Laken drinking vessels


Laken Clásica

Laken Texas

Laken Pouch

Laken Flask

Laken Flask with Green Cover

Laken Cup

Cufflinks with a secret stash.

This is just like those small metal capsules you can buy to put on your dog’s or cat’s collar. You crew off the little top and stuff a rolled up tiny piece of paper inside with your address and phone number, in order to get the little darling back if he or she should get lost. On the Red Envelope web shop they’ve taken this to the next level, however, and produced a similar capsule for men (and women who wear cufflinks). You just put a piece of paper inside with his or her name, your address and phone number in order to help your drunken spouse to get a ride home after the Christmas office party. Brilliant. The cufflinks are USD 50:- a pair, but that is a small cost to get your significant other home safely, no?brbr

The Weekly Gallery

I saw so many nice and interesting things at other blogs and in my inbox last week,  that I thought I share them with you in a new Weekly Gallery just before the weekend starts …

Yvestown




Yvonne just announced the publication of her fantastic book "The Yvestown Book – vol.1" …congratulations!

Labpartners

Labpartners just added a couple great new prints to their shop … and the lion print was created to help raise money for the Uganda Village Project Scholarship Fund

Vlijtigeliesjes 

Very original and sweet Christmas cards by two lovely ladies from Belgium … Vlijtigeliesjes

Pikapackage 

The wonderful December pikapackage giveaway … click here for more info … or go directly to Amy’s shop.

Freshlyblended 

Nicole‘s beautiful Land Bird prints from Freshlyblended press available right here wish you all a fantastic weekend!

Alexa’s Top 90 Design Weblogs

Rm-alexa-2009

Want to know the top design blogs according to Alexa? Well, we’ve compiled all 90 of them. I have no clue how they come up with these rankings, but hey, these are great sites to check out and bookmark! (ReubenMiller ranks 24 – not bad.)

1. Treehugger

2. MoCo Loco

3. Inhabitat

4. Cool Hunting

5. The Cool Hunter

6. NOTCOT

7. Hostess with the Mostess

8. Graphics and Illustrations

9. Designspotter

10. Design You Trust

11. Fuel Your Creativity

12. Swissmiss

13. Cribcandy

14. Josh Spear

15. Design Observer

16. Positive Space

17. Hawksmont

18. Oh Joy!

19. It’s Nice That

20. Functioning Form

21. The Ad Mad

22. Sub-Studio

23. Desire to Inspire

24. Reuben Miller

25. Creative bits ‘n’ bobs

26. Graphic Design Blog

27. Poppytalk

28. Print Pattern

29. 2Modern

30. Design Sojourn

31. Roadside Scholar

32. Idealist

33. Curiobot

34. Design Notes

35. Graphic design for life

36. Land Living

37. Designers Block

38. Decor8

39. Architectradure

40. Design Crack

41. Absolutely Beautiful Things

42. Design Sponge

43. Serial Consign

44. Elit Alice

45. Love Made Visible

46. Twenty1f

47. 30gms

48. Pasta and Vinegar

49. Oh My So Cute

50. Cuteable

51. Rolling Rains

52. Style Court

53. Scoutie Girl

54. Cool Design Ideas

55. Bookmarkd

56. Redsil

57. Push A Pixel

58. Black White Bliss

59. DesignTaleStudio

60. Nordic Design Blog

61. Trend Insights

62. Funfurde

63. 49 Sparks

64. Studio469

65. Neo Nomad

66. ImedaGoze

67. Things of Random Coolness

68. LedLightRay

69. PagePlane

70. A Thing of Beauty

71. Raven’s Nest

72. Design Scout

73. Rebang

74. Reverseorbit

75. Inert Greymatter

76. Trendmatter

77. Design Boston

78. The Zaum of Mr Brown

79. The Terminally Juvenile

80. Designer’s Library

81. Greenwix

82. Old Glutton

83. Blog Sessions

84. Something In The Way

85. Dog Opus

86. Rag and Bone

87. Storm from the East

88. Lena Corwin

89. Obsidian Dawn

90. All the Best

Chocolate spatula with built-in thermometer.

