Friday, January 10, 2014

ALL TOGETHER NOW: 3 WAYS TO AVOID DESK CLUTTER

Photo courtesy of Kaufmann Mercantile

I love brass accessories. They add a bit of gleam, especially when used sparingly. I recently came across these stunning brass desk trays with cut corners on Kaufmann Mercantile, the online purveyor of all things cool, slightly rustic and well-designed since 2009. 
The trays, which range in size, are perfect for holding objects that would otherwise create a messy and cluttered surface. Made in the oldest Japanese metal foundry, in operation since 1897, each surface finish and patina is unique, since it is sanded down after being removed from its mold. 
Originally designed Oji Masanori, a designer of pared-down household objects, the trays hold their own today, looking just as fresh as they did all those years ago.

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

SO POLISHED: FORM AND FUNCTION MEET WITH CHRISTOFLE'S DAZZLING SPHERE, A FLASHY ROUND HARD DRIVE

Photo courtesy of La Cie
Much of the country is going through a deep freeze this week, from an unusual weather occurrence called a Polar Vortex. Unusually cold temperatures like we are experiencing are likely to produce hail and snow, and the results of which can sometimes be as big as the silver ball shown above. The Sphere,  a gorgeous new silver-enrobed round hard drive designed in partnership with French luxury silver maker Christofle and hard drive manufacturer LaCie, is a beauty.  Pushing the boundaries of form and function, the silvered circular orb has sculptural qualities that would enhance any desk, by introducing a sleek, more streamlined tech element.  So, what does it do differently? Well, a few things.  It eliminates the need to have another unsightly black power cord, and since it works off a high speed USB 3.0 instead of the slower 2.0. it uploads files, images and videos three times faster, and looks good doing it.  And while we are on that topic, if someone gets fingerprints all over it's highly reflective surface, you can clean it with silver polish.
The new hard drive is a flashy drive,  cast in one seamless piece of silver-plated steel. At almost $500, it might just be the best way to start collecting art, as you work your way towards another reflective masterpiece from artist Anish Kapoor.

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

THE DESIGN LEADERSHIP SUMMIT DAY 2: TALKING ABOUT MEDIA TO THE NEW YORK REAL ESTATE MARKET

Photo courtesy of John Calabrese/DLN
Designer Katie Leede, Michael Boodro EIC of Elle Decor, and Lizzie Dinkel

When I asked designers what they got out of the Design Leadership Network Summit experience this year, the answers varied, but inspiration and motivation were the topics that many kept returning to.

Here are reflections from some of the industry's most respected design voices-

A sense of community can be very valuable in this often fragmented industry- what does this community provide for you? Thomas Jayne shared, "I love our Design community! It's a family of individuals with the same passions.. yet we all have different viewpoints.. I can't tell you what a relief it is l to talk to a designer pal about issues that only a designer can understand.. It's almost like group therapy."

I asked Katie Leede what she got out of it. "The conference had me flying with the thrill of possibilities. Turns out that having the conference in New York made for a furiously energetic and packed two days full of focused programming that had us all abuzz with inspiration but still able to keep our businesses going during the breaks if need be," she shared.

Jamie Drake on: Who was your favorite speaker and why?
"Arianne Huffington, as she reminded us that we only have one life to live!"

Beth Webb answered the question: A sense of community can be very valuable in this often fragmented industry- what does this community provide for you? Shared resources? Like-minded friends?
"In the past four years I have made many friends that I call on year around for both counsel and sources. I was working on a project in Palm Beach and Celerie Kemble's office helped with a workroom source, Joe Lucas provided an art installer and recommended a drapery workroom in LA for a project in Hancock Park. If the sponsors call and say they are coming to town, even if I am too busy to see them - I make time because there is a personal relationship there. We all share information and commiserate on how we are doing business and more importantly how we can do what we are doing better."

Gary McBournie echoed this sentiment in response to the same question.
"The community aspect is extremely important to me. At the core of it, we are all business owners working in the same industry and facing similar challenges. There are not many other opportunities to sit down with each other and have open discussions. I very much value the sharing of ideas, solutions and resources and I have made many friends along the way."

The final day of the Design Leadership Network in New York began with David Carey, the president of Hearst Magazines speaking at the Hearst Tower.  He spoke on how magazines are shape shifting, creating additional value with online content that serves up relevant information, taking what used to be months (with magazines) to moments (courtesy of the warp speed of sharing online).  This embracing newness and nimble thinking left us all excited to see what is in the pipeline from Hearst's shelter titles, Elle Decor, Veranda, and House Beautiful. Seeing great potential in digital content, he shared, " 70% of tablet readers have never subscribed to those Hearst Magazines they are reading online, " and with a digital subscriptions to Next Issue, you can read up to 10 magazines a month on an iPad.

