google ad sense 728 x 90

Funky Find Of The Week: Swarovski Studded Band-aids





Seems as though there's an endless way to incorporate swarovski crystals into consumer products. And here's the latest: Swarovski Blinged Out Band Aids!

Blinged out band aids with 4 Swarovski crystals available in three crisp colors (White, Red and Pink) and one sweet little tin. Designed by Fabian Seibert of Suelkotlett.

$12.00 a pack.


Nothing heals a boo boo like some bling!

Buy them here.


Aldo Rossi's Rugs On Exhibit in London




Some know Aldo Rossi (1931-1997) for his Pritzker Prize-winning architecture, like the San Cataldo Cemetery in Modena and the Centro Torri Commercial Centre in Parma; some for his masterful hand drawings; and others simply as one of last century's greatest Italian architects, who founded the neo-rationalist movement. Few though, would associate Rossi with carpet design; yet the Milanese architect and theorist has much more than architecture projects to show in his impressive portfolio.

Specialist antique dealers Arto and Eddy Keshishian, in association with James Bly, launch today an exhibition of Rossi's carpet designs. The 15 pieces on show were created in 1986, when Rossi was invited to design a series of traditionally woven carpets by the Zeddiani Company, inspired by Sardinian techniques and culture. The architect embraced the local, basic and schematic carpet craftsmanship tradition, which fitted perfectly with his own geometric design explorations, aiming to boost the island's textile industry.



The beautiful pieces are on show in a selling exhibition in London's Kashishian Gallery till the 24th November, along with one each by the designers Piero Lissoni, Ettore Sottsass and Jasper Morrison, and five by Patricia Urquiola, all measuring 2m by 3m.





INFORMATION


Event dates- 14 November 2007 to 24 November 2007
Telephone- 44.20 7730 8810
Address - 73 Pimlico Road, London, SW1W 8NE
source-wallpaper magazine, nov. 14

The 2008 Artist Series Beach Towels Are Here!




Earlier in 2007, Target and the Art Production Fund came out with a series of four artist-designed towels. The 2007 series (seen below) was a big hit and Target sold out of all four almost immediately. As a big Alex Katz fan, I immediately bought two of his. The towels are nice and large 60" x 70" and well worth the $50.00 for which they retail.


Above: The now sold-out Artists Series of Beach Towels from 2007

Now, Target and Art Production Fund have announced the lineup of guest artists for their second-annual collaboration of fine-art towels known as the Artist Towel Series 2008.

cindy sherman beach towel
Above: One of this years' wonderful artist series beach towels

Jeff Koons, Cindy Sherman, Elizabeth Peyton, and Kehinde Wiley have each created a limited-edition beach towel as part of the WOW (Works on Whatever) items designed by contemporary artists to bring art off the walls and into everyday life.


Above: Jeff Koons' Balloon Monkey beach towel


Above: Cindy Sherman's Woman In Pool beach towel

They include "Balloon Monkey," "Woman in Pool," "Sidney," and "African-American Man." The 60 x 70-inch cotton towels, which will be available starting November 19 for $50 on Target.com and worksonwhatever.com, will also be the official pool towels for André Balazs' Raleigh Hotel during Art Basel Miami Beach December 5 to 9.




































 
above: Elizabeth Peyton's Sidney beach towel


above: Kehinde Wiley's African American Man beach towel

Proceeds from sales will support Art Production Fund's mission to support major civic artwork projects, while half of all proceeds generated from sales of Koons' towel will also support the Koons Family Institute, a resource of the International Centre for Missing and Exploited Children.

Buy 'em quick, they don't stay in stock for long.









Good Fun for Good Dogs. And A Good Cause


Above: Dru Barkymore and Pugnelope Cruz

Is your loving companion a good dog?
Why not reward him or her with a mouthful of Rosie O' Doggell or Brad Pittbull?
You'll not only make your dog happy, but other dogs as well. What am I talking about? Read on.

Doggin' Celebrities with Haute Diggity Dog

The other day I was surfing the net for some toys to put in my jewish dog's Chanukah stocking. (Okay, if that sentence doesn't make me sound like a crazy woman, I don't know what does.)