Since Christmas is approaching, we’ve been looking at the possibilities of making our own chocolate candies this year. To that end we’ve been studying the delicious Chokladpassion (SEK 102:-) by Sweden’s number one dessert chef Jan Hedh (photo by Klas Andersson) and learning some really useful stuff. One being that correct temperatures are essential in all work with chocolate. To prepare milk chocolate and white chocolate, for instance, temperatures should not exceed 48°C (F 118.4°) and definitely never go over 54°C (F 129.2°) since this will ruin the chocolate. You could use an ordinary oven thermometer, but today we found this combo spatula and thermometer that we found ourselves wishing we had. It’s USD 18:99- on Amazon and it’s on our wish-list from now on.brbr
Note: We’ve mentioned Jan Hedh’s book in this post, but that book, however excellent, will be of little value to you if you don’t read Swedish. For our English speaking readers we might suggest another book that we believe is will do the job just fine. This book is Essence of Chocolate: Recipes for Baking and Cooking with Fine Chocolate- and it’s written by Robert Steinberg and John Scharffenberger. It’s USD 23.10 on Amazon. Enjoy! /Ed.brbr

345 – Europe’s Continental Divide

divide2

“America’s continental divide is known worldwide. However, nobody ever considers the presence of a European’s continental divide. While for America the subdivision seems more obvious (Atlantic and Pacific coasts, though nobody ever talks about the Pacific and Arctic divide!), in Europe the subdivision might be between the two largest water bodies bordering the subcontinent: Atlantic and Mediterranean Europe.”

“This physical (hence, objective) subdivision is interesting per se, since some countries considered Mediterranean actually are mostly looking towards the Atlantic (Portugal fully and Spain mostly), others considered central European actually lie fully within the Mediterranean basin, such as Hungary, or mostly (Slovenia, Austria). Even Germany has a big fraction of its area within the Mediterranean watershed!”

Thanks to Javier Garcia-Perez Gamarra for producing and sending in this map.

 

 

 

 

      

344 – Adventures in the Land of the Good Groove

goodgroove
“A while back, I found a record album in a thrift store here in NYC, and I just had to buy it,” writes Adam King. As a mapophile, I understand the categoric cartographic imperative at work here. The map in question is the front cover of Nile Rodgers’ 1983 solo album ‘Adventures in the Land of the Good Groove’. The name Nile Rodgers sounded vaguely familiar, but a little research turned up that this was due to my lack of musical knowledge, not Mr Rodgers’ lack of notoriety. He is influential in his own right as well as instrumental in the careers of many other world-class artists.

Nile Rodgers (b. 1952) started out as a session guitarist for the Sesame Street band, Harlem’s Apollo Theater house band and as a backing musician for Aretha Franklin and Parliament Funkadelic, among others. He became famous with the disco band Chic, best known for their hit ‘Le Freak’. A sample of Chic’s ‘Good Times’ was featured in the Sugarhill Gang’s ‘Rapper’s Delight’, which is often cited as the first hip-hop record. After Chic’s demise in 1983, Rodgers founded Sister Sledge (hit: ‘We Are Family’) and focused on producing (for Diana Ross, David Bowie, Madonna, Duran Duran, Laurie Anderson, INXS, and many others). More recently, Rodgers has taken up producing soundtracks for video games, such as the Halo series. He also wrote music for movie soundtracks, among which the song ‘Love Me Sexy’ for the Will Ferrell vehicle ‘Semi-Pro’.

For this Nile Rodgers solo album, the native New Yorker chose to have lower Manhattan represent the ‘Land of the Good Groove’. The map is made to look like an antique map of the 17th century or thereabouts, down to the ornamental ships and ‘monsters’ in the water. The use of (pig) Latin amplifies the old feel of the map, and is used to some humorous effect — Brooklyn is labelled Terra Incognita and New Jersey is Nova Joisea.

