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Armstrong

Genuine linoleum is the original sheet flooring material, first patented by Englishman Frederick Walton in 1863. Although some people still call all sheet floors "linoleum," the real thing is quite different from the vinyl floors that gradually replaced them a century later. Its name derives from the main ingredient, linseed oil. (In Latin, linum is the word for linseed, which comes from the flax plant, and oleum means oil.) The oil is boiled, mixed with melted resins, and combined with powdered cork, wood flour, resins, ground limestone, and other natural materials. Mineral pigments provide the color. This mixture is formed into a durable sheet by applying heat and pressure.


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"Sweet Maria's would like to be your information source and green coffee supplier for your home coffee roasting adventures. Home roasting is easy! It only takes 5 to 15 minutes and your reward is the freshest coffee around. It requires no fancy equipment and green coffee from Sweet Maria's is half the price of roasted coffee from a retailer. We have a huge selection of green coffees, each carefully cupped and rated for quality."


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loftcube


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Louise Nevelson.Sky Gate, New York, 1977-8 Black Painted wood relief



HERITAGE PRESERVATION PUBLISHES FIRST COMPREHENSIVE STUDY OF LOSS TO NATION’S CULTURAL HERITAGE AS A RESULT OF 9/11 (060302)

The report begins with a short overview of the diverse cultural property universe that existed in and around the WorldTrade Center before the attacks. It then describes the artworks, historic and archaeological artifacts, archives, and libraries that were destroyed or damaged, as well as the condition of those that survived. Outdoor sculpture and historic buildings are included in this summary.



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The Future of Design

The Art of Living Better, With Less

Legendary industrial designer Dieter Rams discusses his iconic 606 Universal Shelving System and the ten essential points of his design philosophy

"What is required, in essence, is a change in perspective, as well as a shift in values. In this way, it becomes possible to approach the art of living better while consuming less. We can begin this process with the observation, reinterpretation, and utilization of all the good things that have already been produced. For example, we can select and recontextualize some of the most significant proposals of German design, in order to identify new design guidelines"

via metropolis 0204
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Tisserand Aromatherapy
Essential oils, which come from flowers, leaves, herbs and wood, are enjoyed by many people to enhance their lives - to feel relaxed or stimulated, to help physical and emotional conditions, or to feel good.

Shoyeido, Traditional Japanese Incense since 1705
For 300 years, Shoyeido has preserved family tradition and secret recipes. In addition, Shoyeido's master blenders create new and innovative products combining centuries of experience with new world technologies.




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nine isolation studies by chuck jones



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antfarm


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mission go-to page for minute to minute updates
per nyt watchers of the sky story

nasa mars landscape digital color photograph
from nssdc library

nasa index

more images bookmark


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Christopher Williams,Model: 1964 Renault Dauphine-Four, R-1095
(Nr. 9), 2000, black-and-white photograph, 25 3/8 x 29 3/8".


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victory over the sun and the black quadralateral


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return the Elgin marbles


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muschamp chronicles, parts 1,2,3 (11/02/00)

"The subject of the 4,466-word article was straightforward enough--the winner of a competition to build the newspaper's new Times Square headquarters--but you needed a graduate degree in Times protocol to keep track of all the roles Muschamp played in writing it. First there was Muschamp the critic, reviewing the design proposed by the winning architect, Renzo Piano. Then there was Muschamp the Times employee, who wasn't in a position to judge his bosses' decision too severely. There was also Muschamp the Times representative, who had to be gracious to the three losing finalists who had gone to the considerable trouble of entering the contest in the first place. Muschamp juggled the apparently conflicting rhetorical requirements imposed by these roles--the need for tough-mindedness and the need to brown-nose and be generous seemed particularly at odds--by praising Piano strongly but praising one set of finalists (Frank O. Gehry and David Childs) even more strongly, then attacking another finalist (Cesar Pelli) harshly. Muschamp thereby sacrificed a modicum of graciousness to gain the aura of independence."


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milkshake via urban dictionary



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black boxes



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Proun

el lissitski


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"The Trade Center is an architectural martyr, our only skyscraper martyr, and a martyr to democracy. Penn Station was a martyr to preservation, and its loss galvanized us into realizing how critical great buildings are and led to a resolve not to let that happen again. The Trade Center was a martyr in the broadest sense to the values of our society, and also a modern symbol. Although we like to think of ourselves as technologically very advanced, our architectural symbols are things like the Lincoln Memorial and the Capitol. So a modern piece of architecture symbolizing the national ideals is quite a remarkable moment. The replanning of the Trade Center connects to preservation. One of the things for which there was broad consensus after the Trade Center fell was the need to put the streets back on that 16-acre block and restore a more traditional urban framework. There again we see the value shift. Nobody would have ever wanted [the attack] to happen, but people are viewing it as an opportunity to correct some things in that area. It's being used in a positive way."
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"But the new generation of house designs takes a different view of the role of rooms, space and usage. The idea that a house was more than a shelter led the influential Swiss designer and thinker Le Corbusier to describe the house as a "machine for living in" in 1923. From his philosophy of architecture flowed the idea that we can improve our lives by standardising and rationalising the design of our houses. But by 1969, the French philosopher Gaston Bachelard was writing: "If I were asked to name the chief benefits of the house, I should say the house shelters daydreaming, the house protects the dreamer, the house allows one to dream in peace."
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The journey from box to house

By Ross Atkin | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
When architect Mark Strauss sees a shipping container, he doesn't think of cargo holds. Instead, he thinks of housing. He imagines these hulking steel boxes - which weigh from 4,000 to 9,000 pounds - as stackable living units; as modular, low-cost homes or shelters that can help alleviate the mounting surplus of containers piling up in American ports.

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"September 11 is beyond words, buildings, and memorials. The eight finalists and Libeskind's plan are all examples of the corporate sublime. The buildings are bland, the memorials canned. They all sanitize and shrink-wrap our emotions in a fanatically tidy visual security blanket. Each makes us settle for less and turns a blind eye toward the heart. We, the living, deserve more. The dead, much more than that."

-Saltz

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