Lucia Van Der Post of The FT's How To Spend It alongside Michelle Ogundehin of Elle Decoration UK and Italian print magazine Apartamento's Marco Velardi

To offer global perspective, Lucia Van Der Post of The FT's How To Spend It was joined by Michelle Ogundehin of Elle Decoration UK and Apartamento's Marco Velardi. They touched on what their readerships expect of them, but to still throw in some surprises. In addition, when it home sot design, what the attributes of good design are vs functional design, and what is just plain beautiful.

Julie Carlson of Remodelista, Newell Turner,  Editor in Chief of Hearst Design Group, Irene Edwards of Lonny, and Janel Labon, executive editor of Apartment Therapy

Furthering the Marketing and Media conversation were the boundary pushers of media-- Julie Carlson of Remodelista,  Irene Edwards of Lonny, and Janel Labon, executive editor of Apartment Therapy. They discussed their respective readerships, the popularity of house tour slide shows,  We were all curious to here Irene, the newly appointed editor of Lonny, talk about her plans for one of the earliest digital shelter magazines. When she said her mission was to prove that a digital publications could be just as lush  as print, I instantly respected her viewpoint.

Photo courtesy of John Calabrese/DLN
The Arianna Huffington

Then came the most highly anticipated and well-received speaker of the day, the inimitable Arianna Huffington. I soaked up every word in a state of rapt wonderment. She is just truly captivating in how she says what she says. The topic she delved into was a favorite area of interest for her, what she calls "The Third Metric", which is "redefining success beyond money and power."  It is about values and wellness;  the place where taking care of the self is everything.  Great quips ranged from, "You don't pay people for their stamina, you pay people for their judgement" to "Space is as important as everything that is put in it." She is so interested in the restorative power of sleep that she has an entire section on it on the Huffington Post.

Then the talk changed from creative space to creative people, and Peter Sallick interviewed Nick Jones, the founder of Soho House, the global club with a local feel for creative types. With a cool downtown vibe and rotating art collection, Jones is tasked with the job of creating ambiance in a room-- "The place has to have ambiance with no one in it." In what is quickly becoming a lifestyle brand, anything you see in a Soho House location, you can buy to get the look at home.

Real estate in New York is a hot topic.  The afternoon focused on residential and commercial design, with talk about restaurant design to high rise dwelling. William Rudin and his daughter Samantha Rudin Earl took us through their large residential enclave downtown of five buildings includes the former St. Vincent's hospital and surrounding townhouses called Greenwich Lane. The spaces are being designed by Thomas O'Brien to be move-in ready. They then answered a steady stream of questions about the galactic prices of New York real estate today.

Digging deeper into that dialogue, Sara Ruffin Costello spoke to a panel that included Corocan Sunshine's Elisa Orlanski, Roy Kim of Extell, Oliver’s Realty's David Wine, and John Vanderslice of Hilton Worldwide. Addressing the audience, they spoke about what is relevant in new buildings today, and expectations are high. Not only are the usual amenities commonplace, but functionality and good design area also in demand. The one thing that is really changing is location, with major developments being built in the far west side and lesser known neighborhoods, the buildings can have built-in perks that residents, often those that don't live here full time, appreciate.

One of the most memorable Moments of Inspiration came from British designer Nina Campbell, who amused with tales of doing a project in China, and her first job. Upon starting, she was asked to make tea for her boss, John Fowler of Colefax and Fowler, and botched the tea.  He told her to move on to do other tasks, and she shared, "So, inspiration number one: Do menial jobs really badly and you will be promoted."

In closing, old friends star designer David Rockwell and Union Square Hospitality Group's Danny Myer ( who attended my alma mater, Trinity), riffed on creating a restaurant together, the Italian trattoria Maialino.  They delved into the process, not their first together, and had fun recounting the creative dialog.

Photo courtesy of John Calabrese/DLN
The entire group in a  parting shot

Here are some additional takeaways from designers that attended:

I asked Barry Goralnick who was your favorite speaker and why?
He replied,  "My favorite speaker was Andy Spade, since I’m focusing on product, as well as design projects. He was very clever and articulate. I liked hearing how he evolved Kate’s and his brands. He created good product backed up by very smart positioning and a real relationship of the brands to the end users. When he effortlessly explained the strategy, you thought, “of course, what other way would one conceive of that?” I also loved hearing the venerable Oscar de la Renta say that the most important thing for him was curiosity. 'Every single day is a learning process.' That has always been my motto, as well."

Lindsey Coral Harper on memorable moments:
"I loved when Oscar said, 'the key to staying creative is intense panic'. If I'm not a little bit nervous about what I am doing, then I'm not pushing the creative envelope enough."

