Thursday, July 9, 2009

But Does It Tell Time?

As we enter the "Jetsons" age, what was once thought of as 'far out', may actually be 'accurate' in the coming years. Soon we won't need TVs or iPods to catch the latest movies.


"ThinkGeek" Video Watches
Tell time, listen to music and watch your favorite movie right from your wrist.



Video Watch with OLED Screen
For a wristwatch to be considered truly geeky it should have one of two things - the ability to play audio and video or some kind of communication functionality (like a built-in cell phone). Well, you can definitely put a big bold check mark in the "yes" column for the Video Watch with OLED Screen. With a full color screen this watch displays video and images very nicely with a 128x128 pixel resolution. The OLED screen is crisp and bright and the watch itself is surprisingly well proportioned (not thick or bulky).

Audio is also accommodated very nicely, with MP3/WMA playback and 6 equalizer modes. A built-in microphone allows recording of notes to self, meetings, conversations or various ramblings for later playback. Battery charges via USB and sports a 7 hour play time (4 hours for video playback). Available with 8GB storage capacity.


Stainless Steel 8GB Video Watch
In our effort to always bring you the latest and greatest gadgets, ThinkGeek presents this Stainless Steel Video Watch with a massive 8GB of internal flash memory as well as a full color 1.8" screen. Made completely from shiny stainless steel for the ultimate in style and coolness.

High pixel count and frames per second make viewing a joy. Plus this watch has a built-in voice recorder, multiple OSD languages to choose from, a built-in high quality speaker as well as a earphone jack, the ability to view JPEG pictures and listen to music at the same time, and so much more. What more could you ask of such a beautiful looking watch? Be the envy of all your friends and blow them away with your shiny new toy.





Metallic Video Watch with OLED Screen


For a wristwatch to be considered truly geeky it should have one of two things - the ability to play audio and video or some kind of communication functionality (like a built-in cell phone). Well, you can definitely put a big bold check mark in the "yes" column for the Metallic Video Watch with OLED Screen.
With a full color screen this watch displays video and images very nicely with a 128x128 pixel resolution. The OLED screen is crisp and bright and the watch itself is surprisingly well proportioned (not thick or bulky). It also has a stylish band and metal case.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

Who Doesn't Love Shoes?

1. The High-Chair Heels


Designed to look like a modern high-chair, the high-chair heels take your feet 6 inches off the ground so they sit almost vertical. This innovative design makes a bold fashion statement that is perhaps better seen in home décor, because it's a fashion accident waiting to happen.










2. The Claw Shoe

This unique shoe is fashion suited to lovers of gothic fashion with its heel designed to look like a talon. While its fashion statement may be work the sacrifice, I like shoes that don't leave me barefoot.










3. The Center Heel Corkscrew Shoe

This strange shoe features a heel that's not quite where we're used to seeing it. If that's not enough, a second strange element was incorporated into the fashion shoe's design; a corkscrew heel. While this shoe at least serves one fundamental purpose of a shoe; covering your foot, it's missing another key element. Fashion lovers willing to risk wearing this design better be professional acrobats, because walking cannot be an easy feat.



4. Cardboard Shoes

Artist Mike Leavitt is featuring a cardboard shoe show in NYC on April 18, 2009. The shoe designs, at a glance, don't look so unusual since the follow sneaker designs of popular shoe manufacturers. It's the material that makes them different. While it might be a great idea for a sustainable fashion statement, these shoes would hit the recycling box after an encounter with inclement weather.




5. Most Dangerous Shoe in the World: Tarantula Shoe

The tarantula shoe is a sky-high platform design that might be a danger to weak ankles, but this scary fashion oddity is the most dangerous shoe in the world for a very different reason; encased in the fashionable item is a live tarantula. Since goldfish shoes went out with the 70s, someone had to come up with a new living shoe design. No word whether or not this fashion might present an animal rights violation or if the tarantula has the ability to be removed. However, there's no doubting that this scary shoe makes a bold and dangerous fashion statement.






6. The Gameboy Shoe

Who says fashionistas can't be gamers too? This geeky shoe design features working retro Gameboys which can actually be removed and played. This multi-function fashion item serves both as a functional shoe and a portable entertainment system!




7. Hot Wheels Shoes

These strange shoes aren't actually made by Hot Wheels; they're designed by Ronaldo Frago. The perfect shoe for mothers on the go since shoes can double as entertaining toys for small children. So the wheels aren't real, but these functional flats sure are cute!




