Friday, August 28, 2009

Dream Alchemy Laboratory


Dreams cam be build by many combinations of substances in every human brain, or more, dreams can take place in other living thing. A laboratory can underline this by experiments, but something magical must be present for a dream to became alive. In this way, in Dream Alchemy Laboratory i wanted to combine the idea of substances and mixtures (in life) that create a dream, but also, the atmosphere in this "laboratory" is somehow magical, somewhere between melancholy and desire. A "peaceful tension" lies on the instruments, putting life into the cold experiment design. More over, the lab coud be just an interface, to human dreams that take place in the "peaceful tension" of this Dream Alchemy Laboratory.


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Test Embed Design

This page shows how the "embed image" option we created works in a html page. This option can be found in posts that contain images we allow to be shared, as here, in the end of the post. An example of this option can be found here .
In this way you can include images from this blog on your site, or on your blog posts, using the capabilities of "enlarge image" and without working to put credits and so on (because this are already written). Just copy and paste the code as provided here It is very similar to the "embed" used by Youtube, but provided in 2 designs, one wich lets you embed the image itself + the credits for the image (jpeg + link) and the second one (Design 2) is a flash display of the image. This is an example of how the code works after putting it in your html page code. First is the Design 1 and second is the Design 2.


Design 1
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Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Dream more

dare more 3D sunlight bulb seaside panorama dream more
Dare to dream more... even if you are a light bulb, you have something from the sun..... :)

Neurons and Search

search neurons 3D art render hands abstract
Searching for... In 3D art ! :)

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Click "copy to clipboard" button, and then use "paste" in your page, in the "edit html" mode. Enjoy! See here how images will appear in your site or blog. We made a test for you!
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Dream Fairy

3D head portrait fantasy dream fairy woman

Simple Dream Fairy. Generally a fairy is represented with wings and a ray of glowing little sparks. I think a fairy has to be somehow different from the Disney representations... 3D head portrait fantasy dream fairy womanbecause a fairy has to do serious work! :)

From the Past



Image name: Echoes of the past
The main idea was to create an image, somewhere between a movie poster and a game screen shot. I used the idea of a phantom in a slidely different way, this meaning that she has the classic "white blur", but the foggy representation doesn't obscure the feminine characteristics. The beautiful body is constructed in opposite with the hair and even with the face, and also, the hair and her power - the fire - are constructed in different directions. This could be interpreted in many ways ... you choose :) I find interesting to associate the image of a foggy ghost (white, immaterial) with the fire (red, immaterial), both volatile and mobile. The shadow in the right down corner is in contrast with the main character, but underlines somehow the idea of the image. Enjoy it! :) echoes of the past foggy woman body fire

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

The "Tuzla" Baccarat Crystal Chandelier

by Lauren Stewart-Ebert


This spectacular Baccarat crystal chandelier was truly one of the highlights (no pun intended...) of Marc-Arthur Kohn's annual summer auction in Cannes, France earlier this month.

Originally designed for the 1855 Exposition Universelle held on the Champs-Elysées, this piece has been recreated for palaces around the world, including those of the Sultan of Turkey and the Shah of Persia.

Nearly 12 feet in height and 8 1/2 feet in diameter, it unabashedly counts over 9000 crystals, 157 lights and weighs over 1,400 pounds! This stunning piece was estimated to sell for $850,000 to $1.1 million.

Although the original took a mere six days to assemble prior to the auction, three years is the expected wait for a newly created version.

Baccarat chandeliers adorn many of the finest palaces around the world...

A Baccarat crystal chandelier hangs in the grand staircase of the Dolmabahçe Palace.

The Dolmabahçe Palace in Istanbul, Turkey has the world's largest collection of Baccarat crystal chandeliers and features Baccarat crystal banisters on one of its many grand staircases.

Detail of the Dolmabahçe chandelier.

A pair of Baccarat crystal chandeliers hang in the Jai Vilas Palace

The Jai Vilas Palace in Gwalior, India houses two of the world's largest Baccarat crystal chandeliers, weighing over three tons each.

The dazzling effect these chandeliers have on the rooms they embellish makes it easy to understand why, after 245 years, Baccarat has earned (and kept) its reputation as the "Crystal of Kings".

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Science & Brain Wallpapers

More Neuroscience, Brain, Neurology Wallpapers and Power Point Templates presentations you can find on the best neuroscience and neurology blog !

Enjoy it! If you are using this on other sites, please link back! Thanks!

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Tuesday, August 11, 2009

La Vie En Rose...Villa Ephrussi de Rothschild

By Cynthia Fray



I’ll never forget my first visit to St. Jean Cap Ferrat. I remember it had an almost ethereal feel to it, most likely due to the dizzying effect of the cliffs that precipitously meet the edges of the Moyenne Corniche, the road we took from Nice.

