[TheForge] dyslexia OT -- was books
David E. Smucker
davesmucker at hotmail.com
Sat May 30 21:01:50 EDT 2009
Interesting James,
dyslexia -- can be a blessing rather than a limitation. Some of us who are
dyslexic turn out to be very good at design, often able to see things in 3 -
D and see patterns in things with ease. We just can't spell worth a damn.
It is also the case that learning to read comes hard but we are great at
math. When we do learn to read we are very good at it and very fast with
high comprehension. (Because we learn to do it by pattern reconnection, not
sounding out of words.)
Some, never like to read, and are much better seeing things as in a video --
that is the visual and pattern part of it.
Not to worry, as my British friends say, matters now how we learn, but that
we learn.
Dave
--------------------------------------------------
From: "Cindy and James" <jallcorn at suddenlink.net>
Sent: Saturday, May 30, 2009 8:11 PM
To: <theforge at mailman.qth.net>
Subject: [TheForge] books
> for me, the biggest problem is DESIGN. I/we don't to small things, and
> only do projects we want to do (we turn down a number of things every
> year). I can learn faster/better by watching a video or DVD or a demo
> that is live than I can by reading a book. I think I am somewhat
> dyslexic or something like that. I won't say what my wife says... :-)
>
> The Machinery's handbook is great for reference, I have an old copy but
> rarely use it because I just don't use a lot of that stuff. However,
> when it is needed, it is worth it's weight in gold, so to speak.
>
> As far as design goes, I rely on my wife who is quite accomplished as an
> artist and designer. SHE uses the Dover books, absolutely devours them
> looking for inspiration for certain clients. Spanish, Italian, French,
> English, Art Deco, Prairie, Art Nouveau, Craftsman, you name it, she has
> a copy of it. But they are mostly illustrations of things past, the old
> master's work. Plus she subscribes to dozens of high end design
> magazines and is always tearing pages out to keep. She won't let me
> throw any of them away.
>
> If I were going to outfit a library for this craft, I would do it with a
> few selected books on the craft, the absolute master's books, and in my
> opinion there are only a few of the Old Masters; a collection of Dover
> books, the aforementioned Machinery's HB; and a collection of good DVD's
> of renowned smiths demoing and talking about the work they do... Hofi,
> Tom Clark, etc. Trouble with the DVD's is the poor quality of the
> recording (audio) and/or the video on lots of these DVD's. I bought
> several from the BAM group and am just now getting around to watching
> them. Most are pretty good on the video but so far the audio part is
> horrible on some. Just can't hear what is being said, but they were
> fairly inexpensive. Just bought 1/2 dozen of the NOMMA DVD's, mostly
> well worth the money and NOT cheap.
>
> James
>
>
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