Archive for November, 2007

Racing Style Book By Assouline

Wednesday, November 21st, 2007

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Parisian publishers Assouline have released a special edition book celebrating race cars from the ’40s, ’50s and ’60s which raced at the Goodwood Motor Circuit. The Goodwood Motor Circuit was Britain’s leading racing venue between 1948 and 1966 and hosted all kinds of motor racing including Formula One. The book features over two hundred photos taken at the circuit in its prime and comes in a black rubber case designed to resemble tire treads.

Sexiest TeaPot

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007

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This teapot by designer Joey Roth is a minimalist reinterpretattion of the teapot. He calls it the Sorapot.The cast metal arch which makes up Sorapot’s handle also acts as a heat sink, something Roth intends to prevent over-steeping of delicate teas. And, unlike many conventional teapots, the Sorapot’s glass and metal components are fully recyclable.

If Apple would have designed it, it would have named it the iPot.

Paris gripped by Emme Je T’aime fever

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007

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A few weeks ago, Parisians woke up to find Emma Je T’Aime graffiti all over town – graffiti which appears to be written by a distraught lover, Paul, but which seems to have a serious budget behind it. Rumors abound that it is a piece of alternative marketing from Jean-Paul Gaultier, but nothing has been confirmed…

Visit the Emma Je T’Aime blogÂ

Washing machines like we all want them!

Monday, November 19th, 2007

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Flexible Distance is a top loading washing machine developed for Ye Xiao Dong as winners of the “Lavatrice Cinese Made In Milan” competition. The emphasis? Pure style. The idea is this machine is so beautiful, it can be placed anywhere in the home; even as a center piece. But how can a washing machine be this mobile? By caster wheels of course. However beauty is only skin deep. The real innovation here is the interface.

Friday, November 16th, 2007

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It appears there are no limits on consumers’ desire for exclusivity, and Claseo is making the most of that trend with an invitation-only line of clothing. Launched earlier this year, Claseo bills itself as the world’s first closed shopping community, where purchases can be made on the site only by those who have been invited. Each member of Claseo is given a limited number of invitations to share with friends, who must enter an invitation code and make a purchase in order to become members themselves. Once they’ve done that, they gain access to Claseo’s fashion label and an online lifestyle portal; the inviting member, meanwhile, is credited with a EUR 10 discount on their next purchase.

All Claseo items are emblazoned with a unique, visible identification code. Not only does that code allow members to recognize one another in a crowd, but it also enables them to learn more about each other. By entering the code seen on another member’s shirt on Claseo’s website (or mobile site), a user can learn that person’s name. Members can connect through Claseo’s online portal, which features profiles, messaging and photo galleries, as well as exchange information and tips on a variety of fashion and lifestyle topics.

Claseo also picks up on the customer-made trend by inviting members to submit design suggestions and vote on new collection ideas, thereby helping to shape the brand and its products; those whose design ideas are adopted get a share in the profits. The site’s product line so far includes just its summer collection of polo shirts, but dress shirts, rugby shirts and dinner jackets are on the way. Claseo is currently also forging partnership arrangements with leading clubs and fashion stores around the world for extended member benefits, beginning with Munich’s P1 Lounge & Club.

Tastebook – your own customized cookbook

Thursday, November 15th, 2007

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Tastebook allows you to create custom-made recipe books by choosing from an array of available recipes on the website (thanks to Tastebook’s partnership with Epicurius.com) and/or by adding your very own.

After registering with the site, you can start selecting the recipes that you would like to include in your very own Tastebook. Once you’re done with your selection, you can pick a cover to customize, and then – before finalizing the process – you can review the created cookbook page by page. Every Tastebook can include up to 100 recipes, which can be added at any time; this means that for all the unused recipe credits, you will get remaining credits to be incorporated afterwards. Its practical design makes it very easy to add and remove recipes from the book over time.

Tastebook is a great idea not only for organizing your own recipes but also for a very personalized present. When I recently moved from Amsterdam to my new hometown Stockholm, I put together a collection of my favorite recipes for a friend of mine. While my original intention was to put them together in a nice folder and add pictures, in the end the moving stress caught up with me and I ended up sending my collection as a Word file via email. If I had known about Tastebook back then (and if they shipped outside the U.S.), I would have gladly paid the $34.95 price to put together a very personal and beautiful cookbook.

