google ad sense 728 x 90

Rollout's Custom & Artist Series Wallpapers




above: Sultry Hair and War Babies, two patterns from Rollout's Artist One Series

ROLLOUT is a creative studio that designs and digitally prints custom wallpapers by the square foot. They recruit community-based artists, photographers, industrial designers and cutting edge graphic artists/designers to create amazingly original wall coverings, many seen in hip stores and offices like Worth clothing and Microsoft's Zune.


Above left; JONATHAN NODRICK (President, Creative Director) and right; ANITA MODHA (CEO, Director of Marketing & Communications)

As described on their site:
ROLLOUT was born out of the need for graphic expression in the interior design industry. Gone are the days of slick minimalism. We embrace texture, expression, emotion and color, filling the gaping hole left by modernism.
Below are some of their custom designs:




Above: as seen in Vancouver's Moustache & Darling



Above: The dressing rooms in Worth have the same wallpaper as the rest of the store, but in cream on white as opposed to silver on black.

Above: A custom callalily design for a private residence

In addition to designing custom wallpapers, they have "stock" designer and artist papers that you can choose from. They can print these papers to fit your space. Please contact them for a quote.

Some of their fabulous artist series wall coverings:
Please click on each image below to enlarge so you can see the detail!












Their premium, latex-based inkjet wallcoverings come in 36’’ wide rolls that they digitally print to any square footage. This allows ROLLOUT to minimize waste – and your costs. ROLLOUT delivers ready-to-hang wallpaper, developed to your precise specifications, to your project site.


Above: You can order a sample book with five of their designs for $25

Above: Or this cool skull shirt based on one of their custom wallpapers.
For more info on the t-shirt or sample book, e-mail them here.

Now, it's true, with wall coverings like these it's very difficult to hang art on the walls. But then again, with wall coverings like these, who needs art?

ROLLOUT Custom Wallpaper
#301-321 Railway Street
Vancouver BC Canada V6A 1A4
Office (604) 681.3780
Cell (604) 258.8072

GENERAL INFO
info@rollout.ca

SALES & MEDIA
anita@rollout.ca

TECHNICAL INFORMATION
jon@rollout.ca


Visit their site here.

Bert Stern's Marilyn & Lindsay: Side By Side


above left, Lindsay Lohan by Bert Stern, 2008 and above right, Marilyn Monroe by Bert Stern, 1962

Photographer Bert Stern may best be known as the photographer who shot Marilyn Monroe's famous last sitting, a collection of vulnerable and beautiful shots of the actress, taken at the Bel Air hotel in 1962. The photographs are arguably the most famous images ever captured of America's most famous actress. Six weeks after she had posed, Monroe was found dead of an apparent barbiturate overdose.

Another Twist On Toile: Modern Toile Wall Tiles



Awhile back I did a post on "Twisted Toile", modern takes on the traditional french toile as now found in wallpapers, linens and more. Then just the other day I came across a wonderful addition to the world of trendy toile; some fabulous ceramic wall tiles from Saint Honoré Wallcoverings. The french store also carries wallpaper and like hundreds of other online boutiques, trendy wall decals.

Avatars Dress Better Than We Do: Paying For Clothes That Don't Exist


I came across the wonderful article in UK's Telegraph by Alison Taylor and have reprinted it here for your enjoyment (and info) with added visuals and links:

Virtual Vogue: Second Life Wardrobes

Who pays real money for unreal clothes? Enough people to make digital dressing-up big business. But is virtual fashion just another teenage craze or is it the end of clothes shopping as we know it? Alison Taylor investigates.

After much wardrobe searching, I plump for my DKNY ivory satin coat, skinny Raven jeans and vintage polka-dot blouse to meet Brad -that's Brad Pitt - at the log cabin. It might be snowing outside, but there's a roaring fire to keep us warm. It's been a busy few days refurbishing my pad (bling-bling meets kitsch boutique), catching up with all my fashion-loving friends and shopping. Recent purchases include a chic wool beret (again DKNY), a Heidi Klum clover pendant and - my favourite - a gorgeous vintage caramel leather mac.