Nevertheless it was during this odd exercise that I came across some newly released limited edition plush dog toys on Muttropolis.com that actually made me laugh aloud. Enough to startle my dog for whom I was shopping (Indie, my 1 year old jack russell terrier) who was sleeping at my feet as I surfed the net (see below).



Puparazzi Pups are the brainchild of Pamela Reeder and Victoria Dauernheim, the ladies behind Haute Diggity Dog. And, to make it even easier to purchase these, Haute Diggity Dog announced that they will be donating a portion of profits from these Limited Edition Toys to nonprofit organizations dedicated to helping dogs rescued from HIGH KILL SHELTERS across the country under their new program HELP A DOG PLAY ANOTHER DAY!


Above: Bruce Woofless, Clint Barkwood, Angelina Grrrowlie and Doggy Depp

Upon seeing these hilarious canine versions of hip hollywood, I promptly wrote to Pamela and Victoria wanting to know more about them and where the profits would be going.


Above: Pomeranian Anderson, Biteme Spears, Bone Rivers and Brad Pittbull

How many did they make?
Where can I buy them?
Did they need to have the celebrity's permission?
Who designed them?


Above: Bark Nicholsen, Pup Doggy, Rosie O'Doggell and Sarah Jessica Barker

In a matter of minutes I received a friendly and informative reply from Pamela Reeder who was happy to tell me about this fun and benevolent project.

Coincedentally, my question about the 'permission' to create these was a timely one. Just last week Haute Diggity Dog won their second lawsuit brought against them by Louis Vuitton- LVMH (who clearly lack a sense of humor). Their toys were judged as parodies of famous objects. You can read details about the suit here.

Pamela, who designed these herself, went on to explain about the project:
"...We will be listing monthly how much money we raised that month and WHO it went to with a link for the group.Our November sales will be going to The Baja Animal Sanctuary and we will be presenting them with a check on December 6th as well as 165 rubber dog toys for the dogs for Christmas. The sanctuary is in the desert and is semi-outside with dirt floors so sending our toys would be inappropriate, so I bought rubber sturdy ones. Most of these dogs have never even had a toy in their lives. Which is the whole basis of this fund raiser...our toy sales helping other needy dogs live to play another day.

We are donating fifty cents for every toy sold at wholesale....so far this month we have sold approx 7,450 pc..so that's $3,225 already with 2 more weeks to go! Once the toys sell out that will be it for this collection and my guess is that we will be sold out by January at this rate since it is Christmas but we plan to do another collection the same way (something different) late Spring again (-: We are hoping to raise $30,000 or more from this one collection!"


You can tell from her enthusiasm and language in the above excerpt from her e-mail to me how much she and her partner really care about the welfare of dogs.


Below is some background on the fun and fashionable duo behind the luxe parody dog toys.



HAUTE DIGGITY DOG is the brain puppy of Pamela Reeder and together with partner Victoria Dauernheim, Haute Diggity Dog has quickly grown from a fun idea to a successful line of popular parody dog toys, unique collars, carry bags, and must have dog accessories. Additionally, the company's products have been featured on the Today Show, Good Morning America,and CBS Early Show,Haute Diggity Dog has an extensive celebrity following and has been a featured item in gift bags to nominees and presenters at the Oscars and Emmy Awards.

PAMELA REEDER is no stranger to growing a business. She learned the ropes while owning a successful bath and body retail store. She also owned and operated a freelance floral design business, some of her clients included Spago, New Line Cinema, Disney, Glamour Magazine, Martha Stewart and president Bill Clinton. Pamela's skills were also utilized as a product manager/buyer for a major Las Vegas casino resort company. It was her great love of dogs though, that led her down the path to Haute Diggity Dog.

Pamela lives with her two beloved dogs Biscuit and Rusty. All three are redheads :)

VICTORIA DAUERNHEIM was one of the pioneers at FedEx and assisted the start-up company through its development years into becoming a billion dollar giant we know today. Working for FedEx and coming from a military family enabled this "Southern Belle" to travel the world. Victoria is a little bit of Champagne, a little bit of moonshine, and a whole lot of fun. She and Pam met while working for a Las Vegas casino resort chain. Victoria has a feisty Pomeranium named Fluffy.