Warhol’s Liz Taylor gives clue to art stability

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

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Reluctant actor, master of self-deprecation, tousle-haired English fop. Tonight a new description must be added to the list of Hugh Grant’s qualities: modern art collector who has struck the jackpot.

An Andy Warhol work owned by the Four Weddings and a Funeral star will go on sale in New York as a centrepiece of Christie’s auction of post-war and contemporary art. The portrait of Elizabeth Taylor, called Liz, from 1963, is expected to fetch up to $35m (£17m), 10 times the sum that Grant paid for it at a Sotheby’s auction in 2001. Or to look at it another way, a profit of about $5m for every year he has owned the painting. Not bad work if you can get it.

(THE GUARDIAN, UK)

Kitchen Vent

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

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The new Futura downdraft vent from Guttman is about as sleek as a kitchen vent can get. Push a button and it slides down into the countertop.

Laughing all the way to the Banksy

Tuesday, November 13th, 2007

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THE phenomenon of Banksy, an English graffiti artist, seems to have got out of hand. Banksy, who trades heavily on his anonymity, began drawing on walls alongside streets in north London and Bristol, his hometown.

But his stencils—often of rats making mordant political jokes—have come in from the cold streets to the prosperous warmth of London galleries and auction houses. Record prices for Banksies have been repeatedly set and exceeded over the past nine months.

The rush began in February, when Sotheby’s sold seven of Banksy’s works in oil, enamel, acrylic and spray-paint. Bonhams took up the baton, and set the pace in April, selling Banksy’s “Space Girl and Bird” for £288,000. This autumn, Bonhams has auctioned another 11 Banksies, and Bloomsbury no fewer than 21.

The April record was broken at Sotheby’s on October 12th, when “The Rude Lord” (pictured)—an 18th century portrait that Banksy altered to show the subject giving a middle-finger salute—fetched £322,900. At a less well publicised Sotheby’s sale three days later, six Banksies sold for a total of £447,000. Sotheby’s has put three more in their sale on December 12th, with a modest top estimate of £150,000-£200,000.

What is happening? Is this a significant shift in taste, with popular street art claiming a place in the mainstream, or is it a phase? It could turn out to be a bubble.

Look closely at “The Rude Lord”. Banksy bought the original for £2,000 and sold it for more than 150 times that. It exhibits most of his qualities: his anarchic sense of humour, his skill as a draftsman (though he never had any training or went to art school) and the quick and easy appeal of his work.

He has become a celebrity. When he was photographed working on a piece clever street art in late October, it made many of the London papers. Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt think he’s terrific. So does Damien Hirst, who is an enthusiastic collector.

Collectors who bought Banksies when they were young and he was entertaining have noticed this year’s huge price inflation and are taking their profits. The temptation is irresistible. Ralph Taylor, Sotheby’s man at the cutting edge—who thinks he might have met the artist but can’t be sure—says that he takes calls regularly from people saying that have a Banksy. A few of them had picked up pieces for £300 which auctioneers estimate at £50,000, and now find they are selling at between £70,000 and £100,000.

“You can kill a market,” Mr Taylor warns, though Sotheby’s, who will have put 18 Banksies up for sale in 2007, seems to believe this one is robust. Banksie appears to be unimpressed. “The art world is the biggest joke going,” he said in the New Yorker in May. He could prove to be one of its best jokers.

(THE ECONOMIST)

Louis Vuitton christmas windows

Tuesday, November 13th, 2007

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‘The moment an idea becomes repetitive or predictable then any sense of creativity is lost.’ Thus spoke Yves Carcelle, Chairman and CEO of Louis Vuitton, commenting on the brand’s latest project, which is indeed distinctly unpredictable and unrepetitive.

Pioneers in the fashion world for opening their arms to collaborations with a range of surprising artists (notably Takashi Murakami, who graffitied the precious Monogram in 33 colours, Olafur Eliasson, who created a pitch black lift in the Paris flagship store, and Richard Prince, who teamed up with Marc Jacobs to design the S/S 2008 bag collection) the historic, luxury brand yesterday unveiled their Christmas windows in London’s flagship – the result of a competition with the iconic design college, Central Saint Martins.

(WALLPAPER)