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New Fashion Label Current/Elliott: What Denim Dreams Of Being



Current/Elliott is a new fashion label by stylists-turned-designers Emily Current and Meritt Elliott, who met in college and became stylists under the name of MAUDE. They began by buying vintage jeans and customizing them for their celebrity clients.



Now, they've recreated their special one-of-a-kind pieces with japanese stretch denim, so that everyone could enjoy their sense of style, comfort and individuality.



Their 2008 Fall denim collection includes everything from a backlash against skinny jeans with their fabulous "boyfriend jeans" to denim smock dresses, shorts, chic denim jackets and hoodies. They manage to combine femininity with comfort, sexiness with style and vintage with contemporary couture.

Getting lots of press (even in the NY Times just yesterday) is the 'boyfriend jean', a wonderful slouchy but still sexy pair of jeans:




Here's a peek at some of my other favorites from their line:

The Shrunken JJ:

The Duckhunter:

The Fontaine Short:

The Tulip Dress:

The Moto Jacket:

The Kangaroo Dress:

The Seam Skirt:

The Navy:

The Mini Pocket:

The Circle vest:


Like all hot new fashion brands, these are not cheap. Expect to shell out about $225 bucks for the 'Boyfriend' jeans and the following items list for the prices in parentheses: The Circle Vest ($172), The Laurel Canyon ($194), The Fontaine Short ($159), The Elephant Bell 1971 ($226), The Artist Smock ($206)

Where can you find these?
Below are links to some of the stores that carry their line.
Ron Herman, Singer 22, shopbob, eluxury, lola boutique
You can also find them at Fred Segal, Barney's and Neiman Marcus.

Look What I Found! Cloned Eyeball Lamps, The Patriot Pin, All in One Plates, Cornerframes & The Pick Chair



Cloned Eyeball Lamps:
 Lamps based on your eye color. You fill out the form, attach photos of your eyes, and voila! Eyeball lamps based on your own peepers.








The hand blown glass eyeball lamps made by Glassblower Livio Serena in Murano are based on exact clones of your actual eye color. Order them through 5.5 Designers.

All In One Plates:


The above plates look as though they are three stacked plates but it's actually one plate.

All in One Porcelain plates are trompe-l'oeil of 3 layered plates.
Two plates per pack. Made by Domestic
Material : Porcelain
Dimension : d:26,5cm
Color : white
Buy them here.


The Patriot Pin :


Above: This target is a reconditioned WIBC / ABC Approved AMF Amflite II bowling pin with Osama Bin Laden in the crosshairs. This pin is controlled weight and plastic coated. The wooden core and fresh plastic coating give this target a durable and long life for target practice. Approximately 15" tall and 4 3/4" in diameter.

Made by American Targets is made for actual target practice. But it certainly makes a cool piece of art. Buy it here.

Corner Frames:



These corner frames designed by Yvonne Schroedo for Thorsten van Elten is something I've been waiting for someone to produce. Wrapping around corners, either inwards or outwards, they come in black stained beech or natural maple wood.



Buy them here.


The Pick Chair:


The Pick chair is a lightweight, minimal folding chair that goes from hanging on the wall to completely unfolded and ready for seating. Epitomizing designer Dror Benshetrit’s vision: the emotion of art intertwined with the simple poetics of form following function. The first foldable cantilever chair, the pick chair goes from wall art to functional furniture with a flick of the wrist.

Saw and Tree Pick Chairs:

Materials: chromed aluminum structure; seat and back in open pores painted wood, laser graphic woodcut. Designed by Dror Benshetrit, manufactured by BBB emmebonacina.
Dimensions: wall mounted W38 H171,75 cm, open W38 D47 H48 cm
You can buy the wood ones (saw and tree) from the artist's studio here.
Or from the manufacturer here.

Happy shopping.

If you like the finds on my blog, you'll love my picks over here.

How The Colorblind See The World

I came across this wonderfully imaginative and informative post about colorblindness, so I simply had to reproduce it (without stealing bandwidth, of course) for my readers who may have not seen it.

My own grandfather was colorblind and his wife, my grandmother was an artist. I always wondered how he saw her paintings. Now I know.



