
The Look Book: Home
Claire Rollet(Author)
Templar Publishing
Published on 1. October 2015
Book
Hardback
48 pages
978-1-78370-269-5 (ISBN)
Description
Babies, toddlers and pre-schoolers love to look at the world around them. Each page of this book is packed with quirky, delightful illustrations of familiar objects, which toddlers can point to and name and pre-schoolers can use as an enchanting first step to reading. An enjoyable way of turning looking into learning with Claire Rollet's eye-catching ink drawings.
Reviews / Votes
Young children love to explore the world around them - and to recognise familiar things in books, so they can take pride in pointing them out and naming them. Each page of this book is packed with quirky, delightful illustrations of familiar objects toddlers can point to and name and pre-schoolers use as an enchanting first step to reading; there are labelled familiar objects on alternate pages. What can they see in the kitchen? Under the stairs? In the bathroom? There is plenty to explore and the eye-catching coloured ink drawings are delightfully full of detail to spot and talk about. -- Sarah Brew * Parents in Touch *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Templar Books
Target group
Children/juvenile
Dimensions
Height: 273 mm
Width: 11 mm
Thickness: 227 mm
Weight
476 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78370-269-5 (9781783702695)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Claire Rollet (Author, Illustrator)
Claire Rollet is a London-based illustrator. She studied at Chelsea School of Arts and later graduated from Kingston University. Claire's working process begins by drawing the pictures using nib and Indian Ink. The black & white line drawing is scanned in the computer then brought to life on Photoshop by adding a delicate and carefully chosen palette of colours.
Claire Rollet is a London-based illustrator. She studied at Chelsea School of Arts and later graduated from Kingston University. Claire's working process begins by drawing the pictures using nib and Indian Ink. The black & white line drawing is scanned in the computer then brought to life on Photoshop by adding a delicate and carefully chosen palette of colours.