8. Most Disturbing Shoe: The Rat Shoe

Talk about fashion statement! This disturbing shoe might be great for Halloween, because its dead rat design could certainly scare the daylights out of anyone. This scary shoe is not for the faint at heart. But what were they thinking?





9. The Landscape Shoe

This neat shoe is a walking piece of art in design and function. Lover of greener pastures and livestock? Then this shoe is definitely for you. It's unique design built onto the shoe includes a tree, cow, horse and stray lumber.










10. The Pant Shoe

It's hard to tell whether these are shoes, pants or a little of both. While the sneaker design may be comfortable and practical off the runways; you certainly better plan ahead when nature calls.

Thursday, April 2, 2009

The 'Most Famous' Blonde of All Time

At the time of Jean Harlow's untimely death, this next blonde bombshell was just eleven years old. She had no idea, she would become the most famous blonde in American history.

Marilyn Monroe was born June 1, 1926 in Los Angeles, California. She lived to the 36 when she died of a (questionable) drug overdose. Born, Norma Jean Mortensen, her father abandoned she and her mother and her mother Gladys, who worked as a film cutter for RKO Studios. Gladys suffered from mental illness and was in and out of mental institutions for the duration of her life. Because of that Norma Jean spent time in foster homes. At nine years old, she was placed in an orphanage where she would stay for the next two years.

In 1942, at the age of 16, Norma Jean married 21-year old aircraft plant worker James Dougherty. The marriage lasted four years and divorced in 1946. Norma Jean was now modeling swimsuits and bleached her red hair blonde. Various shots made their way into the public eye, where some were eventually seen by RKO Pictures and head Howard Hughes. He offered Norma Jean a screen test, but an agent suggested that 20th Century-Fox would be the better choice for her, since it was a much bigger and more prestigious studio. She was signed to a contract at $125 per week for a six-month period.

Her first film was in 1947 with a bit part in The Shocking Miss Pilgrim. After three more unsuccessful films Fox declined to renew her contract, so she went back to modeling and acting school. Columbia Pictures then picked her up to play Peggy Martin in Ladies of the Chorus (1949). Notices from the critics were favorable for her, if not for the film. Columbia dropped her shortly after. Once again she turned to modeling. In 1949, she changed her name to Marilyn Monroe and posed nude for the now famous calendar shot which was later to appear in Playboy magazine in 1953 and further boost her career. She appeared in five more films, but the good news was that she received very good praise for her roles in two of them The Asphalt Jungle (MGM) and All About Eve(Fox), both in (1950). But it wasn’t until Monkey Business (1952), where she was seen for the first time as a platinum blonde, a look that became her trademark. The next year she appeared in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (1953) as Lorelei Lee, opposite Jane Russel. It was also the same year she began dating the baseball great, Joe DiMaggio.

Marilyn was now a genuine box-office drawing card. Later, she appeared in How to Marry A Millionaire (1953) with Betty Grable, Lauren Bacall and Rory Calhoun. Although her co-stars got rave reviews, it was the sight of Marilyn that really excited the audience. In 1954 she starred opposite Ethel Merman, Mitzi Gaynor, Donald O’Connor in There’s No Business Like Show Business.
That was quickly followed by The Seven Year Itch (1955), which showcased her considerable comedic talent and contained what is arguably one of the most memorable moments in cinematic history: Marilyn standing above a subway grating and the wind from a passing subway blowing up her store bought white dress up in the air.
By October 1954, Marilyn announced her divorce from DiMaggio. The union only lasted eight months. In Bus Stop (1956), Marilyn showed critics that she could play a straight dramatic role. It was also the same year she married playwright, Aruthur Miller (the divorced in 1960). After a year off in 1958, Marilyn returned to the screen the next year for a delightful comedy, Some Like It Hot (1959) with Tony Curtis and Jack Lemmon. The film was an absolute smash hit (and one of my personal favorites).

The next year Marilyn appeared in Let’s Make Love (1960) with Tony Randall and Yves Montand. The film made money, but it was critically panned as stodgy and slow-moving. The following year Marilyn made what was to be her final film. The Misfits (1961), which also proved to be the final film for legendary Clark Gable, who died later that year of a heart attack. The film was popular with critics and the public alike.

In 1962 Marilyn was chosen to star in Fox’s Something’s Got to Give (1962). It was to be her comeback movie. Due to her absenteeism, which caused delay in production, resulted in her being fired from the production in June of that year. She would die of a drug overdose on August 6, 1962.

