Handy at Home


Book Description

Presents household advice, tips, cautions, and reminders, from unclogging toilets to choosing the right tool for the task, and features sections on home security, seniorproofing, and childproofing.










Do it Yourself


Book Description

Do It Yourself investigates the history behind the current do-it-yourself craze in homebuilding and home repair. The origins of home improvement can be traced to the early part of the century when government loan programs placed home ownership within the reach of growing numbers of families, mass-circulation magazines began providing their readers with information about home remodeling and repair, and increasing numbers of Americans turned to the manual arts and handicrafts as leisure-time pursuits. World War II provided many Americans with the skills and confidence to undertake home-improvement projects on their own, and after the war, changes in the manufacturing and retail of tools and equipment created new possibilities for transforming one's home. As home remodeling became a central feature of domestic life and consumer culture, the "do-it-yourself" movement was born, coming of age in the baby-boomer 1950s and 1960s, when Americans created suburban paradises and reclaimed decaying urban centers. The text of Do It Yourself, which investigates topics ranging from women's roles in home repair to historic preservation, is a lively mix of illustrations -- including period photographs, magazine spreads, and advertisements -- and clearly written analysis of the trends behind these images.




Monographic Series


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Tasha Tudor


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National Union Catalog


Book Description




Woman's Almanac


Book Description

This volume brings together practical and essential information in the basic areas of women's lives. It covers topics such as how to embark on brand new careers, rear better families, have more free time, enjoy more exciting sex lives, become financially independent and politically powerful, how to ask for a raise, start a daycare center, or establish a credit identity. This information was culled from sources such as how-to literature for women, from nineteenth-century periodicals to modern how-to manuals, books, articles from out-of-print magazines, from little-known pamphlets, and a few classics from women's writings about women. In addition, this book provides a "Woman's Directory, " a yellow-pages like section at the back of the book, listing a wealth of organizations and facilities for women.