SUGGESTED READING LIST
Furniture Record, Bedding Articles, January 15, 1940.
Giles, Ray. Sleep. Bobbs-Merrill Co., Indianapolis, Ind. 1938.
Bulletin 26, Basic Selling Facts for Bedding, Mattresses, Bed Springs, and Pillows—Good Housekeeping, Department of Merchandise Education, Fifty-seventh Street at Eighth Avenue, New York, N. Y.
Bulletin entitled—"Consumer Investigation," issued for the National Association of Bedding Manufacturers by the Lawrence H. Selz Organization, Merchandise Mart, Chicago, Ill.
Bulletin 10, Feathers and Down—Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry, Harrisburg, Pa.
Jacobson, Edmund, M. D. You Can Sleep Well. McGraw-Hill Book Co., Inc., New York, N. Y.
---- You Must Relax.
McCollister, Frier. Selling Sleep, National Retail Dry Goods Association, The Bulletin, November 1939.
National Furniture Review, 666 Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Ill. March 1940. Bedding Section.
Palmer, Lois. Your House. Boston Cooking School Magazine Co. 1928. The Bedrooms, pp. 78-91.
Seal, Ethel Davis. Furnishing the Little House—Century Co., New York, N. Y. The Bedrooms, pp. 155-168.
Magazine Articles.
- American Home, November 1939, We're Campaigning for Better Sleep.
- Good Housekeeping, November 1939, Buy the Mattress That Suits You.
- House and Garden, October 1939, When You Select Bedding.
- House and Garden, April 1941, How to Buy Bedding.
- House Beautiful, April 15, 1940, Good Nights.
- McCall's, April 1939, How to Buy a Mattress.
- Parents', October 1939, Bed for the Baby.
- Parents', September 1940, A Sound Bedtime Story.
- Practical Home Economics, April 1941, An Outline of Sleeping Equipment.
- The Bride's Magazine, Spring Issue, 1940, To Sleep.
- The Bride's Magazine, Spring Issue, 1941, Choosing Your Bedding.
- Woman's Home Companion, April 1941, How About Your Guest Room?
Unit VII
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE ART OF INTERIOR DECORATION
- Interior Decoration as a Selling Method
- Emotional Values of Light, Color, Line, and Proportions
- Color Management in Decoration
- Principles of Furniture Arrangement
Photograph by Grignon.
Figure 29.—This fernery server, part of a new eighteenth century dining-room suite, gives the new interpretation to functional pieces in period design. The attractive server with compartment for glasses and a service shelf for plates, cups, and the like, is equipped with two metal plant containers. The rug is an all-over textured olive green Axminster.
Unit VII.—AN INTRODUCTION TO THE ART OF INTERIOR DECORATION