Lower Manhattan’s streets and avenues also get the fake Latin treatment, and are rendered as Twenty-Thirdium, Houstanus, Canalus and Via Broadicus. Other locales include Tribeccium, Terra Financicus and Villagius Easticus. Over on the West Side is the intriguing Mysterium. Is anybody familiar enough with Mr Rodgers’ oeuvre to know why?

Many thanks to Mr King for sending in this image of the album cover.
 

 

 

      

343 – To which Viktor the Spoils? A Tale of Two Ukraines

800px-ukraine_electionsmap_nov2004

Russia is no longer the hub of a worldwide Communist empire, nor the main ingredient of the Soviet Union; but the Kremlin still insists on wielding power in its old sphere of influence, an area of special interest to Russian foreign policy that it calls the Near Abroad.

The most recent – and, to Russia’s other neighbours, most intimidating – example of that insistence was this summer’s brief Russo-Georgian war, in which the Russian Army established final control over Georgia’s breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, eventually recognising their independence.

In the years immediately following the Soviet Union’s collapse, Russia was too weak to prevent what it qualifies as EU and NATO ‘encirclement’ (an old Russian geopolitical worry). But now, a resurgent Russia flush with oil money insists on checking what it sees as further encroachment by the EU and(especially) the US.

The term Near Abroad therefore excludes far-flung corners of the worldwide socialist experiment, such as Vietnam or Cuba (although Russia maintains good relations with old-school leftist regimes such as Cuba’s and new ones such as the Venezuela of Hugo Chavez).

It also seems to exclude what used to be called Eastern Europe, states that were independent before 1945 and are again now, almost all firmly lodged in western institutions such as the European Union and NATO (i.e. East Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, Rumania, Bulgaria; of the former Yugoslav states, only Slovenia is fully integrated).

An interesting twilight zone are the Baltic states (Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania), in NATO and the EU, but with considerable historical baggage vis-a-vis their giant neighbour to the east – they were independent between the World Wars, but part of the Soviet Union thereafter, and each harbours considerably large Russian minorities.

The Ukraine however, with 45 million inhabitants and about the size of France, is firmly within Russia’s Near Abroad. Its east is ethnically mainly Russian (Ukrainian nationalism tends to be a western thing), and Russia has strategic interests in the Crimea (Russian until 1954, when it was transferred to the Ukraine, but still home to Russia’s Black Sea Fleet). The country itself seems divided on whether it is an eastern outpost of the west, or a western outpost of the east.

The 2004 ‘Orange Revolution’, in which pro-western candidate Viktor Yushchenko successfully contested the rigged results of the presidential election that was ‘won’ by his pro-Russian opponent Viktor Yanukovich, seemed to place the Ukraine firmly in the western camp. Ukrainian politics has however seen several reversals of fortune since that time, proving that Ukraine is unique among the former Soviet republics: pro-western and pro-Russian sentiments are almost completely in balance.

That balance is not spread out evenly across the country. This map shows which of both Viktors was the victor in each of Ukraine’s regions in the (contested) November 2004 presidential elections. Each candidate has won in a remarkably contiguous area – Yushchenko winning the northwestern half of the country, Yanukovich the southeastern part. Both Moscow and the West are eager to have the populous, and potentially prosperous Ukraine in their camp. Will the fault line running through the Ukraine become the front line of a Second Cold War?

This election map was taken here from Wikimedia Commons.

 

 

      

Teapot with teabag holsters.

Today’s smart stuff is a teapot, but not just any old teapot. Firstly, it’s ceramic, which is claimed to be the best for good tea. Secondly, it has two smart containers or saddlebags where you can put your teabag(s) after dunking them in the hot water, thus avoiding messing up the tabletop or your saucer. The website claims that this particular teapot is based on a fifties design, but we’ve never seen anything like it before. It would be cool if one of our readers might remember the original… Anyway, the pot is microwave- and dishwasher proof and you can have one for USD 10:- on sale.brbr

Student Of The Month

ReformSchool

Christine Schmidt from Yellow Owl Workshop is Student Of The Month over at ReForm School and her exclusive collection original paintings for ReForm School are just super and very affordable … here you can find them all …