertcart purchases this item on your behalf and handles shipping, customs, and support to QATAR.
Buy Playing with Pop-ups: The Art of Dimensional, Moving Paper Designs by Hiebert, Helen (ISBN: 9781592539086) from desertcart's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders. Review: I am very pleased with this delightful book - I am very pleased with this delightful book. I found it informative and very interesting and look forward to doing some of the projects. Review: Lovely Book - Great aid to my card making.Something a bit different! Good size.
| Best Sellers Rank | 825,618 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 394 in Book Making & Binding 499 in Paper Folding & Origami 6,672 in Other Art Media & Techniques |
| Customer reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (87) |
| Dimensions | 22.23 x 1.27 x 26.04 cm |
| ISBN-10 | 1592539084 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1592539086 |
| Item weight | 562 g |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 144 pages |
| Publication date | 1 May 2014 |
| Publisher | Quarry Books |
M**N
I am very pleased with this delightful book
I am very pleased with this delightful book. I found it informative and very interesting and look forward to doing some of the projects.
G**H
Lovely Book
Great aid to my card making.Something a bit different! Good size.
B**M
Some good pop-up
An inspirational and instructive book. Some good pop-up designs
S**S
A Pop-Up Masterclass
Pop-ups are the graduate school of papercrafting - the ultimate challenge and goal. In this ace new title, the secrets of pop-up construction are revealed by an expert team of contributors. Learn how to make intriguing interactive papercraft construction:a volvelle ("dissolving" picture), slice-form, a tunnel book, pull-tab card, and more conventional pop-ups, too. There's an awe-inspiring Gallery section at the back of the book, featuring the creations of world-class papercraft pros. Another winning papercraft title by Helen Hiebert.
J**S
Five Stars
Great for starters like me!
L**C
Five Stars
The book is as described and arrived on time
L**.
Five Stars
WONDERFUL BOOK!! FANTASTIC!
P**A
A very hands-on book
Playing with Pop-ups by author Helen Hiebert is an activity book on creating pop-ups. It's a beginners book that goes through the basic techniques of creating cuts and folds. The instructions are clear and simple to follow. The book starts off with the materials required and then proceeds on quickly to the 20 hands-on projects. The designs of the pop ups are included in the book with instructions to photocopy them into different sizes. You don't want to cut the pages off from this beautiful book. The pop-up designs are also available for download on the publisher Quarry Books website. The first five are elementary projects to start you off. The next 15 are more interesting and you can create pop-up subjects like city skyline, robot, dragon, carousel book, and more. Some are quite elaborate designs requiring many cuts, folds and gluing. The end result is often delightful and charming, such as the recreation of an interior room, or a volvelle (a rotating paper mechanism). The last chapter features a gallery of artworks from paper engineers and artists. 25 are featured and the works are wonderful and inspiring. Highly recommended to pop-up beginners. (See more pictures of the book on my blog. Just visit my Amazon profile for the link.)
L**S
es un libro ,maravilloso muy bien explicado y lo que mas me agrado es que enseña paso a paso y te dan muchas ideas.
I**A
Malo muy malo, solo tiene un par de cosas que merece algo la pena, carísimo y encima está en inglés y es imposible hacer nada.
J**M
A wonderful book! I love it.
P**N
Reviewed by Suzy Morgan for Bonefolder Extras @ http://bonefolderextras.blogspot.com/2014/08/playing-with-pop-ups-art-of-dimensional.html I love pop-up books. I collect pop-up books: my family still gives them to me as birthday and holiday presents, even though I am a grown adult. I work in a library with a substantial collection of pop-up books, and I am quick to tell anyone who will listen that I have gotten to hold and play with an original Meggendorfer pop-up book. Therefore, I wasn’t surprised when I was asked to review Helen Hiebert’s new book, Playing With Pop-Ups. A passing observer would probably remark that I was “elated” at the prospect of doing such a review. Teaching the art of the pop-up is difficult, just like any how-to book about bookbinding, because it challenges the author to describe 3-D concepts in a 2-D format. Many pop-up structures function with a front-end and a back-end structure, just like a website: the viewer almost always only sees the front-end result, and the back-end support is not very apparent except to the experienced reader. I’ve looked at many a damaged pop-up book and wondered, “How on EARTH did they make this?” while trying to fit two parts of a broken whole back together unsuccessfully. Helen Hiebert’s approach to this essential problem with teaching these complicated structures is a combination of providing templates to practice on, and a wealth of concisely illustrated instructions. The book begins with a very brief history of pop-ups, a commentary on the state of pop-up arts today, an interesting glimpse into the production of a commercially published pop-up book, and overview of the basic pop-up terminology, tools, and tricks of the trade. I particularly enjoyed the description of the production line process of a commercially published pop-up, myself. Each different kind of fold and cut used in the following project instructions was clearly illustrated with a nice photograph and a well-written description. Hiebert also provides a list of recommended tools, as well as alternatives for some tools – like using a paperclip or the back of a knife instead of a bone folder to fold or score paper. This is a nice touch that makes the craft more accessible and promotes the kind of “creative reuse” so endemic to bookbinding. However, in my opinion, the real genius of Hiebert’s book is the templates she provides for each project. These are pages in the book that are meant to be photocopied onto the paper of your choice, and then you just follow the dotted, dashed, and solid lines with bonefolder, knife, and glue, to create the pop-up. The first three projects are termed “Pop-up Warm-ups,” and are meant to familiarize the budding paper-engineer with the basic tenants of pop-up structure. The projects that follow increase in difficulty, but provide a nicely diverse range of different types of structures and themes. These include a pop-up city skyline, a Valentine’s card, paper earrings, a tunnel book, and a volvelle with six slots. Our conservation lab intern and I spent a happy afternoon completing one of the projects using the templates. It’s really a no-brainer way of teaching the structure, as it removes the risk of beginner mistakes such as mis-measuring; each part of the template is clearly labeled with different lines for cuts, mountain folds, or valley folds. The other wonderful thing about the templates is that many of them are blank or simple enough that you could easily customize them or slightly modify them to create an original work. In my opinion, the templates get the point across very effectively and leave very little confusion about how they should work. The final section of the book is devoted to a beautifully photographed gallery of current-day pop-up book artists and their work. Seeing these artist’s amazing work serves as inspiration to think creatively about your own future projects, as well as a visual bibliography of pop-up books to seek out in your local library or bookstore. As a collector of pop-up books, it was reaffirming to see books from my own library represented and to feel that kindred spark of passion for the art. In other words, “We like the same pop-up books!” Hiebert’s book is a solid addition to the library of any beginner or intermediate paper engineer, and is a welcome complement to other pop-up book manuals, such as Carol Barton’s The Pocket Paper Engineer series or David Carter and James Diaz’s The Elements of Pop-Up. _______________________________ Suzy Morgan is a 2009 graduate of the School of Information at the University of Texas at Austin, where she received a certificate in advanced studies in conservation from the Kilgarlin Center for the Preservation of the Historic Record. She has had internships at Northwestern University, Syracuse University, the Cincinnati Art Museum and the Ringling Museum of Art. After working as the web developer at the Newberry Library and working in private practice as a book conservator and preservation consultant, she is now Preservation Specialist for the Arizona State Library.She is also the creator of The Multi-lingual Bookbinding/Conservation Dictionary Project: The goal of this project is to combine, in one place, all the known bookbinding and book conservation terminology, in as many languages as possible.
G**I
excelente contenido, la calidad es bastante buena, la impresion es muy linda y aunque el delivery estuvo BASTANTE atrasado valió cada peso
Trustpilot
1 month ago
3 days ago