Indeed, I was quite taken with the infinite beauty offered by the views that surprise you as you round the corners en route to the village. My husband (and native Niçois), Austin antiques dealer Jean-Marc Fray, said he wanted to show me one of his favorite villas in the area. He said it contained some great antiques I might like to see. Parking is rare in Cap Ferrat so we parked along one of the neighborhood streets and made our way up a hill to the villa entrance. And there I gasped. Never in my wildest dreams would I have imagined such a palace hidden there amongst the bougainvillea and the cypress trees, gardens sprawling as far as the eyes could see, with a view over the Bay of Villefranche on one side and the Bay of Beaulieu on the other.

I was stunned. The interior was just as opulent as the exterior. As I made my way through its rooms and walked the gardens of this architectural “folly”, I discovered the remarkable woman behind it all – Baroness Béatrice Ephrussi de Rothschild – an eccentric indeed, with a passion for art and antiques, travel and nature, and all things pink...


The Louis XV Salon

Follies on the Riviera
In the late 19th century, at the onset of the Belle Epoque, the French Riviera was the winter destination for Europe’s international elite. Queen Victoria, the Czar of Russia, the King of Bavaria, the prince of tea Thomas Lipton, and a certain Monsieur Singer (of sewing machine fame) were familiar faces in the area. Between rounds of clay pigeon shooting and roulette at the Casino in Monte Carlo, these affluent travelers moved about on board their private yachts, anchoring in the Bay of Villefranche- Sur-Mer.

In 1907, Belgian King Leopold II, who owned most of Cap Ferrat at the time, decided to expand his domain but was cut short by a Parisian Baroness – Mme Béatrice Ephrussi de Rothschild – who had just purchased seven hectares of land on the narrowest strip of the isthmus. She had fallen in love with the area after visiting her husband’s cousin, Theodore Reinach, who was building a Grecian-style villa in Beaulieu-Sur-Mer (Villa Kerylos). She decided to build a summer palace inspired by the Italian Renaissance.

From that moment on, enormous projects were put into motion, such as leveling the rocky piece of land and bringing in loads of water and dirt for nine different gardens. Two architects undertook the job: Giraud (of the Petit Palais) and Nenot (of the new Sorbonne). Eight more architects would come and go before the project was finally completed in 1912. The result was ostentatious, but grand nevertheless—a “temple of refinement.”


The Louis XV Salon

An Eccentric Rose
Béatrice de Rothschild, daughter of Baron Alfred de Rothschild (a Regent of the Banque de France), was born in 1864 and raised at the Chateau de Ferrières (one of the most important chateaux of the 19th century, about 30 kilometers east of Paris). At the age of 19 she married Baron Maurice Ephrussi, a banker, art collector, and fifteen years her senior.

The Baroness was a perfectionist who was committed to the success of her imperious villa designs. She had life size canvases painted of the plans and traveled extensively around the globe in search of furniture and art. She ordered trainloads of antiques and rare objects, which she sorted through personally right on the station platforms of Beaulieu. She was passionate about travel, games, art, and pastels. She covered the walls of one of the palace rooms with a rare ensemble of sketches and drafts by Fragonard, others with paintings and sketches by Boucher, polychrome ceramics from Castelli, and terra cotta by Clodion. She had royal taste, demonstrated by a game table created by Dubois for Marie Antoinette—a piece whose historic value did not escape her savvy collector’s eye.

The Baroness lived a life of eccentricity and dressed the part. Pink was her favorite color and she would greet suppliers dressed entirely in pink from the top of her silk parasol down to the tip of her boots; even her crocodile handbag was pink. The villa was built in rose pink and every room had to be pink – even her villa in Monte Carlo was called “Rose de France.” She invited her friends to extravagant receptions reminiscent of Marie Antoinette, transforming her house into an exotic zoo, and haven for her favorite companions: parakeets, monkeys, mongooses, and of course, pink flamingos.


The Baroness' Bedroom

Admiral Béatrice
Even the landscape of her newfound Eden was an inspiration to the Baroness. True to her love for travel and in particular to cruising, she decided to give her gardens the shape of a ship’s bow, from which she could contemplate the sea on either side, and where, from her loggia, she could observe her team of more than 30 gardeners, coiffed in French Navy berets with red pompons. She even went so far as to name the villa “Ile de France,” in memory of a cruise taken aboard a ship of the same name.

Nine magnificent themed gardens would take its visitors for a whimsical trip around the world. The French, Florentine, Spanish, Exotic, Stone, Japanese, Provençal, Rose, and Sèvres gardens were individual works of art designed by the most esteemed landscape artists from Europe and the United States (Harold Peto and Achille Duchen, among others). It took seven years to complete.

