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BOOKS
We carried a unique curation of English and Chinese books on fine art, design, visual culture, as well as picture books of fine illustration, pop-up and paper-art for children and adults.
Hope you have enjoyed what we had to offer while it lasted. Keep up your curiosity and love of books and visual culture!

Around The World in 80 Trees
by Jonathan Drori
illustrations by Lucille Crere
Trees are one of humanity’s most constant and most varied companions. Expert Jonathan Drori uses plant science to illuminate how trees play a role in every part of human life, from the romantic to the regrettable.
illustrations by Lucille Crere
Trees are one of humanity’s most constant and most varied companions. Expert Jonathan Drori uses plant science to illuminate how trees play a role in every part of human life, from the romantic to the regrettable.

Discover the secret
behind the Dragon's Blood resin from Yemen used by the famous Stradivari...

Find out about the toxic tree
deep in the jungles of Indonesia. It's said that birds perching on its branches would keel over dead. Is this true?

Ever seen a tree with
glistening turquoise globules? Drori took us to New Caledonia to meet this intriguing Séve Bleue...

And many many more
strange and true tales – populated by self-mummifying monks, tree-climbing goats and ever-so-slightly radioactive nuts – is illustrated by Lucille Clerc, taking the reader on a journey that is as informative as it is beautiful.

Small Shops, Big Hearts
by Christina Yung
This gem of a book lets the stories speak for themselves. Discover Hong Kong cultural heritage in daily life through traditional trades that have been around for decades and some, for centuries, in this modern day and age. Immerse yourself in real life tales from one of the first Hong Kong’s photo studio stalls, bamboo steamers maker, handpainted china works, and more.
This gem of a book lets the stories speak for themselves. Discover Hong Kong cultural heritage in daily life through traditional trades that have been around for decades and some, for centuries, in this modern day and age. Immerse yourself in real life tales from one of the first Hong Kong’s photo studio stalls, bamboo steamers maker, handpainted china works, and more.

Established in the 1940's
this is the last remaining shop that produces handmade brass utility wares in Hong Kong. Read on in the book...

While back in the 1930's
the now so called 'old-style' Chinese Scales were not that old. The shop is still around in present days... take a peek...

Go further back to the 1900's
when this snake soup shop first opened its doors... According to Uncle Mak, 87, who runs it now, nothing much has changed since then! Discover more in the book "Small Shops, Big Hearts".

Design DNA of Mark I
Hong Kong's Public Housing Prototype
by Dr Rosman CC Wai
by Dr Rosman CC Wai

The birth of every piece of
public architecture including museums, cultural centres, public parks, public housing – all have their own stories in the city, its design and art aesthetics development.

It is not possible to adequately
understand post-war Hong Kong without recognising the profound impact that its public housing programme has had on the city’s development. Mark I, Hong Kong’s public housing prototype provided more than basic shelter for society’s less privileged, its design also deserves architectural merit.

The inception of the Mark I Block in
1954 indeed aroused questions: what was the housing situation like in Hong Kong before the 1950s? Was the Shek Kip Mei fire on Christmas Day 1953 the sole instigator of the colonial government’s interventions in Hong Kong’s public housing programme

This book is the result of
ten years of investigation into the history, professional accounts, and design development of Hong Kong’s public housing prototype, and is dedicated to all who have contributed to public housing in Hong Kong.
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