Above: Amy Winehouse and some outfits from stardoll.com

Sadly this is not me speaking, it's my MeDoll; my web alter ego or avatar on Stardoll.com, a virtual world of shopping and dressing-up. Stardoll receives more than six million visitors every month from across the globe, 94 per cent of whom are teen and tween girls who log on to restyle digital versions of celebrities such as Paris Hilton, Amy Winehouse and even the esteemed editor of American Vogue, Anna Wintour. The average user age might have gone up after Stardoll was mentioned in Vanity Fair's Hollywood issue, encouraging readers to 'play celebrity stylist' in lieu of this year's awards ceremonies. 'No Golden Globes? No red carpets? No problem. Get your celebrity fashion fix and help more than 100 of Hollywood's best dressed get prepped for the Big Night at Stardoll.com.' And why not? I defy any woman not to smile as she drags a pair of garish shorts and silly sunglasses on to a David Hasselhoff doll.

If they register and sign up for an account, Stardoll members can also create MeDolls, which they usually design in their own likeness, choosing from a variety of virtual faces, skin tones, hairstyles, lip shapes and eye colours. They can dress their MeDolls in a dazzling array of Stardoll brands available in the on-site Starplaza mall - real-life brands such as DKNY, Ugg, Hilary Duff's Stuff by Duff and Heidi Klum's jewellery range, as well as invented ones such as the goth-style Fallen Angel and girly Pretty in Pink. There's even a vintage shop, Star Bazaar, for second-hand fans. 'You can dress yourself up and be anyone!' says Jessica, 17, a long-time user from Norwich. 'It's just fantastic. There's a craze going on right now where everyone has to have blue hair. It's bizarre. Of course no one has blue hair in real life but it shows you can be so creative and be whoever you want to be. You're allowed to have blue hair [on Stardoll].'

Above: Faith Hill and her wardrobe on stardoll.com

Stardoll's popularity is staggering - there are currently slightly more than 14 million members, with about 25,000 new people joining daily. But it started off in 2001, as the website Liisa's Paperdoll Heaven, the hobby of a retired Scandinavian factory worker inspired by the paper dolls that first appeared in the mid-19th century. Such was the appetite for contemporary virtual 'dolling' that by 2005 the venture capitalists were knocking and the site was reborn as Stardoll - with added Stardollars, a virtual currency all of its own.

Registering gives the user 25 Stardollars to buy their MeDoll a better wardrobe at the Starplaza or improvements to their on-site 'suite'. But like real dollars in real plazas they don't go far. So why not - for £4.49 a month - become a Superstar, guaranteeing you 50 Stardollars to spend every week? According to Jessica, that will currently buy you just one pair of virtual limited -edition pink Ugg boots. 'They don't sell them [on the site] any more so there are massive bidding wars for them. People are paying, like, 50 Stardollars for them. It's crazy.'

On the phone from Sweden Mattias Miksche, the chief executive of Stardoll, won't say how many Stardoll users are Superstars or what their monthly spend is, but points out that 'rigid filters are in place so that users can't spend stupid amounts'. The British limit is £6 per week, making the maximum spend over four weeks, including membership, £28.49. Pretty steep for clothes that you will never put on your back and Ugg boots that you'll never put on your feet.


Above: Alicia Keyes and wardrobe on stardoll.com

Jessica, who's got an online wardrobe stocked with in-demand items that she will eventually sell and make Stardollar profit on, is still trying to puzzle the whole thing out. 'Although Stardoll is a lot about creativity, it's very heavily based onfashion, too,' she says. 'I think people just want to look fashionable and, if they don't have the money to buy those clothes in real life, they can buy and wear them on Stardoll.'

Stardoll may be aimed at the teen and pre-teen market but it is just one of a growing number of fashion-focused web worlds becoming popular with users of all ages, whether you want to live out your footwear fantasies in pink Uggs, socialise with fellow fashion enthusiasts on the latest 'style networking' sites or even do something as practical as virtually 'trying on' real clothes before you buy them for real.

Indulging the style whims of self-created 'webselves', or avatars, and spending real money on virtual clothes, is a particularly strange concept for the uninitiated. 'I think it's extraordinary spending real dollars in virtual worlds,' says Ann Mack, the director of trend- spotting at JWT, the advertising powerhouse in New York. 'But it's a "psycho-graphic" rather than a demographic, a certain mindset - people who feel very comfortable playing with their identities both online and offline and people looking for an escape from their daily lives.'


