Journal

A chronicle of people, places, happenings, and creations we admire.

The New Yorker: 90 for 90

Venerable magazine and institution (whose subscription department once sent Marge Simpson a rejection letter, lol) celebrates its 90th birthday this year.  Various versions of the ever-present Eustace Tilley, that monocled aristocrat that has solidified the brand since 1925, is expressed by a host of new and returning cover artists for this issue.

http://www.newyorker.com

Follow @newyorker

Credits: Top to bottom from left: Kadir Nelson, Barry Blitt, Peter Mendelsund, Carter Goodrich, Roz Chast, Anita Kunz, Lorenzo Mattotti, Istvan Banyai, Christoph Niemann

Sustainable Sculpture: Enrico Marone Cinzano

Sustainability, honesty and purity are the core elements of the forward looking creations of Enrico Marone-Cinzano.  Created with up-cycled lumber from dismantled chalets around the Piemonte region of northern Italy, these pieces are deceptively sturdy and purposeful everyday sculptures for modern living.  Furniture and lighting alike are often framed with blackened industrial steel that has been discarded and repurposed.  The Swiss Pine (Pinus Cembra) is known to be rot and insect resistant, given its former life as part of chalet structures in many cases dating back to the 1700's.  The wood is finished with old-world techniques and non-toxic materials in keeping with the holistic and sustainable ethos that EMC stands for.  These and many other manufactured and bespoke pieces are available by request.

Follow @enricomc

Images ©Enrico Marone-Cinzano

How to be a Proper New Yorker: Tip No.1

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Talk to Strangers 

A chat on the crosswalk
or restroom line small talk
can turn your gray day ok

A cafe greeting
can become a wonderful meeting

Your day may even end
with a completely new friend

Don’t Talk to Strange Strangers

If you smell body odor from afar
if you see bare feet in the wrong season

if you can find an empty subway car
know that there’s a reason

FORMFREU.DE Blog

©Markus Haub / Thomas Sälzle

©Markus Haub / Thomas Sälzle

©Markus Haub / Thomas Sälzle

©Markus Haub / Thomas Sälzle

©Markus Haub / Thomas Sälzle

©Markus Haub / Thomas Sälzle

©Markus Haub / Thomas Sälzle

©Markus Haub / Thomas Sälzle

©Markus Haub / Thomas Sälzle

©Markus Haub / Thomas Sälzle

Formfreu.de has been a favorite photo blog of ours for a long time. Started by Markus Haub and Thomas Sälzle in 2007, they are able to consistently create evocative content on subjects from culture to automobiles.  Strong color and composition, emotion, irony and humor are immediately evident in their work.  

Be sure to set some time aside to check them out.  Careful, it can become addictive.

www.formfreu.de

Follow @formfreu_de 

Ice Hotel No.25, Jukkasjärvi, Sweden

This year marks the 25th iteration of the Ice Hotel in Jukkasjärvi, about 17km outside Kiruna, located in Lapland.  The venue is constructed by master ice carvers as a global vacation destination.  The Ice Hotel is a seasonal destination open typically between November and March, the coldest time of the year above the Arctic Circle; it is rebuilt annually as it is composed mainly of ice and snow or "snice" used to bond the solid blocks together.  Themed rooms and spaces are booked in advance for a unique and truly once in a lifetime experience.  While the hotel is geared to those adventurous travelers that can put up with the (sub-zero degree celsius) interior temperature, the rooms are supplied with furs, animal skins and extreme-cold sleeping bags.  It also has many amenities of a traditional hotel, including a chapel, the ICE BAR a sauna and a restaurant.  

Jonas Edvard x Nikolaj Steenfatt: Terroir Project

Danish designers Jonas Edvard and Nikolaj Steenfatt have collaborated to create a truly green fabrication process using seaweed.   Selecting only fresh seaweed from the Danish shoreline, they sort the material by color (dark to light) and hang dry it outdoors in the sun.  They then pulverize the material and create a moldable glue-like mixture, a natural property of the alginate found in brown seaweed. It can be shaped and molded and then kiln-dried. The material used to create these chairs and lighting can even be broken down and reconstituted to create new forms.  This is the very definition of sustainability.

http://jonasedvard.dk

http://steenfatt.dk

Images ©Edvard/Steenfatt

New Alpina Startimer Pilot Big Date Professional Pilot Watches 2015

"...Alpina has used its experience as official supplier of military and pilot watches to develop two new versions of its iconic Startimer Pilot line, a line that is widely appreciated by professional and private pilots alike..." -- Alpina press release, January 25, 2015

There is an inherent aversion to quartz watches in many collector circles, a snobbery (guilty as charged) in favor of mechanical watches, with the never-ending sub-debate over automatic vs. hand wound movements.  But here's a quartz I seriously recommend you take a closer look at should you get the chance.

Alpina may be an otherwise lesser known brand to the US market, but not to watch cognizenti. Often overlooked for more desirable mechanical manufacturers like Rolex, Girard Peregaux or IWC, Alpina has been quietly creating superior products for over 6 generations.  The new Startimer Pilot Big Date Series brings forth further elegance to the sometimes intimidating 'Big Pilot' form factor.

The new series is an updated interpretation of the classic 'Big Pilot' design.  The Startimer Pilot "Small Seconds" (REF. AL-280N4S6 / AL-280N4S6B) features hours, minutes, big date and small seconds overlay and the Startimer Pilot "Chronograph Big Date" (REF. AL-372BS4S6 / AL-372BS4S6Bwith hours, minutes, seconds, big date, and 1/10th seconds chronograph counters.  Both versions have handsome stainless steel 44mm cases and are water-resistant to 100m (330 feet).

Images ©Alpina Watch International S.A., All Rights Reserved