Pam and Victoria's love of animals has been the driving force that propelled Haute Diggity Dog from dream to reality. Both are involved in charitable foundations and are big advocates and supporters of dog rescue programs.

You can contact Pam and Victoria at info@hautediggitydog.com

Some online retailers who carry Haute Diggity Dog products:
www.smalldogmall.com
www.trixieandpeanut.com
www.muttropolis.com
www.shopluckydog.com
www.inthecompanyofdogs.com
www.lushpuppyonline.com
www.barkslope.com
www.dogbar.com
www.wrapables.com
www.jakesdoghouse.com
www.hautedogboutique.com
www.tailsinthecity.com
www.glamourdog.com
www.pamperedpup.com
www.gwlittle.com
www.thepinkpaw.com
www.bestinshowsf.com
www.pawpalaceonline.com
www.moochieandco.com
www.canineranchnyc.com
www.shopthedog.com
www.wiggle-n-waggle.com
www.poshpetboutiqueandspaw.com
www.maxwelldog.com
www.busterandsullivan.com
www.michipet.com
www.funnyfur.com
www.doggievogue.com
www.diggitydogcarmel.com
www.yourdogwilldigit.com
www.foxypaws.com
www.happytailpets.com
www.fundogfred.com
www.ruffaroundthehedges.com

Funky Find Of The Week: Lantic's Pure Gold Remote Control




This new remote control by Lantic Systems is made of pure gold. That's right, gold. I dare you to call it 'the clicker'.

source-Lantic Systems' site:
Lantic Systems delivers the most expensive remote control in the world.
The Danish hi-tech manufacturer Lantic Systems, which is specialized in developing high end integrated entertainment systems, has designed a remote control in pure gold.

It is probably the world’s most expensive remote control on the market – at a price in excess of USD 30.000,- which compared to the standard remote control retailing from USD 1050,-

The new remote control – Gold RC1 – was presented Nov. 13th at the METS 2007 Exhibition in Amsterdam, Holland – the worlds biggest marine equipment trade show.

Lantic Systems is ready to deliver Gold RC1 from December 2007 and the first orders have already been received.

Modeled after the original RC1 from Lantic Systems, the Gold RC1 offers the same sleek form factor and cool metallic finish and ease of use that have made the RC1 one of the hottest remote controls on the market today.

The Gold RC1 is as well as in design as in function the centre of the Lantic Entertainment system which offers control over TV/video/dvd, music/CD, internet, e-mail, CCTV, burglary alarm, lights, curtains, air-conditioning and surveillance of navigation systems etc.

This is a unique technology which matches the other integrated state-of-the-art management and entertainment systems, which Lantic Systems is specialized in developing for the mega yachts and the exclusive homes worldwide.



To contact:
Lantic Systems A/S
Nordlandsvej 90
8240 Risskov
Denmark
E-mail:info@lantic-systems.com
Telephone: +45 8743 9090
Fax: +45 8743 9099
For more information, click here.

Brother, Can You Spare A Dime? If So, Here's 20 Great Places To Put It.


Modern & Beautiful Places To Put Your Coins

Around this time of year, people start thinking (and worrying) about their money. The holidays are coming up, year -end deductions and expenses are taken into account and chances are, most of the world is pinching their pennies.

So, If you're not gonna spend it, at least put it in something cool. Above are 20 beautiful places in which to put that spare change- if you've got any.

There's no longer an excuse for keeping pennies in a ...gasp...jar!

Just click on each piggy bank above to purchase.

Wanna see more cool and modern money boxes/piggybanks/coin boxes? Go here.

Cartier's Surprisingly Hip Launch
For Their Latest Watch



While I've always been a fan of Cartier, especially their watches, I wouldn't have described them as a hip company or a cutting edge company or even a company in touch with an audience under 40 years of age.

However, their fabulous, artful and beautifully illustrated launch of their newest watch, the Ballon Bleu has changed my mind.