Above: the virtual world for alter egos, Second Life.

SecondLife.com, created in 2003, is probably the best-known virtual world, with more than ten million members whose avatars inhabit a place with its own stock exchange, estate agents, holiday destinations and relationships. Again, fashion has a huge presence, with virtual malls stocked with'home-grown' fashion brands and retailers as well as real-world brands. Lacoste recently sponsored an avatar modelling contest. New Look ran a clothing design competition. Giorgio Armani's silver-haired avatar made an appearance at the opening of his own shop. 'Finally I can be two places at once,' he said. Calvin Klein launched a virtual version of its fragrance ckIN2U (consumers who want a sniff of the real thing are able to click through to the fragrance's website and request a real- world sample). There are enthusiastic Second Life fashion bloggers, too, and even a fashion magazine, Secondstyle.com.


Above: the cover of Second Style, a virtual fashion mag for second lifers

For Second Life punters, it's an opportunity to experiment with a new look or identity (and to look your best at all times, unlike in the real world). For brands, it's a marketing opportunity. Nigel Morris at Isobar, the company that helped Adidas open in Second Life, thinks brands should experiment with digital environments: 'We feel virtual worlds are part of a new trend in relation to community and the notion of identity and how people see themselves on the web.'

But Mack is not sure how successful this will be long-term.'There was a lot of talk of brand getting in on it, but that was at the height,' she says. 'If you go to Second Life now, many brands are sitting there stagnant. Unless you spend a lot of time updating the clothes and the stores, it feels old very quickly.' It's like deciding to devote time to creating a Second Life persona and being bothered to live out a cyber life -you've got to have the time and inclination.

Style networking sites such as osoyou.com and fashionspace.com are more firmly entrenched in the real world. These are web forums where fashion-lovers congregate, check out celebrity fashion looks and swap style tips. Osoyou.com is Britain's first site to combine social networking (as on Facebook) and online shopping - so as well as picking up tips from other members on where to buy a good biker jacket, surfers can click through to popular fashion 'e-tailers' such as my-wardrobe.com or high-street names such as M&S, Oasis and Karen Millen, and buy one. Or you can put your finds to one side for another time.

Osoyou.com launched in autumn 2007 and now has 250,000 visitors to the site. Typical members are women between 20 and 40 with a habit for online shopping. Osoyou.com's founder Dawn Bebe (who was the launch director of Grazia magazine) says, 'Our figures show they typically shop at work, during their lunch break, or at 4pm,when we are clearly the equivalent of a KitKat break - more expensive but fewer calories!'

Women account for just under half of all internet users, spending between two and four hours per day browsing (mostly during workhours, prompting Bebe to coin the term 'cyberskivers').And online shopping figures continue to rise (clothing sales went up by 28 per cent in 2007, according to the IMRG Capgemini sales index). Bebe's research shows that more women are turning on their laptops again when they get home, with the intention of better organising their lives. 'That's how women rationalise their usage,' she says.

Jess Markwood, 22, a hotel receptionist from Cornwall, has been logging on to Osoyou.com for a couple of months.'I save the clothes I like, sort of a fantasy wardrobe,' she says,'and then buy when I can afford it.' Or not.'Sometimes that satiates my shopping need, because when I go back I'm more critical. I'm less impulsive than I'd be in a shop.'


Above: My Virtual Model (mvm.com) allows you to brand yourself as a supermodel and even upload your own face.

Even the frustration of not being able to try before you buy when shopping online is potentially at an end. The website My Virtual Model (mvm.com) is a system that enables you to create something like Stardoll's MeDoll, a lifelike virtual model of you based on an uploaded digital photograph and your real-life measurements. The idea is that you can use it to help you to shop more practically, with your virtual self'trying on' the clothes you like to see if they fit, suit or go with those blue shoes you quite fancy, too. The software is already up and running on H&M's website.

So do these advances mean the end of shopping as we know it?'[Technology] will never replace the high street or girlie shopping trips,' says Bebe. 'But it will provide a parallel experience online.'