Do I believe that it was a drug overdose that killed her? No. Let's see. She started an affair with the President of the United States, John F. Kennedy in December 1961. May 17, 1962, a sick Marilyn defies studio executives and leaves in the middle of shooting her latest film, Something's Got To Give, and flies to New York to attend a Democratic Fund Raiser and birthday salute for President John F. Kennedy at Madison Square Garden. Approximately 17,000 people at $1,000 a ticket showed up that night. Jackie Kennedy,
however by now knew of the affair, did not attend. Later that evening a picture was taken of the trio (Marilyn, JFK and RFK). By now news of the president's illicit affair was becoming common knowledge. JFK's brother Robert, was called in. He served as the go-between and told Marilyn to leave his brother alone as he couldn't be seen with her anymore. To help soften the blow, he offered his private line to Marilyn and picked up the affair where his brother left off. By June 1962, Marilyn and RFK were hot and heavy. After about two months he deserted her...cold turkey. No warning. She never saw it coming. This made her depressed in bad shape. It was in late July that she had an alleged abortion (people would speculate which brother was the father: JFK or RFK). It was said that she was going to call a press conference to air some things out. She was hurt at being cast aside. Before she had a chance to do anything, she died.

Those close to her said that Marilyn knew enough about pharmacology and would often take just enough pills and champagne to go to sleep, so that an overdose was unlikely.

Marilyn’s death was ruled “acute barbiturate poisioning” by Dr. Thomas Noguchi of the Los Angeles County Coroners office and listed as a “probable suicide”. Many individual, including Jack Clemmons, the first Los Angeles Police Department officer to arrive at the deatch scene, believe that she was murdered.

The death of Marilyn Monroe is one of the most debated conspiracy theories of the 20th and 21st century.


She made only 30 movies in her lifetime, but her status and mysticism will remain with film history forever.


JEAN HARLOW, MARILYN MONROE Both known for platinum blonde tresses. Discovered by Howard Hughes. Starred with Clark Gable. Died way too young. Lit up the screen, like no other. Brought smoldering sexuality yet innocence to their films. Both my favorites.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

The 'Original' Blonde Bombshell

What is it about the color of blonde hair that drives some men crazy? For some men, brunettes are hot, redheads are daring, but blonde, now that's sexy. If gentlemen prefer blondes then they must go absolutely crazy over platinum blondes! What is it about the white-yellow tresses that men equate that with sexiness and excitement?

Two such blonde vixens that are legendary and stood the test of time are Jean Harlow of course Marilyn Monroe.

Jean Harlow was born March 3, 1911 in Kansas City, Missouri. She lived to the ripe old age of 26 when she died of uremic poisoning on June 7, 1937. Born Harlean Harlow Carpenter, she was the daughter of a successful dentist and his wife. At the age of 16, she ran away from she home to marry a young businessman named Charles McGrew, who was 23 at the time. The couple pulled up stakes and moved to Los Angeles, not long after they married. It was here that Jean found work as an extra in films.

Landing bit parts in movies all over Hollywood. In 1929 she had bit parts in at least 11 movies, playing everything from a passing woman on the street to a winged ballerina. Her marriage to McGrew turned out to be a disaster and barely lasted two years. After her divorce, she was able to devote more time in finding roles in feature movies. Her first prominent role was in Double Whoopee (1929), but her big break came in 1930, when she was only 19 years old.
She landed a role in Howard Hughes’ World War I epic, Hell’s Angels, which turned out to be a smash hit. Not long after the film’s debut, Hughes sold her contract to MGM for $60,000, and it was there that her career shot to unprecedented heights. Her appearance in Platinum Blonde (1931) cemented her role as America’s newest sex symbol. The next year saw her paired with Clark Gable in Red Dust (1932), the second of six films she would make with Gable.

It was MGM’s glittering all-star Dinner at Eight (1933) that Jean was at her comedic best as the wife of a ruthless tycoon (Wallace Beery) trying to take over another man’s (Lionel Barrymore) failing business. Later that same year she played the part of Lola Burns in Victor Fleming’s hit Bombshell. In 1935 she was again teamed with Gable in another rugged adventure, China Seas. Her remaining two pictures with Gable would be Wife vs. Secretary (1936) and Saratoga (1937). It was her films with Gable that created her lasting legacy in the film world. Unfortunately during the filming of Saratoga, she was hospitalized with uremic poisoning. The film had to be finished by long angle shots using a double. Gable said he felt like he was in the arms of a ghost during the final touches of the film. Because of her death, the film was a hit. Record numbers of fans poured into America’s movie theaters to see the film.


