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83 color, 8 b/w photos; 325 line drawings
978-0-89672-650-5
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With Colonial Williamsburg Foundation
M. de Garsault's 1767 Art of the Shoemaker
An Annotated Translation
Illustrated with additional eighteenth-cnetury images and artifacts
D. A. Saguto, with foreword by Ernest W.
Peterkin
Tens of thousands of shoemakers worked in
eighteenth-century Paris and London, but if any wrote about their trade
before M. de Garsault in his 1767 Art du cordonnier, nothing
survives. Surprisingly little scholarship has been published since, until
this richly contextualized translation. Informing this edition are D. A.
Saguto's extensive notes and incisive examinations of eighteenth-century
German and Italian sources as well as later French editions of Garsault's
work. The result is an elegant illumination of artisanship and practices
that otherwise might have been lost.
Art of the Shoemaker
returns us to a world where shoes, like most other goods, were made by hand
with time-honored techniquesÑfrom preparing threads and shoemakers' wax to
the stitch-by-stitch use of the awl and the proper making of an inseam.
Complementing Garsault's original copperplate images are contemporaneous
illustrations and hitherto unpublished photographs of eighteenth-century
tools and artifacts. Also included are a facsimile of the original French
text, translations of other eighteenth-century writings on shoemaking, a
glossary of eighteenth-century terms, and suggested further reading.
As master boot- and shoemaker Ernest W. Peterkin
comments in his foreword, Art of the Shoemaker offers solid
foundation and new appreciation for students of costume, artists,
collectors, archaeologists, and future artisans.
D. A. Saguto, a fifth-generation artisan whose eighteenth-century
ancestors were shoemakers in Maryland and North Carolina, has been master
boot- and shoemaker for the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation since 1990. The
nation's leading researcher on eighteenth-century footwear, he has been a
guest curator for many museums, including the Smithsonian Institution and
National Park Service; a guest lecturer on shoemaking history at the
University of Delaware and Virginia Commonwealth University; and a
consultant on archaeological digs, shipwreck recoveries, shoe-related
litigation, and Hollywood movies.
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