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Definition 2025
skeuomorph
skeuomorph
English
Noun
skeuomorph (plural skeuomorphs)
- A design feature copied from a similar feature in another object, even when not functionally necessary. [From 1889.]
- 1987, Alexander von Gernet, Peter Timmins, Pipes and Parakeets: Constructing Meaning in an Early Iroquoian Context, Ian Hodder, Archaeology As Long-Term History, page 37,
- One of the most striking examples of a skeuomorph is the aforementioned impaled bird motif which has the stem of a pipe thrust through the body of a duck or other bird, so that the mouthpiece protrudes from the bill.
- 2000, "skeuomorph", entry in Barbara Ann Kipfer, Encyclopedic Dictionary of Archaeology, page 519,
- A decorative bow attached to a shoe is a skeuomorph of the laces once used to tie it; triangular shapes drawn below handles on pottery are skeuomorphs of the metal plates by which the handles on metal prototypes were attached; and the semicircular mark on the back of a teaspoon represents the bradening of the handle where it was soldered to the bowl when it used to be made in two pieces.
- 2005, Alice A. Donohue, Greek Sculpture and the Problem of Description, page 81,
- Such skeuomorphs can be used to reconstruct ephemeral artifacts that cannot be recovered archaeologically. Understood in this way, the skeuomorph functions to extend the archaeological record.
- 2007, Jennifer Viegas, "Stonehenge Amulets Worn by Elite", Discovery News, April 6:
- While working two months ago in South Lowestoft, Suffolk, British archaeologist Clare Good excavated a four-sided object made of the mineral jet. It closely matches a geometrically designed gold object found far away at a burial site called Bush Barrow near Stonehenge in Wiltshire. The match is so close that experts believe the black artifact is a skeuomorph, or a copy in a different material.
- 1987, Alexander von Gernet, Peter Timmins, Pipes and Parakeets: Constructing Meaning in an Early Iroquoian Context, Ian Hodder, Archaeology As Long-Term History, page 37,
Usage notes
Skeuomorphs serve various purposes. Since people are used to the click sound of a camera as feedback that it took the picture, many digital cameras reproduce it. Other examples are copper cladding on a zinc penny (for familiarity) and wood finish on a plastic product (for a more expensive look).
Derived terms
Synonyms
- skiamorph
See also
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skeuomorph on Wikipedia.Wikipedia