Saturday, June 26, 2010

Places We Love...


Les Demoiselles Dupuy
People always ask us where and what we eat while we’re traveling across France, so we thought we share one of our favorite restaurants which we never fail to hit (often more than once!) during our buying trips. We’ve been eating seafood and fresh fish at this place for a decade. Our mouths start salivating like Pavlov dogs as soon as we see the sign for SETE on the autoroute!

Owner Gilles Dupuy is a talented architect and artist (his paintings hang throughout the restaurant) and he and his crew (including renowned oyster shucker César shown above at right) are always there to greet us so it really feels like going home.

Leslie and chef Demoiselle de cuisine.


Vintage oyster plates hang overhead...


One word to describe the food: FRESH. Everything is fresh, fresh, fresh, often caught within just a few hours of serving and the ambiance is straight out of a Hemingway novel - very old salt, broken in and worn (in a good way), with a grotto-esque interior and nautical décor overlooking the port of Sete. You you can watch the fishing boats go by while you eat and listen to the seagulls calling for a table scrap. The terrasse outside is a “zone pietone” (no cars) so far from the noise and crowds of the more touristy areas.

 Jean-Noel is so happy to have arrived!

 Jean-Marc too... the Picpoul is nice and crisp!

The raw bar, especially the oysters and the sea urchins (Jean-Marc’s favorite), are sublime of course, but the Demoiselles do all kinds of fish and seafood a la plancha (the calamari is to die for) or prepared in all sorts of different ways.

Sea urchins...

Oysters gratinées...

Mussels gratinées...

Squid a la plancha...

One of the talented Demoiselles in the kitchen...

Les Demoiselles Dupuy offers a truly authentic Setois experience. We're heading to France next week for more buying, and more plates of fruits de mer - our tastebuds are rapt in anticipation!

Hail César!




Les Demoiselles Dupuy
4 quai Maximin Licciardi
34200 SÈTE - FRANCE
(33) 04 67 74 03 46

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Poster Design Template



This are some (poster design) templates that I made for free for a literary club meeting , in Bucharest - the prose club is called "The shaping of ideas" (not the exact translation from Romanian) and it is conducted by the well known writer C. Stan.

free poster templates, modern artfree poster templates, modern artfree poster templates, modern artfree poster templates, modern artfree poster templates, modern artfree poster templates, modern art


free poster templates, modern art

free poster design templates for a literary meeting in Bucharest

You can also visit the images on Deviantart 3D art and design Portofolio

or visit some poster design templates

Poster design template 1 on deviantart 

Poster design template 2 on deviantart

Other examples of poster design  on - scientific event poster or some brain science desktop wallpapers 

Book Cover Design V

Book cover design I & II
Poster Design and mini conference I


Poster Design for a mini conference II


Poster Graphic Design Gallery by MyNorthShadow
poster graphic design gallery
More on graphic design

Monday, June 21, 2010


The History of Perfume


Text and photos courtesy Parfumerie Fragonard

An “industry” as old as mankind
The word "perfume" is derived from the Latin per (through) and fumare (to smoke) because, long before the use of modern techniques, the first perfumes were obtained by burning woods, resins and other complex mixtures. Humans have always been exposed to smells. We can suppose that it was around a fire that our earliest ancestors discovered what smells they could produce by throwing herbs, leaves or twigs of different plant species into the flames. The use of perfume is contemporary, therefore, with the development of the first towns and its purpose was mainly religious, to communicate with the gods and enable the dead to join the hereafter, particularly for the Egyptians.


Egypt: the ancient center of perfume
Of all the ancient civilizations, Egypt has left the greatest mark on the history of perfume. By the end of the Roman Empire, with Rome’s political and economic powers waning, Alexandria, with its guilds of renowned perfumers and alchemists, played a key role in the world of perfume. While it is incorrect to state that the ancient Egyptians used perfume solely for religious and funeral rites, perfume was an essential feature of these mystical ceremonies.


The Egyptians never restricted their use of perfume to purely religious purposes. Although some perfumes were reserved for ritual use, others were used in daily life for healing, adornment and the improvement of home life.


Greece: the beginnings of hygiene and the cult of the body
Egypt and the East passed on their knowledge of perfume to the Greeks via the maritime trade routes of the Cretans and Phoenicians. The Greeks imported the necessary raw materials from Africa and the East through their trading posts dotted around the Mediterranean, eventually becoming experts in preparing perfumed products.