Back on Stardoll, Jessica is already an old hand at using her virtual self to inform her real-life fashion decisions. After successfully customising a virtual skirt 'with lots of pins and badges', she's been applying the same trick to the hats and bags in her wardrobe. 'It's hard to imagine yourself in real life in all sorts of clothes, but with this you can try things on and think, "Oh, that looks really good. I'll see how it goes,"' she says. 'It really expands your creativity and how you express yourself. Because that's what clothes are all about.'
source: The Telegraph

Can Imbibing Save The Planet? 10 New Green Vodkas


Okay, so maybe getting drinking eco-alcohol products won't really save the planet, but it certainly won't hurt it. Given the new and growing awareness of the importance of utilizing sustainable technologies and renewable resources and packaging, several companies are coming out with "green" spirits, here are some planet-friendly Vodkas for you.

1. 360 Vodka:



They include an agreement to offset 100 percent of the company’s energy and carbon use; bottling the vodka in containers composed of 85 percent recycled glass; using 100 percent recycled paper and cardboard for labels, packaging and promotional materials; using grains grown in Kansas and Missouri to reduce the need to transport ingredients to the distillery; and donating money to environmental organizations.



There are even paper coasters for 360 that bear the brand’s logo on one side and these instructions on the other: “Join the greening of America and soak this coaster in water for a couple of hours. Place the card in a pot of soil and cover lightly. Keep moist and in a week or so you’ll have sprouts of cosmos and marigolds. Enjoy your flowers.”
Read more here.


2. Square One Organic Vodka:
(information from their site)

Upon moving to Marin County in Northern California, Square One Organic Vodka founder Allison Evanow found inspiration in the community’s embrace of the land, from protected public fields to abundant local organic farmers’ markets. And she was thrilled by how the community created by the Saturday morning farmers’ market was also a friendly platform for raising greater environmental issues. This led the spirits industry veteran to wonder, “Why not put the ethos of the farmer’s market into a glass?” Indeed why not create a luxury spirit that leaves a light footprint on the earth yet makes a big splash [so to speak] among cocktail cognoscenti?


Above: Allison Evanow with her organic vodka

Vodkas are prized for their purity, so the idea of an organic vodka was both viable and exciting… Thus Allison set out to create the greenest clear spirit yet. And she started at…square one, with the purest ingredients she could find: pristine spring water from the Teton mountains and organically certified North Dakota-grown rye.The ingredients are so pure that Square One obviates the need for multiple distillation, emerging through a single pass in the distiller with its unique flavor profile intact.



But Allison wasn’t content to focus only on what’s in the bottle – the packaging had to reflect Square One’s philosophy of eco-conscious sophistication. That’s why the distinct square bottle is not frosted [a process that calls for some serious chemicals!] and the label is now printed on paper made from bamboo, bagasse and cotton, all sustainably grown and renewable fiber sources. And once the bottle is empty the label easily peels off so the bottle can enjoy a second life as a vase or other container.

Finally, while we at Square One embrace the square, we’re also happy to come full circle: Because the rye byproduct from our vodka-making process is organic and minimally processed, it is packed with protein and fiber, thus making it ideal for sale as feed to an organic dairy farm.We did not intend to sell off our “waste” but are now thrilled to be a vital link in the cradle-to-cradle process of growing grain, feeding cattle, and creating the best martinis you’ve ever tried!
Learn more here.

3. Purus Vodka:





Even Anheuser-Busch has gotten into the green game with their Purus Vodka. The premium organic vodka retails at $35 a bottle, which is recyclable and wrapped in a “tree-free paper” label with safe soy-based inks, water-based adhesives, and an environmentally sustainable cork closure. It’s made from crystalline Alpine water, locally harvested 100% organic Italian wheat and cultivated without pesticides or commercial fertilizers at a 3rd generation family-owned distillery.



On the site you can even enter your info to plant a tree in the “Purus Forest.” While this is the first vodka brand created and marketed specifically by Anheuser Busch, their Stone Mill pale ale and Wild Hop lagers are both organic beers.
learn more (and plant a tree) here.