Platinum. Named after the jeweler's metal, rarer, even more valuable than gold. When referred to as hair color, the technique used is to bleach almost all the color out of the hair and then add violet and blue tones to give it a white-platinum blonde look.
Jean Harlow proved she was much more than just some blonde, she was the 'original' platinum blonde. Other sex symbols/blonde bombshells have followed, but it is Jean Harlow who all others are measured against.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Not Just A Faucet

One more thing... The Hansa Latrava faucet































One doesn't typically think of faucets as handsome, but this is a welcome exception. It was created for Octopus Design by former Merc-Benz designer Bruno Sacco, so you can safely think of it as the dishwashing equivalent of driving an E-Class.octopus-design.de
[Moco Loco]
PAUL L. UNDERWOOD
Photo: mocoloco.com
10:59 PM, March 20, 2009

Calvin


February 15, 2009


Bringing the Calvin Klein men's collection back to its home turf after years of showing in Milan might have made Italo Zucchelli think more than usual about its American roots (for his music, he picked "Jet Song" from West Side Story, the ultimate Manhattan soundtrack), but it certainly didn't steer him from the path he has set for the label. The subtle futurism of the movie Gattaca always comes to mind. In the same vein, Zucchelli will transmogrify something familiar—a tailored suit, say—into something alien by using a sci-fi fabric. Here, for instance, a liquid material flowed around the body like mercury. And the uniformity of outfits in shades of gray (anthracite, slate, dove, and a metallic zinc) with everything (suit, shirt, tie) matching also suggested the movie's hyper-sophisticated homogeneity. But with this collection, the designer perfected his high-tech, high-touch signature.

A broad-shouldered Harris Tweed herringbone overcoat, a shearling hoodie, a winter-white leather bomber stood alone as classic menswear pieces. Jackets and pants in a molded wool/nylon were their polar opposites, looking like a gladiatorial something out of Tron (staying with the sci-fi movie cross-references), which pleased Tron fanboy Kanye West to no end.For Zucchelli, such an overt attempt to transform the body is an update of Calvin Klein's sportswear roots. It's like a Bruce Weber model's torso abstracted in fabric. Possibly too abstracted for some in the audience, but another way to look at it was as Zucchelli's take on the notions of protection and armor that are floating around New York. The metal closings on coats added a hard edge. So did the footwear, solid as construction boots. If life is about to get tougher in the city, this is the smart way to dress dystopia.


— Tim Blanks

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

The Ultimate Designer

Her 35 Oscar nominations,including every year from 1948 through 1966, and 8 awards make her both the most honored costume designer and woman in Academy Award history to date.

Rarely did her own sketching because of her time schedule. Almost all sketches of "hers" one sees today were actually done by a devoted staff of sketch artists.
During the 1920s, she taught French and art at the Hollywood School for Girls.
On They Might Be Giants' 2001 album, "Mink Car", there is a song called "She Thinks She's Edith Head".
Was a close friend of actress Anne Baxter. She was godmother to one of Baxter's children.
A photograph of Miss Head working on a dress design appears on one stamp of a sheet of 10 USA 37¢ commemorative postage stamps, issued 25 February 2003, celebrating American Filmmaking: Behind the Scenes. The stamp honors costume design.

The character "Edna Mode" in Disney/Pixar's The Incredibles (2004) was modeled on her.

Extremely diplomatic, she went out of her way to get along with co-workers and rarely gossiped. In later interviews, however, she mentioned that she did not enjoy working with Mary Martin, Claudette Colbert or Hedy Lamarr.

Her trademark "sunglasses" were not "sunglasses" but rather blue lensed glasses. Looking through a blue glass was a common trick of costumers in the days of Black and White film to get a sense of how a color would photograph. Edith had a pair of glasses made out of the proper shade of blue glass to save herself from looking through a single lens. Her friends commonly would see her in regular "clear" glasses.
She is tied with composer Alan Menken for third most Academy Awards won. Each of them have eight.
Biography in: "The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives". Volume One, 1981-1985, pages 376-378. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1998.
Alumnae Initiate of Delta Zeta sorority, Mu chapter.


Born on October 28, 1897, her family moved to San Bernadino, California when she was very young. She received a BA in French at the University of Californai at Berkeley in 1918 and an MA in Romance Languages from Stanford University in 1920. She became a Languages teacher (specializing in French). Her first teaching position was at Bishops School in La Jolla, California; however after one year she took a position teaching both Languages and Art at Hollywood School for Girls. To improve her drawing skills (which at this point were rudimentary) she took evening art classes at Chouinard Art College.

