home

.

Femtalks Blog

Practical Tips For Women and More

Entries Comments



Category: home & garden

house home improvement, garden, landscaping, backyard, interior renovation, design, do it yourself, DIY, projects

Fun product on table top for entertaining: ‘The Chin Family’ for Alessi

7 July, 2008 (14:25) | design, event planning & entertaining, home & garden | By: editor

chin2

Finally something cute for the table top! “The Chin Family” Good thing especially when it comes to entertaining guests at home. Thanks to Stefano Giovannoni who designed this for Alessi in collaboration with the National Palace Museum of Taiwan. More info visit here.

Product’s description and history background from alessi’s website:

The National Palace Museum of Taiwan can be considered the Louvre of the Orient for the richness and scope of its collections of antiquities, painting, calligraphy, objets d’art, books and documents. Its holdings originate from the imperial collections of the Ch’ing dynasty, and the earlier Sung, Yuan and Ming dynasties, and constitute the central core of Chinese culture and art.

Its history is a tumultuous one. At the time of the founding of the Chinese Republic, the collections were stored in the inner court of the northern sector of the Prohibited City, from where they were moved by the republican government to the outer court in 1917. The early years of the Republic were rife with conflicts between various warlords. In 1924, Feng Yuhsiang occupied Beijing, compelling the last emperor, P’u-i, to leave the Prohibited City and constituted the Committee for the Disposition of the Ch’ing Imperial Possessions, thereby stanching further losses of works from the collection.

The Palace Museum was officially inaugurated on October 10, 1925 in Beijing and its collections were opened to the public. The museum consisted then in just two departments - Antiquities and Books. In 1928 the Nationalist army entered Beijing and put I P’ei-chi in charge of the museum and formally converted it into a governmental institution. This period, considered the golden age of the museum in China, exhibition activities grew significantly, and by 1936 hundreds of books had been published on the museum’s holdings. In 1931, following the turmoil in northern China, the Nationalist government decided to evacuate the collections to Shanghai, after which they were again moved to specially constructed storage facilities at the Taoist monastery of Ch’ao-t’ien-kung in Nanking. Following the Marco Polo Bridge incident of 1937 the collections were divided between Pa-hsien in Szechwan and Nanking, then after the fall of Shanghai were evacuated to various destinations, the final one being Lo-shan in the Szechwan province. During the Sino-Japanese War, the museum limited itself toprotecting the collections, which remained crated and packed, though, despite the difficulties, a few exhibitions were held. After the Japanese defeat in August 1945, the Palace Museum reassembled the collection from the storage sites in Pa-hsien, O-mei and Lo-shan, sending all of them to Nanking.

In the autumn of 1948, after bitter fighting between the Nationalist and Communist armies, it was decided to ship the most precious objects to Taiwan, where work was begun cataloguing the collections and resuming the practice of exchange with other international museums. New museum facilities were completed in 1965 in a suburb of Taipei, and since then the museum has undergone numerous expansions. The museum’s activities expanded as well, incorporating teaching, research, publishing and collaborations with other international institutions. The complete inventory of the collections, which comprise the finest pieces of fine art and applied art in China’s long history, was completed in 1991.

The collaboration between Alessi and the NPM of Taiwan grew out of the museum’s wish to open itself yet further to the international scene, and to encourage greaterawareness of Chinese history and culture in the West. We asked Stefano Giovannoni to imagine and design a sort of mascot for the new Museum of the 21st Century. From this was born “The Chin Family” series for the “A di Alessi” catalogue: a group of characters, each of whom represents a specific household function. “Mr. Chin” is also a new chapter in the ludic design language that characterises Stefano’s work: instead of the usual method of casting a single piece of plastic from a single injection, the character-objects are made with separate moulds (head, hat, body, foot, pompom) which are then assembled like wooden soldiers or porcelain dolls, thereby giving greater articulation to the typical wit and refinement of Giovannoni’s decorations of the clothes, which are hand-painted.

interested in these products? you can grab for yourself here.

link1(hwtm.com), link2(alessi.com).

chin1

chin3new

chin4

Trendy chemical tube glass vase and bubble glass vase

6 July, 2008 (15:21) | design, home & garden, shopping | By: editor

CB2 a new and trendier store line from Crate and barrel aim toward younger generation market. The store carries interesting accessories for home such as these bubble glass vases and tube vases. These are cute! CB2 is coming to San Francisco soon, it will open to public in July 31st 2008 - I can’t wait to see it. For now if you want to find more item you can browse online at CB2.com.

Tip: Hacking Bevmo.com to buy award-winning wines on the cheap

31 May, 2008 (05:01) | SF Bay Area [local], home & garden, shopping, travel & leisure | By: editor

bevmo-buy-gold-red-wine-cheap-price

I am an oenophile, and enjoy drinking red wines and of course, always enjoy shopping and tasting new wines.

I won’t say that I have a very sophisticated palate in tasting red wine, but I generally find that award-winning wines that have competed in blind tasting competitions would give me some indicator to the quality of the wine.

I found this trick or hack for you to list the Gold Medal wines in BevMo (bookmark this link) and you will be able to sort the wines:

Visit Bevmo here .

