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Craftland

In Search of Lost Arts and Disappearing Trades

Author James Fox
Hardcover (Paper-over-Board, no jacket)
$30.00 US
6-1/8"W x 9-1/8"H | 23 oz | 12 per carton
On sale Oct 28, 2025 | 368 Pages | 9780593735077

An enchanting and illuminating exploration of the history of craftsmanship and the world’s oldest craft traditions, documenting the rapid disappearances of time-honored practices and shedding light on artisanal work in the face of massive technological industrialization by renowned Cambridge art historian Dr. James Fox.

During an age of mass manufacturing, fast fashion, synthetic materials and the unsustainable practice of companies valuing quantity over quality, a return to tradition, connection, and simplicity is essential.

Art historian and award-winning broadcaster Dr. James Fox explores the rapidly fading crafts and artisanal traditions of the world—such as coopering, basket-weaving, wheelwrighting, metalwork, and blacksmithing—that have shaped so much of our history through their alchemy of the hand-made human touch and generational wisdom.

Fox explains the history of craftsmanship in Britain, taking readers across the lands and communities that originated there, teaching them about the practices, traditions, and people at their heart. From coopers to thatchers, basket makers to bellfounders and dry wall builders, Fox tours Britain, once the workshop of the world, in search of its lost and disappearing craft traditions and the artisans trying to keep them alive including, a rush weaver who has managed to rebuild a sustainable business with her baskets and other wares, a bell foundry that uses the same practices it used in the nineteenth century, and dry wallers, building walls one piece of stone at a time that could last two centuries.

Part travelogue and part historical record, Craftland is a profoundly intimate meditation on our human cultural heritage, exploring what we lose as these traditions fade from view in the race of progress, and what we stand to gain if we bring them back.
“It is so rare to come across a book brimming with fresh news and seasoned with hope. James Fox uncovers a largely hidden history which is still alive all around us today. I read it in two gulps with delight.”—Andrew Marr, British Broadcast journalist and author of The Making of Modern Britain

“A dazzling combination of evocative prose and meticulous research, Craftland is an impassioned undertaking and novel portrait of the country’s past and how we might rethink our future.”—Kate Bryan, author of How to Art

“Absolutely wonderful. I absolutely love it! He’s describing a mostly lost world, but it seems more relevant almost by the hour: globalisation and modernisation are never far from my thoughts and in these incredibly specific and fascinating stories I feel like I'm discovering the origins of the modern world around me.”—Xand Van Tulleken, co-host of A Thorough Examination and contributor to BBC Morning Live

“This hugely absorbing book is so full of stories of crafts and craftspeople and communities, and of creativity over the ages. It’s such an important story to tell and told so compellingly. Wonderful.”—Michael Morpurgo, author of War Horse
© Kirty Topiwala
Dr. James Fox is a Cambridge art historian, writer, public speaker, curator, and multi-award-winning, BAFTA-nominated broadcaster. He has previously held positions at Harvard and Yale. He is currently director of studies in History of Art at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, creative director of the Hugo Burge Foundation, director of education at the Jeffrey Rubinoff Sculpture Park in Canada, and president of the Friends of the Stanley Spencer Gallery. He is the author of The World According to Color, named “Book of the Year” by the Sunday Times, Daily Telegraph, New Statesman, Spectator, and Art Newspaper. He lives in London. View titles by James Fox

About

An enchanting and illuminating exploration of the history of craftsmanship and the world’s oldest craft traditions, documenting the rapid disappearances of time-honored practices and shedding light on artisanal work in the face of massive technological industrialization by renowned Cambridge art historian Dr. James Fox.

During an age of mass manufacturing, fast fashion, synthetic materials and the unsustainable practice of companies valuing quantity over quality, a return to tradition, connection, and simplicity is essential.

Art historian and award-winning broadcaster Dr. James Fox explores the rapidly fading crafts and artisanal traditions of the world—such as coopering, basket-weaving, wheelwrighting, metalwork, and blacksmithing—that have shaped so much of our history through their alchemy of the hand-made human touch and generational wisdom.

Fox explains the history of craftsmanship in Britain, taking readers across the lands and communities that originated there, teaching them about the practices, traditions, and people at their heart. From coopers to thatchers, basket makers to bellfounders and dry wall builders, Fox tours Britain, once the workshop of the world, in search of its lost and disappearing craft traditions and the artisans trying to keep them alive including, a rush weaver who has managed to rebuild a sustainable business with her baskets and other wares, a bell foundry that uses the same practices it used in the nineteenth century, and dry wallers, building walls one piece of stone at a time that could last two centuries.

Part travelogue and part historical record, Craftland is a profoundly intimate meditation on our human cultural heritage, exploring what we lose as these traditions fade from view in the race of progress, and what we stand to gain if we bring them back.

Praise

“It is so rare to come across a book brimming with fresh news and seasoned with hope. James Fox uncovers a largely hidden history which is still alive all around us today. I read it in two gulps with delight.”—Andrew Marr, British Broadcast journalist and author of The Making of Modern Britain

“A dazzling combination of evocative prose and meticulous research, Craftland is an impassioned undertaking and novel portrait of the country’s past and how we might rethink our future.”—Kate Bryan, author of How to Art

“Absolutely wonderful. I absolutely love it! He’s describing a mostly lost world, but it seems more relevant almost by the hour: globalisation and modernisation are never far from my thoughts and in these incredibly specific and fascinating stories I feel like I'm discovering the origins of the modern world around me.”—Xand Van Tulleken, co-host of A Thorough Examination and contributor to BBC Morning Live

“This hugely absorbing book is so full of stories of crafts and craftspeople and communities, and of creativity over the ages. It’s such an important story to tell and told so compellingly. Wonderful.”—Michael Morpurgo, author of War Horse

Author

© Kirty Topiwala
Dr. James Fox is a Cambridge art historian, writer, public speaker, curator, and multi-award-winning, BAFTA-nominated broadcaster. He has previously held positions at Harvard and Yale. He is currently director of studies in History of Art at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, creative director of the Hugo Burge Foundation, director of education at the Jeffrey Rubinoff Sculpture Park in Canada, and president of the Friends of the Stanley Spencer Gallery. He is the author of The World According to Color, named “Book of the Year” by the Sunday Times, Daily Telegraph, New Statesman, Spectator, and Art Newspaper. He lives in London. View titles by James Fox