As with the Ancient Egyptians, perfume remained sacred to the Ancient Greeks. Greek mythology even describes the origins of particular fragrances as disputes amongst the Gods.
However, the Greek’s interest in perfume also included the realm of medicine and personal hygiene. The cult of the body, both male and female, which developed in Ancient Greece, is inextricably intertwined with the world of perfume.

The Middle Ages and barbarian influences
In just over a millennium, Rome grew from a small farming village to the undisputed world capital. As Rome’s power and influence grew, its morals were also radically altered. The Republic managed to maintain a certain austerity for a while but eventually yielded to luxury with the discovery of oriental refinement and perfumes.

Public baths attracted a large number of Romans and body care was practiced throughout the rich classes of Ancient Rome. Scents, room perfumes, oils and balms for skin and hair, and spicy aromas from refined dishes were all important parts of Roman life. This profusion in fragrance use caused the moralists of the period to condemn the excessive use of perfume.

From The Renaissance to The Enlightenment
By the end of the 14th century, liquid perfumes were replacing solid ones. Scented waters and tinctures were sought after for their medicinal values.


Bathing was considered to be dangerous and unhealthy, and consequently aristocrats used increasing amounts of perfume to conceal the embarrassing odors of their ill-washed bodies. Strong, heady perfumes, such as amber, musk, jasmine and tuberose, persistent enough to cover-up bad odors were en vogue. Similarly, the fragrance used in perfumed gloves brought to France by Queen Catherine de' Medici from her native Tuscany masked the unpleasant smell of poorly tanned leather.

The association of leather and perfume was so strong that in 1656 the Corporation of Glovemakers and Perfumers was formed in France. Under Louis XIV, nicknamed “sweetest smelling king of all”, this guild was granted the monopoly of perfume distribution, which had previously belonged to apothecaries and druggists.


Strong demand for perfumed products, mainly imported from Italy, encouraged France to develop its own perfume industry. The Grasse region, in the south of France, which enjoyed a favorable climate and local support from the Montpellier faculty of pharmacy, began to specialize in both aromatic raw materials and the actual production of perfume.

The age of Enlightenment saw a major expansion in perfumery products. Scented waters gave way to toilet vinegars and bathing gradually came back into favor. As flasks adapted to these new products, vinaigrettes, handy recipients for sweet-scented vinegars, were produced.

The French court was the undisputed model of refinement and elegance throughout Europe and eventually France became the home of the greatest perfume makers and most innovative perfumes. While Paris was the capital of trade in perfumed products, the town of Grasse, with its extensive fields of jasmine and rose, became the capital of production.


It was during this period that Grasse began to acquire its worldwide reputation for the diversity and quality of its production.

The beginnings of modern perfumery

It was in the 19th century that perfume making, and industry in general, was completely revolutionized.


The emergence of modern chemistry, gradual democratization, the rise of an industrial middle class, and a flood of scientific and technical discoveries all caused a complete structural change in the skills and products of the perfume trade.

Advances in organic chemistry produced synthetic compounds that reproduced smells of the rarest essences. Both the glove maker-perfumer and the alchemist gave way to the contemporary perfumer- a professional well versed in all the scientific and technical possibilities available. During this period, with the predominance of bourgeois taste based on moral values such as reason and decency, society turned towards more delicate perfumes. Perfume was consumed in the form of perfumed bath salts, fragranced sachets for linen cupboards and incense pastilles. The atomizer, invented in 1870 by the writer Brillat-Savarin, made it simpler to use spirit-based products.

In the 20th century, perfume became increasingly luxurious and is still strongly associated with other artistic endeavours. Perfume was used and desired not only for its fragrance but also to highlight the attractiveness of the wearer.

The names evoke far-away places (Mitsouko, Shalimar, Cuir de Russie), emotions (Scandale, Je reviens, L’Heure bleue) and nature (Vent vert, Fleurs de rocaille).