In the U.S. 7% of the male population – or about 10.5 million men – and 0.4% of the female population either cannot distinguish red from green, or see red and green differently. Color blindness affects a significant amount of the population, and it is even more prevalent in more isolated populations with a smaller gene pools. It is mostly a genetic condition, though it can be caused by eye, nerve, or brain damage, or due to exposure to certain chemicals.

For those of us who see colors just fine, it is hard to imagine what those with color blindness are seeing. Luckily humans are smart and have created technology like the Color Blind Web Page Filter.

Popular Websites: As Seen by the Color Blind
The Color Blind Web Page Filter, which was used in this post to demonstrate the different types of colorblindness, allows you to view what a site looks like to people with each type of color blindness. Here are a few examples from some popular websites.








Iconic Art: As Seen by the Color Blind
Some would say we all see art in our own unique way… that would be especially true for the color blind. Here are a couple examples of some of the most iconic paintings as seen by the color blind.





Color Blindness Background
Using the filter we’ll take a look at the current most popular palette, July, and how it is seen by those with different types of color blindness.

The normal human retina contains two kinds of light cells: the rod cells (active in low light) and the cone cells (active in normal daylight). Normally, there are three kinds of cones, each containing a different pigment. The cones are activated when the pigments absorb light. The absorption spectra of the cones differ; one is maximally sensitive to short wavelengths, one to medium wavelengths, and the third to long wavelengths (their peak sensitivities are in the blue, yellowish-green, and yellow regions of the spectrum, respectively). The absorption spectra of all three systems cover much of the visible spectrum, so it is not entirely accurate to refer to them as “blue”, “green” and “red” receptors, especially because the “red” receptor actually has its peak sensitivity in the yellow. The sensitivity of normal color vision actually depends on the overlap between the absorption spectra of the three systems: different colors are recognized when the different types of cone are stimulated to different extents. Red light, for example, stimulates the long wavelength cones much more than either of the others, and reducing wavelength causes the other two cone systems to be increasingly stimulated, causing a gradual change in hue. Many of the genes involved in color vision are on the X chromosome, making color blindness more common in males than in females.

Types of Color Blindness
There are three types of inherited or congenital color vision deficiencies: monochromacy, dichromacy, and anomalous trichromacy.

Monochromacy

Monochromacy, also known as “total color blindness”, is the lack of ability to distinguish colors; caused by cone defect or absence. Monochromacy occurs when two or all three of the cone pigments are missing and color and lightness vision is reduced to one dimension.

Dichromacy
Dichromacy is a moderately severe color vision defect in which one of the three basic color mechanisms is absent or not functioning. It is hereditary and sex-linked, affecting predominantly males. Dichromacy occurs when one of the cone pigments is missing and color is reduced to two dimensions.

Protanopia is a severe type of color vision deficiency caused by the complete absence of red retinal photoreceptors. It is a form of dichromatism in which red appears dark. It is hereditary, sex-linked, and present in 1% of all males.

Deuteranopia is a color vision deficiency in which the green retinal photoreceptors are absent, moderately affecting red-green hue discrimination. It is a form of dichromatism in which there are only two cone pigments present. It is likewise hereditary, sex-linked, and present in 1% of all males.

Tritanopia is an exceedingly rare color vision disturbance in which there are only two cone pigments present and a total absence of blue retinal receptors.

Trichromacy
Anomalous trichromacy is a common type of inherited color vision deficiency, occurring when one of the three cone pigments is altered in its spectral sensitivity. This results in an impairment, rather than loss, of trichromacy (normal three-dimensional color vision)

Protanomaly is a mild color vision defect in which an altered spectral sensitivity of red retinal receptors (closer to green receptor response) results in poor red-green hue discrimination. It is hereditary, sex-linked, and present in 1% of all males. It is often passed from mother to child.

Deuteranomaly, caused by a similar shift in the green retinal receptors, is by far the most common type of color vision deficiency, mildly affecting red-green hue discrimination in 5% of all males. It is hereditary and sex-linked.

Tritanomaly is a rare, hereditary color vision deficiency affecting blue-yellow hue discrimination. interview with the Creator of Colblinder

source:

Colourlovers.com

additional sources: Wikipedia: Color Blindness
Color Blind Image Filter

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