  • Gold medal wines
  • Sort the price from Low to High
  • And… now you can get the wine for the best value (so to speak).

FYI, here in San Francisco Bay Area, I have a few wine stores that I enjoy shopping at:

Hope this helps. Let me know if you have other findings to share with other oenophiles!

Disclosure: I love new world wines (Napa Valley) better than old world wines.

Recycled Denim (Ultra Touch) - friendly sustainable building material

24 May, 2008 (16:01) | home & garden | By: editor

Thanks to Nick for his comment on my last post in trying to embrace and promote sustainable building development.

He gave a useful video link on this as an outreach educational effort. I watched the video and think it’s very useful to come to know about our living environment and how we are to be able to take parts in it in a friendly, non-toxic, non-harmful kind of way.

Victor Insulation - an AllTech environmental resource

Other Interesting Facts about Ladybugs

21 May, 2008 (16:02) | home & garden | By: editor

ladybug IMG 3446

When I think of ladybugs, they’re not only cute but very colorful to me especially against the green background be it leave or lawn. I’ve heard that ladybugs attracted to light colors and if you don’t really like ladybugs you can use dry white sage, this is sort of the natural cheap and cheery way for ladybug repellent.

More interesting facts on ladybug:

  • In the past, doctors would mash ladybugs and put them in your mouth to cure a toothache
  • In Switzerland, ladybugs are called “good God’s little fairy.”
  • You can fit 80,000 ladybugs into a gallon jug
  • Male ladybugs are smaller than female ladybugs
  • Ladybugs are the official state insect of Delaware, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Ohio and Tennessee
  • They can live for as many as three years
  • A ladybug beats its wings 85 times per second when it flies
  • Their spots fade as they get older
  • The spotted wing covers on ladybugs are made from a material called chitin, the same as our fingernails
  • Link

    Organic Pest Control - Live Lady Bugs

    21 May, 2008 (15:48) | home & garden | By: editor

    Do you know that those small lady bugs can help you with your garden? Maybe we all should considering to do pests control in an organic way not just because we know exposure to pesticides has been linked to a long list of diseases and health problem for us human (the center of disease control has documented cases of farmworker illnes after exposure to pesticides) but it is also to protect our environment including air, water, soil, plants, animals, etc around us, for our earth and our offsprings =)

    IMG 3447 IMG 3442

    I found this at Lowe’s garden center: “LADIES IN RED” and here’s the writing at the back of the package

    For control of
    Aphids, Spider mites, Thrips, White Fly and other harmful plant pests on your roses, trees, shrubs and flowers in your garden and greenhouse. Adult ladybugs can consume up to 80 aphids or plant pests per day

    Instructions
    Release ladybugs in the evening out of direct sunlight, after the area has been watered. Clip the corner of the mesh bag and sprinkle ladies out onto your plants, or shrubs. For trees you can tack the mesh bag to the trunk and let the ladies crawl up the tree.

    Link

    Steel not necessary a cold thing to spice up your home & garden

    19 May, 2008 (13:29) | event planning & entertaining, home & garden | By: editor

    I tend to stay away from steel cuz it has that sort of new-age, industrial look and cold feeling for home and backyard decor. But actually it’s not that bad, it has that minimalism and sleek design approach and some actually still pretty homey like the steel butterfly, the bird-feeder and especially the floating votives bubble glass clear I’m lovin it =) check out why you should steeling your home.

    The question is, why wouldn’t you want to add some metal to your petals and do a little “hardscaping” before the season’s in full swing and you haven’t the time, nor as many choices, to pepper your patio with the pretty and the practical (not always mutually exclusive, as you shall soon see!):

    A dining set perfect for tete-a-tetes. A contemporary communal fire pit. Sophisticated seating for your guests. Whimsical garden decorations, including floating votives and bilevel bird feeders, magnificent mobiles and I’ve-died-and-gone-to-Coral-Gables sculpture.

    Some of the pieces mentioned are made from stainless steel that just won’t rust. (By the most canny of coincidences, I just discovered how rust-on-stainless is chemically impossible in a display next to the Deco darling of a choo-choo, the California Zephyr, at the Museum of Science and Industry.) Others are designed in regular steel, the most recycled metal EVER. Did you know that every year, North Americans recycle more steel (a lot of its in the 100 million steel cans Americans use every day) than aluminum, plastic, glass and paper combined? And speaking of aluminum, did you know that it is not only durable, but highly sustainable? Yes! Over two-thirds of all the aluminum ever produced is in use today, including the half of all aluminum cans [113,204 a minute—you do the math!] that are recycled. Learn much more at earth911.org

    source (thanks Cindy)

    Go green - recycled denim as insulation material

    19 May, 2008 (12:40) | home & garden | By: editor

    denim insulationgrenier denim

    I never know about the fact that you can make your house wear jeans =) or what commonly refer to as recycled denim for insulation purposes. Isn’t it just great to know you can wear jeans and after all that wear and tear your jeans can become a green insulation for your house.

    There are now many green types of insulation available. Two popular types of green insulation are cellulose insulation, which is made from recycled paper, and denim insulation, which is made from recycled jeans.

    “Entourage” star Adrian Grenier used UltraTouch denim insulation in his Brooklyn brownstone.

    link1, link2