Crystal-makers, like Lalique and Baccarat, devoted their talents to designing elegant perfume bottles and the advertising industry promoted new perfumes. Leading fashion designers – following Paul Poiret, the first to associate a perfume (Les Parfums de Rosine) with a line of women’s clothes – gradually moved into the secret specialised world of perfumery. In 1925, Ernest Beaux created the most mythical designer perfume ever, Chanel N°5. Lanvin, Rochas, Patou, Ricci, Balmain and Dior, soon joined this expanding business that linked designer clothes with designer fragrances. In the 1950s, men’s fragrances began to gain popularity.

Today, marketing is key to every form of creation in perfumery. “Noses”, the creative artists, have to compose perfumes within the strict framework of particular fashions and detailed specifications. Hundreds of new perfumes are launched each year, but very few are able to survive beyond their first year.

While this massive expansion and industrialization of the perfume industry continues, today, there are still artisan perfume makers who offer original high-quality creations designed and produced in the traditions of the great perfume houses of the past.


The House of Fragonard
 - a story of perfume making…


Shortly before World War I, Eugène Fuchs, an entrepreneur at heart seduced by the magic of perfume, decided to set up his own perfumery based on the novel concept of selling perfumery products directly to tourists who were beginning to discover the charms of the French Rivera. Parfumerie Fragonard was opened in 1926. Eugène Fuchs chose to name it after the famous Grasse-born painter, Jean-Honoré Fragonard (1732-1806), as a tribute to both the town of Grasse and to the refinement of 18th-century arts. Similarly, the choice of name expressed his desire to run his business in accordance with traditions.

This spirit has been loyally perpetuated by the three succeeding generations who have run and are still running the company with production plants and retail outlets in Grasse, Eze and Paris, France.

It was under the tenure of Jean-Francois Costa that the Parfumerie Fragonard experienced rapid growth and modernization. As an avid art collector, he acquired a large and unique collection of antique perfume related items that has both enriched the House of Fragonard and given the town of Grasse a new cultural dimension.

Today, Jean-François Costa's daughters, Agnès and Françoise preside over the perfumery, and are as concerned as the preceding generations with continuing to build the company while adapting it to current market needs and desires.


Fragonard Home Scents

Jean-Marc Fray French Antiques now offers Fragonard scented candles, and home fragrances imported from Grasse, France.
Candles
If the white biscuit porcelaine pot blends beautifully with your interior décor, it serves further to highlight a soft, pervading fragrance. These candles bring a soft, convivial atmosphere to your house. Available in 12 fragrances: Sandalwood, Ylang-ylang, White Flowers, Cinnamon/Orange, Orange blossom, Vineyard Peach, Vanilla, Brioche, Cappuccino, Date & honey and Bientôt minuit. $42.


Home fragrances
They partner your interior decoration, highlighting its character and bringing you a most enjoyable sensation of harmony. These elegant fragrances come in equally attractive glass spray bottles, so decorative and traditional. Available in two scents: Eau d’oreiller and Chambre d’Amis $53.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

3d train

3D trains

Unique 3D trains, by day and night. Hope you like it! A future locomotive with a great level of detail. 3D art - train.

3D trainbest 3d train render


Thursday, June 17, 2010

Fete de la Musique – June 21, 2010

A French tradition, a world-wide success, a music celebration!



Every year, on the day of the summer solstice, the people of France descend into the streets by the thousands for an all-night celebration of music. Created in 1982 with the help of French Minister of Culture, Jacques Lang, to promote music of all genres, accessible by all and performed in the streets, the “Fete de la Musique” has become an international phenomenon. The title of the event is a play on words that became its very own slogan - “Fete de la Musique” or Festival of Music, sounds like “faites de la musique” which means simply, “make music”.

Hundreds of musicians gather in the streets, bars, and cafes all over France, giving free performances of everything from jazz, rock, hip-hop to electronic and world music. If you happen to be in France on June 21st, you won’t miss this spirited event. The mood is fun and light and there’s music in the air at every corner - what better way to experience the villages and neighborhoods of France like a real local!

In 1985, the festival spread to other European countries in honor of the “European Year of Music”, and fifteen years later, the Fete de la Musique expanded to more than 100 countries on 5 continents! The themes change from year to year. This year’s theme is “Musique au feminin” inspired by female musicians, composers and vocalists around the world, from long ago to the present time. Their creativity, their battles, their profound truth and their repertoires will be honored on June 21, 2010.






Vive la musique!!
For more information about Fete de la Musique 2010, visit their website.