4. UK5 Organic Vodka:



UK5 Vodka is world's first Organic Vodka made from 100% rye. The actual organic farm in which the Rye is produced is located in Germany has been organic for over 30 years. There are many unique points when talking about UK5 Organic Vodka with the most important being we are the world's only non filtered Vodka. The result is UK5 is an extremely smooth distillate. Most people believe filtering is good for the product and the fact is they are correct. But that is due to all the impurities that exist in conventional Vodkas. As a result they must be extracted from the liquid before people can drink the product. Filtering extracts all the impurities but it also takes out all the flavors and essences of the Vodka. After all, it is impossible to take out the bad without taking out the good.



UK5 Organic Vodka uses only the worlds purest water and the world's finest organic grain which has a denser cell structure perfect for making premium vodka. Conventional vodka is made from grain sprayed on average at least 7 times with chemicals; these chemicals which are found in our water supply and food chain, are feared to cause human cancers, interfere with our hormones and our human nervous system. In 1998, UK companies used 50,000 tons of grain, grown using artificial chemicals in the production of Gin and Vodka.
Learn more here.

5. Lotus Vodka:



Developed by San Francisco-based Delicious Brands, White Lotus is a proprietary blend of the finest vodka, natural flavors and secret ingredients targeted to sophisticated, health-conscious consumers between the ages of 25 and 40. This vodka was specifically created for the on-sale market to pair with fresh fruit juices for healthier, better-tasting cocktails. White Lotus packaging is environmentally friendly: The label is printed directly on the bottle and the cases are made in part from recycled cardboard.


Now available in two flavors, white lotus or blue lotus, new flavors will be available soon.
Learn more here.

6. Rain Vodka:

Rain is handmade from scratch in small batches at Buffalo Trace Distillery. Every step in making Rain is designed for enjoying the ultimate vodka taste experience. Rain vodka is distilled exclusively from 100 percent organic white corn, creating a superior taste profile. The vodka undergoes an extensive 20-day production technique that includes cold-water sweet mash fermentation, seven distinct distillations and a polishing stage that adds pure limestone water.




Tasting Notes
Rain is made from organically grown white corn. Smells of pear drop, moss and hay in the first sniffing; aeration allows the aroma to deepen, especially the appealing earthy moss/wet soil perfume. Palate entry is feather-light; at mid-palate there’s a firm but satiny taste of sweet grain. Aftertaste is grainy. Delicious and delicate.
SUPERB (90-95)/Highly Recommended --Wine Enthusiast Magazine
learn more here.

7. VeeV Vodka:


VeeV is a high-end, high-proof liqueur make from the South American açaí berry, which contains antioxidants. An alternative to vodka in cocktails, its taste is slightly sweet with accents of dark berries, cherry, and chocolate. The spirit is available from Southern Wine & Spirits in 750 and 50 ml bottles.



For every bottle sold, VeeV donates $1 to help protect and replenish the Amazonian Rainforest through partners Rainforest Action Network and Sambazon’s Sustainable AçaĂ­ Project. This helps to offset the carbon output of VeeV’s day-to-day activities.

VeeV’s support of the Sustainable AçaĂ­ Project directly benefits the farming communities that harvest the AçaĂ­ berries, promotes organic certification, and ensures that AçaĂ­ is “wild harvested” to preserve the surrounding flora and protect biodiversity. The donation to the Rainforest Action Network (RAN) protects the world’s forests by promoting the alignment of corporate and governmental policies into with conservation efforts.

VeeV Vodka has Açaí in it, one of those so-called "superfoods."learn more here.

8. Reyka Vodka



Reyka has been blogged about a lot although it's probably the least "green" of the bunch. Claiming to be the world’s first green vodka- it's made from glacial water and distilled using sustainable and clean energy from geothermal heat.




The folks over at NOTCOT did a nice encompassing feature on it. In addition to it being 'green', they have a fun feature where each day the bottle is packaged with a different foil neck wrapper depending upon the nature and icelandic surrounding of the day! learn more here.

9. Snow Leopard Vodka
gives 15% of their profits to save the beautiful Snow Leopard.



10. Death's Door Spirits are herbicide and pesticide free and sustainably grown on washington island and sourced as local as possible.



If you haven't already, be sure to read my post about high-end vodkas with stunning bottle designs, Premium Vodka Distillers, Drunk With Design.

And be sure to see the post on wild, unusual and flavored vodkas here.


In honor of the 2010 Earth Day, see part II, Ten more Organic vodkas!

Please donate

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