By creating a microsite that showcases six different comic book writers/illustrators' work as well as seven Ninth Art writers in an unusual visual odyssey they have made me re-examine my previous notion of this luxury jewelry and watch manufacturer.

I can hardly do the entire site justice without reproducing it, so let me just share a few of the illustrations and a few frames of the comics and let you experience the entire thing for yourself.

Click on the images below so you can see them larger and appreciate the art.




Above: six different illustrations, each showcasing the blue cabochon in a different visual interpretation.




Above: 3 different examples of partial comic strips written about the watch

Of course, the watch is stunning. It's most notable feature, the large blue cabochon sapphire winding mechanism incorporated into the bezel and open on both sides. Followed by the unusual slightly rounded shape of the front and back of the face.





Above: The unusually set blue sapphire cabochon winding mechanism on the newest Cartier watch


Above: A detail of the watch face

Like most of Cartier's bracelet watches it's available in 18k yellow, pink or white gold (with or without diamonds) and 18k yellow gold combined with stainless steel (no diamonds).


Above: The unusual shape of the Ballon Bleu

So, in addition to tempting me with yet another stunning horological adornment, Cartier's microsite has captured my eye as well and I wonder if they've produced hard copies of these 'stories'.



Most surprisingly of all, I must declare, Cartier is hip.

See for yourself here.

or buy the watch here.

Modern Interior Design. On a Different Scale.


Above: Art Deco City room (look at the Corbusier Chairs and lucite table!)

Before you simply glance at the pictures below and think you are simply viewing yet another series of beautifully designed modern interiors... STOP and realize these are miniature models.

That's right, tiny handcrafted replicas of rooms and interiors by craftsman Peter Tucker, who calls them "Roomboxes". He creates everything down to the replicas of famous classically modern furniture like that of Corbusier and Reitveld as well as working light fixtures of all sorts.

Throughout this post, be sure to click on the images to enlarge them so you can appreciate all the details.


Above: the Artist and Craftsman, Peter Tucker

Below is an interview with the artist, reprinted with his permission:
Peter Tucker's contemporary miniatures spring from a 180-degree turn in life about 10 years ago. He had been a school psychologist and then he had owned and operated a systems database design-consulting firm. Peter is thrilled with the change.

"Around that time, two curves crossed. One was that I was getting less and less enjoyment in systems and the second was that I wanted to do something creative. In computer database design, the things you do disappear before you finish.
Sometimes I worked on a project for years, got very well paid, then the project was scrapped and I felt I had nothing to show for the work."

That career also involved a major amount of travel. The final epiphany for Peter came when he was sitting alone in a hotel room far from his home in British Columbia, when a good friend died, and a day later, his mother-in-law died. "I realized that it wasn't much of a life if you can't be there for your friends and family.


Above: Beautifully accurate modern room, down to the objets d'art (click on image to enlarge)


Above: another view of the above modern intimate interior

"The kids were no longer really a responsibility and Jeremie (Peter's wife) was tremendously supportive, even though we both knew that it would never be the financial equivalent of database design. On the other hand, I would not be spending 250 days a year away from home."


Above: A perfect little replica of the bedroom from the beloved children's story "Goodnight Moon".

Known for his modern doll house furnishings and lighting, Peter's only previous experience with miniatures was a doll house he helped build for his little sister when he was about 10, and another doll house he started building for his daughters, Heather and Michelle, many years ago.


Above: A painstakingly perfect working art deco light sculpture of tiny proportions.


Above: a modern two-story loft (click on image to enlarge)


Above: Detail of the above modern loft

"I was still traveling a lot when I started it and I finished it years later, after they were grown. and had left home. I really enjoyed building it. I found it very satisfying. Miniatures were all new to me, but Jeremie's parents were antique dealers in Connecticut and she had lots of contact with miniatures and dolls. "


Above: Peter's roombox of the Frank Lloyd Wright designed Zimmerman House, his "Usonian" period

Peter's first show was in Seattle, Washington, where he met Marilyn and Andy Benedict of Maison des Maisons. The Benedicts invited him to be their featured guest at the Chicago International show in 1999. Since then, Peter has been a Chicago International regular. A boost in the direction of modernism came from a client Peter met at the Seattle show "Her father was an engineer with Frank Lloyd Wright and she was only interested in modern miniatures," Peter said. Looking for someone to build her room structures, Annie Herzfeld approached Peter, who was pleased to take the task. "Over the course of that year, I got hooked on modern," he said.