On that same note, Timothy Corrigan added, "I may sound naive, but I was totally in shock by the prices of real estate in the new buildings in New York City..  the $3500-4000 per square foot mentioned in the Rudin Greenwich Lane presentation could have knocked me over with a feather. In our projects (which are pretty high end all over the world), we deal in figures like $800-1200/sq foot construction costs, so those figures still are red hot in my memory! $90,000,000 for a penthouse apartment....really?"

Kara Mann on: What did you leave inspired to take action on in your life, business, or both?
"The DLN is always a great check in on where your biz stands. Most times I leave feeling like you know...I'm doing ok, other people are experiencing some of the same challenges. Helps me to just keep digging in deeper to who I am as a designer and business person."

Monday, January 6, 2014

A RECAP OF THE 2013 DESIGN LEADERSHIP SUMMIT: KNOWLEDGE AND INSPIRATION

Photo courtesy of John Calabrese and DLN
DLN founder Peter Sallick, (the CEO of Waterworks and interiors website Dering Hall), along with co-hosts John Edelman, (President and CEO of modern furniture store Design Within Reach), and Kate Kelly Smith (SVP publishing director and chief revenue officer of Hearst Design Group) on the 2nd day of the Summit at Hearst Tower.

This past November, a large group of interior designers, architects and landscape designers descended upon New York City for three days of design lectures, filled with meaningful moments, great takeaways and endless inspiration at The Design Leadership Network Summit, now in its 8th year.  I had the great pleasure of attending the event, and to be part of the of-the-moment design dialog was nothing short of incredible. Having designers come from all over the globe to gather in New York City provided a valuable sense of community and closeness, not to mention the jaw-dropping New York institutions where the events were held.

This year, a wide variety of  areas from inspiration to technology, culture, media and beyond was discussed, under the theme of Knowledge and Inspiration. Containing hot topics relevant to the design world and business endeavors, the days were divided into the following areas of exploration-- Technology and Design, Fashion, Art and Culture, Marketing and Media, closing with Residential Meets Commercial. Each day was punctuated by a designer sharing a personal moment of inspiration in their career. Here are some of the highlights of the first day. 

Dinner underneath the New York Public Library's magnificent dome

The first evening, event hosts founder Peter Sallick, CEO of Waterworks and Dering Hall, Kate Kelly Smith, SVP publishing director and chief revenue officer of Hearst Design Group, and John Edelman, president and CEO of Design Within Reach started things off with the Keynote, Lord Norman Foster discussing Knowledge + Inspiration with architecture critic and writer Paul Goldberger over dinner in the depths of The New York Public Library.

Sukhinder Singh Cassidy spoke on shippable video and user experience online

 The first day, held at the modern white Frank Gehry-desgned AIC building downtown,  started with a deep dive into the world of Technology + Design, beginning with my new tech idol, former CEO of Polyvore and founder of shippable video site Joyous, Sukhinder Singh Cassidy discussing boundary-pushing shoppable video and how big data allows us to be known holistically.

Next up was a look at how 3D printing is poised to change the rate at which products are produced and how they are experienced.

French wunderkind Jean-Francois Chianetta and MickaĆ«l Jordan showed us their augmented reality 3D app, Augment, where you upload 3D images and view them in a 3D space. Following the look at 3D, Finn  Mikko Martikainen of Sayduck showed us how their app placed scanned furniture into settings, in real time.  Showing how new furniture would look in a home setting, it's fair to say that this blew our minds. As much as I wanted to use this right away, I think it is going to be some time before it makes its way beyond big companies.

Then Ron Croen showed us Volio, his program that allows users to interact and converse with a video, where the person on the screen provides answers to a set of problem-solving questions. It was amazing, like Siri with a human face.

Closing out the morning was inventor and Priceline.com founder Jay Walker, the now Chairman of TedMed, the popular health and medicine talks.  He reminded us of the power of design for health and wellness, and that "data will control the biological world."

Photo courtesy of John Calabrese/DLN
Oscar de la Renta chats with Bunny Williams

The afternoon topic, Fashion Art and Culture, led by the warm and wise designer Bunny Williams chatting with longtime friend, Oscar de la Renta. They both advised to, "Train with the best in your field," and that curiosity is one the best assets you can have." 

Photo courtesy of John Calabrese/DLN
Andy Spade in conversation with Elle Decor's Michael Boodro

Then came one of my quirky favorites, Andy Spade of Partners and Spade. His ironic sense of humor and great storytelling had the room in stitches. From leaving the ad world to creating Jack Spade and helping brand companies like Warby Parker, he is in the business of "creating desire" with an emotional connection, especially nostalgia.  His latest product introduction is sleepwear company, Sleepy Jones that fuses insouciance with cool.

Photo courtesy of John Calabrese/DLN
Then the American artist Richard Philips revealed what is behind his large scale 70's-inspired celebrity culture- infused paintings and movie videos. He revealed his photographic process and showcased how he works to create his hyper-realistic images (mainly of women of Hollywood), which was fascinating.