The French Garden stands above all the other gardens, both literally by virtue of its location, and figuratively by its size and extravagance. Stretching out directly in front of the Villa, it ends with waterfalls and a Temple of Love—a magnificent view from the building. A horseshoe shaped stairway takes you to the Florentine Garden, overhanging the Mediterranean Sea, with cypress lined alleys and white marble statues. The Spanish Garden follows inspired by the gardens of Andalusia, with its grotto, its vine-covered pergola, pink marble colonnades, and tiled fountains. The Baroness loved bas-reliefs and sculptures and collected many during her travels. The sheer size of these objects prohibited their entry into the villa, so the Stone Garden was created to harbor these treasures. She was also seduced by the oriental pavilion at the Exposition Universelle and sent an emissary to Japan to develop plans for the Japanese Garden, a zen-like garden filled with urns, pagodas, a Japanese bridge, and fountain protected by bamboo plants. The Exotic Garden blossomed with a wonderful collection of cacti, agave, and other succulent plants many of which come from cuttings from the exotic garden in Monaco.

Finally, the Rose Garden, home of Béatrice’s favorite flower - with all its thorns and pink petals - filled the sea air with its heavenly fragrance. The beautiful Provençal Garden is located at the eastern edge of the property and the Sèvres Garden is situated in front of the tearoom.


The Baroness' Bedroom

Sophistication, Splendor, and Monkeys Too
Although the villa was decorated with great works of art and fine antiques, the atmosphere within was homey and warm. The splendor and sophistication of its furnishings, testimony to the Baroness’ taste for art and travel, never undermined the inherent coziness of the villa, particularly in the Baroness’ private quarters. The Louis XV salon that opens up to the gardens was filled with furniture from Mme de Pompadour’s era, but personal objects placed here and there remind visitors of the well-traveled woman who arranged it all. Her boudoir was equally tasteful, adorned with 18th century boiserie from the Hotel Crillon, and a floor rug from the Savonnerie of the Royal Chapel in Versailles.

She was an avid collector of porcelain and dedicated an entire room to her collections from Sèvres and Vincennes, royal manufacturers founded by Louis XVI. She had a particular fondness for the 18th century as the Tapestry Room attests with its Jacobean furniture upholstered in tapestries from Beauvais. The Monkey Room, at once an appreciation for the 17th century and an indication of her playful side, is richly decorated with porcelain monkeys by Meissen, and boiseries by Jean-Baptiste Huet. A true homage to these endearing animals she loved so much.

As devoted as she was to every aspect of this architectural feat, Baroness Ephrussi de Rothschild never returned to the villa after the death of her husband in 1916, preferring her residence in Monte Carlo. She died at the age of 70 in 1934, bequeathing her property to the Académie des Beaux-Arts of the Institut de France with specific instructions to transform her villa into a museum that would, “retain the feeling of a salon.” A collector’s residence, situated on an idyllic site, showcasing remarkable works of art with spectacular gardens that take us around the world, this place is testimony to art and beauty, accessible by all—just exactly as Béatrice requested.

Every visitor today is her guest.


The French Garden

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Madeleine Vionnet: A Fashion Icon Remembered

by Lauren Stewart-Ebert


Madeleine Vionnet led a quiet, unassuming life. She was one of the most important designers of the 1920's and 1930's, and her work is currently on display in the Museum of Decorative Arts in Paris. 

Born in Loiret, France in 1876, she began working as an apprentice seamstress at age 12. She refined her talents while working as head seamstress for the house of Callot Soeurs and later as the head of Jacques Doucet's maison de couture.

A Vionnet creation from the 1920's.

Vionnet rejected the corseted Belle Epoque gowns which were standard women's fashion at the time. Her designs centered around fluid, natural forms, inspired by Isadora Duncan and Loïe Fuller. She is credited with reinventing the bias cut, which allowed greater elasticity and flow.

A postcard featuring the logo for Vionnet's fashion house, designed by Thayaht in 1919.

Sketches for Vionnet's logo by Thayaht.

In 1912, Maison Vionnet was established. Although the outbreak of World War I and a lack of funds made for a difficult beginning, her determination and skill would prevail. By 1926, her staff counted over 1,200 employees.

Evening gown in pale pink lamé and black silk lace appliquéd with black silk velvet, 1939.

Evening gown from the spring/summer 1938 collection.

Evening gown in lamé and ivory silk net, 1938.

Maison Vionnet survived the stock market crash of 1929 and the labour strikes of 1936 only to be closed ten years later as World War II began. Though she was retiring from the fashion world, Vionnet had the foresight to preserve her files, which she donated to the Union Francaise des Arts du Costume (UFAC) in 1952.

Evening gown in silk tulle, panne velvet and horsehair with a silver lamé underdress and Lesage embroidery, 1938.

A 1921 sketch of a coat by Madeleine Vionnet.

Madeleine Vionnet passed away in 1975, but Maison Vionnet lives on. The label was purchased in February of this year by an Italian businessman and will be headed by former Prada womenswear designer Rodolfo Paglialunga.

A dress from the 2010 resort collection, designed by Rodolfo Paglialunga.