Above: A detailed miniature of a Greene & Greene dining room

Peter had been doing Arts and Crafts, Art Deco, and Greene and Greene structures.
"Once I got involved with Annie, I became more involved modern. "I really like to make things that are as accurate as possible, or more importantly, convey the accurate feel of what I am trying to reproduce.


Above: Another arts & crafts interior roombox (complete with dog!)

Sometimes I have to go away from total accuracy because it doesn't always work in scale."
When making the back of a fireplace, Peter uses bricks half the size of the ones in front because he feels that one should have the impression of being 15 to 20 feet away when looking into a roombox. "I try to create precision with an optical illusion," he stated.
Peter's accuracy has had its disadvantages. "At least a dozen times people have placed an order on my Web site thinking they are buying a full size item."


Above: Just look at the wood and brick detailing in this unfurnished Greene & Greene replica. A roombox like this sells for almost $6,000 USD.

Because Peter's academics started with engineering, with a reasonable amount of accuracy he can convert a picture to a scale drawing. "I haunt local book stores for interior design books and reference books and I've wandered all over the neighborhood looking for appealing architecture. Then I look to see what finishes and woods were used. I try to come as close as I can and I make changes that need to be done to make it look right."


Above: A Modern art deco interior complete with Corbusier's pony hair lounge chair

Originally, Peter thought of his modern boxes as a stage, letting the client do the "dressing. " But he found that there were very few modern furnishings and even fewer things in the way of lighting.


Above: Peter's Modern "apartment" roombox.

"Now I have come to the point that I design and make the furnishings that would work in the room. Some things are just a visual treat and I have to make them, like the red and blue chair by G. Rietveld (seen below both in a roombox and alone) . It is a study in geometry, angles and planes in primary colors. "I also took pleasure in making the piano from a picture a client sent me of a full-size piano entered in a competition. My knowledge of grand pianos was limited, but by the time I was finished I knew about the soundboard, the cast iron frame and the height of the keys from the floor. I like the detective work that goes with design. "



Above: Peter's replica chair of Reitveld's original as seen in the above room

Because Peter works in a contemporary style, he developed fluorescent lights, tracks with modern canister lights, and other accessories not found in older homes. "When I make lighting I use LED's so you don't have to change bulbs."


Above: another interior-just look at the sophisticated lighting in it!

Although Peter knows that contemporary and modern styles appeal to only about 10 percent
of audiences at shows, he would like to continue in the genre. "I would like to be able to produce some things that are totally unique.”


Above: Peter's handcrafted tiny maple X table

I would love to do the living room of Falling Waters, a Frank Lloyd Wright house in Pennsylvania. This, though, is a two-year project and I can' t do it unless someone commissions it."

Peter enjoys the fact that that his work appeals to the next generation of miniaturists . "I like when a kid points to something on my table and says, 'Mom, that's cool'


Above: A roombox of a local bar

Victorian is not what kids understand. Grandma's house is as far back as they go and it usually is not Victorian. It's probably the fifties at the latest. "I feel really good about the career change-although it is still a scramble at times-but ' I enjoy what I'm doing and other people enjoy what I'm doing."


Above: A modern two-story loft (click to enlarge)



Above and below: details of the two-story loft shown above



Peter Tucker also has amazing victorian and classically designed roomboxes as well.
Visit his site by clicking here for a complete inventory of his admirable work.

Want to buy one of these stunning roomboxes?
They don't come cheap- nor should they.

Click here for a price list.
contact information:
Peter Tucker
Roomboxes Etc.
3675 West 29 Ave
Vancouver B.C. Canada
V6S 1T5
(604)224-3928 Pacific time zone


Other great miniature models:

be sure to check out Mark Turpin's Pine Island and:


Gideon Bing's mini architectural models for Resene too!

Please donate

C'mon people, it's only a dollar.