Tyler Florence followed, discussing what it means to be a name brand. He advised to, "Keep your eyes peeled and pull inspiration from unusual places" and that to him, "Luck is opportunity meets preparation." Great advice for a room filled with inspiration seekers.


The evening session, held at Lincoln Center's Avery Fisher Hall's Grand Promenade, featured an all-star art panel comprised of real estate and art collector Abe Rosen, designer and architect Bill Georgis, and inventive artist Tom Sacks, moderated by The New Museums's Lisa Philips. Talking The Importance of Art in Public Spaces, Rosen has helped better the art landscape in New York, with art on display outside his landmark building, Lever House.

The first day left me feeling so informed and inspired. Stay tuned for more on day 2, covering media, the New York real estate climate, architecture, and creative inspiration as well as designers reactions to the summit.

Friday, January 3, 2014

EASING INTO THE NEW YEAR

Photo courtesy of Set Editions
Did you start 2014 off on the right foot? If you want to hit the reset button to start the New Year in a different mindset, or just really say goodbye to 2013, these drinking glasses are here to help ease the pain. If you are still recovering from New Year's debauchery, this might be the best vessel for your Hair of the Dog Drink. The pain avoidance scale has a wide range of varying degrees, so fill your glass with your drink of choice at the level that best suits where you are. The stages of grief, from denial to acceptance are spelled out in plain English on Set Editions Good Grief Glasses.  Each sip will move you one step closer to the path of least resistance. Cheers. 

Thursday, January 2, 2014

2014 CALENDARS TO START THE YEAR OFF RIGHT

With the pages of my 2013 desktop calendar finished, I am in the market for a nice replacement to fill the brass easel that sits empty on my desk, staring at me. Every day is a gift, so why not make each day memorable with a beautiful calendar? Here are the best desk calendars, to suit the classicist to maximalist, and everyone in between. 
May 2014 be filled with a full calendar of new horizons and rewarding experiences.


Photo courtesy of Sugar Paper
Sugar Paper, the LA-based letterpress paperie located in Brentwood's adorable bucolic Brentwood Country Mart, gained a steady following for its pastel colored confections designed with charming fonts. Seeing that they are now doing their sophisticated desk calendar in a more "serious" black and white version, I prefer its striking contrast to the candy colored hues.

Photo courtesy of Mrs. Strong
The Classic hand-engraved individual page a month desk calendar, created by Mrs. Strong, is the original, often imitated easel version.  It's gold foil motif that changes from month to month makes an elegant desk companion.

Photo courtesy of Mrs. Strong
For those that love eye-catching color, the ever-changing colorful motifs on Mrs. Strong's Le Petit Calendar starts off the year with a purple elephant.

Photo courtesy of Connor
Owls are still very much the bird of choice. Connor's engraved desk calendar for Barneys dons a wise owl all year long. Perhaps his knowing ways will come through his large, engaged eyes.

Photo courtesy of Dempsey and Carroll
Swirly script makes Dempsey and Carroll's rectangular calendar a fancy option.

Photo courtesy of Social Monograms
I love this calendar from Social Monograms for its customization, and because each month brings a new monogram color.

Photo courtesy of Rifle Paper
I am a huge fan of Rifle Paper Co., their letterpress stationery and cards are quirky and charming with a handmade touch. Their Botanical Desk Calendar is filled with hand painted blooms. 

Photo courtesy of Monocle
Minimalists rejoice, there is a desktop calendar for you too. In a collab with Monocle, stationers Proper and Correct have designed a tabbed-page month system for easy reference with notecard style sheets. The taxi cab yellow cards come on a small oak stand. Neat and tidy.  Available through Need Supply.

Photo courtesy of Sapui
Bringing the beauty of fresh flowers to the pages of a letterpress calendar, the Brooklyn-based floral designer Saipua partnered with Brown Parcel Press for a limited edition collaboration of six Perennials prints.  Based on their seasonal flower pairings, these prints are works of art.

Photo courtesy of 1 Canoe 2
Nestled in a tree trunk slab, the cutest letterpress imagery of hand-drawn and colored daily basics decorate each month of this calendar by 1Canoe2.  Designed by two artists, the changing monthly designs are perfect for those that would rather be out-of-doors.

Photo courtesy of Katherine Watson
With a bit of old fashioned charm, Katherine Watson's letterpress block printed calendar with flowers and vines encircling the months of the year would look beautiful framed.


Wednesday, January 1, 2014

HAPPY NEW YEAR, HELLO 2014!

Bye Bye 2013, 2014 welcome!  I'm so excited to ring in a new year and all the great things to come. What is on your resolutions list? On mine? To de-clutter my life, re-connect with friends that mean so much to me, and give my time to Cycle For Survival, my charity of choice to make a difference in others lives.