1 favorite
1 review
1 rating
  • 4.0 of 5 stars
2
people

Small Things Considered: Why There Is No Perfect Design

Vintage (Sep 14, 2004)
Paperback – 304 pages
ISBN-10: 1400032938
ISBN-13: 9781400032938

Book Description

Why has the durable paper shopping bag been largely replaced by its flimsy plastic counterpart? What circuitous chain of improvements led to such innovations as the automobile cup holder and the swiveling vegetable peeler? With the same relentless curiosity and lucid, witty prose he brought to his earlier books, Henry Petroski looks at some of our most familiar objects and reveals that they are, in fact, works in progress. For there can never be an end to the quest for the perfect design.

To illustrate his thesis, Petroski tells the story of the paper drinking cup, which owes its popularity to the discovery that water glasses could carry germs. He pays tribute to the little plastic tripod that keeps pizza from sticking to the box and analyzes the numerical layouts of telephones and handheld calculators. Small Things Considered is Petroski at his most trenchant and provocative, casting his eye not only on everyday artifacts but on their users as well.

Latest Discussions

Book Reviews

Displaying the only review.
chillycraps
chillycraps wrote and rated
  • 4.0 of 5 stars
4 months ago

It's an interesting book that talks about design in everyday life's objects. Things like how paper bag evolved into plastic bag, how the paper cup was made, how WD-40 got its name, why our doorknobs are at this height, why stairs are in odd number, why our handphone's keypad is in such a way... It's a story of how designers build things within constraints. You don't design a toothbrush so sophisticated yet it can't fit into our mouth.

There's this meaningful quote in the last chapter: "Engineers use science to solve their problems if the science is available. But available or not, the problem must be solved, and whatever form the solution takes under those conditions is called engineering."

Wall Posts

There are wall posts. Please sign in to post your comment.
Amazon Kindle