In 1924, despite lacking art design or costume design experience, Head was hired as a costume sketch artist at Paramount Pictures in the costume department. Later Head admitted to borrowing another student's sketches for her job interview. She began designing costumes for silent films commencing with The Wanderer in 1925, and by the 1930s had established herself as one of Hollywood's leading costume designers. She worked at Paramount for 44 years until she went to Universal Pictures on March 27, 1967, possibly prompted by her extensive work for director Alfred Hitchcock, who had moved to Universal in 1960.

She was responsible for some of the best-known Hollywood fashion images of her day, with her costumes being worn by the most glamorous and famous actresses in films. Head's influence on world fashion was far reaching, especially in the 1950s when she began appearing on Art Linkletter's television program and writing books on fashion.
Although Head was featured in studio publicity from the mid-1920s onward, she was originally over-shadowed by Paramount's Head Designer, first Howard Greer then Travis Banton. It was only after Banton's resignation in 1938 that she achieved fame as a designer in her own right. Her association with the "sarong" dress designed for Dorothy Lamour in The Hurricane made her well known among the general public, albeit as a more restrained designer than either Banton or Adrian. In 1944 she gained public attention for the top mink-lined gown she was credited with designing for Ginger Rogers in Lady in the Dark, which gained notoriety as it was counter to the mood of wartime austerity. The institution of an Academy Award for Costume Designer in 1949 further boosted her career as it began her record breaking run of Award nominations and awards, beginning with her nomination for The Emperor Waltz.
Head was known for her low-key working style, and unlike many of her male contemporaries usually consulted extensively with the female stars she worked with. As a result she was a favourite designer for several of the leading female stars of the 1940s and 1950's; Ginger Rogers, Bette Davis, Barbara Stanwyck, Shirley Maclaine and Anne Baxter, and was frequently 'loaned' out by Paramount to other studios at the request of their female stars. She was also known for her restrained designs, and during the 1950s was dubbed the "queen of the shirtwaisters" by her detractors. However, it should be noted that this approach to costume design was in line with studio policy which did not want films (especially late release or re-released films) to become instantly dated through the use of short-lived costume fads. Despite this, or even because of this trait, she has been cited as one of Alfred Hitchcock's favorite custome designers and had a long association with Hal Wallis among others.

During her long career Head was occasionally criticized for her working methods. Early in her career she opposed the creation of a union to represent studio based costume designers and outfitters, and she was accused of being "anti-union" on several occasions. Her design trademark of restraint also on occasion brought her into conflict with the wishes of film stars or directors. Claudette Colbert apparently being one star who preferred not to work with her, while her relationship with flamboyant film director Mitchell Leisen was by all accounts quite tense. Despite her own design accomplishments, she also had a reputation for taking credit for others' work. However, this practice only became controversial in the latter part of her career, since in the era of studio-dominated film production, a department head commonly claimed credit for design work created in his or her department. Privately, she was a warm and loving hostess, hosting fabulous soirées at her and her husband's Benedict Canyon home.

In 1967, she left Paramount Pictures, and joined Universal Pictures, where she remained until her death in 1981. As studio-based feature film production declined, and many of her favoured stars retired, Head became more active as a television costume designer, often designing costumes for film actresses, like Olivia De Havilland, who were now involved in television series or film work. In 1974, Edith Head enjoyed a final Oscar win for her work on The Sting. This film, which starred Paul Newman and Robert Redford, was notable for its nostalgic recreation of American life in the 1930s.
During the late 1970s, Edith Head was asked to design a woman's uniform for the United State Coast Guard because of the increasing number of women in the Coast Guard. Head called the assignment a "highlight" in her career. Also, during this period, her designs for a TV mini-series based on the novel Little Women were notable. Her last film project was the black and white comedy Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid, starring Steve Martin and Carl Reiner, in which she accurately re-created fashions of the 1940s, matching the extensive use of film clips from classic film noir motion pictures. It was released shortly after her death and dedicated to her memory.

Head was a very private woman, a trait well illustrated by the dark sunglasses that became her trademark. The glasses and her unchanging hair style helped her to hide her true age. In the 1920s, she wore a Colleen Moore Dutch boy cut, but in the 1930s she noticed Anna May Wong's style and copied it: flat bangs with a chignon at the back. She would wear it for the rest of her life. These features and the consistency of her appearance over the decades helped make her an instantly recognized figure.

She died on October 24, 1981 in her sleep while coughing violently, and ruptured her esophagus. The cough resulted from a rare bone marrow disease.
She has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6504 Hollywood Blvd.

Personal Quotes
"I've designed films I've never seen."
"If it is a Paramount film, I probably designed it."
"What a costume designer does is a cross between magic and camouflage. We create the illusion of changing the actors into what they are not. We ask the public to believe that every time they see a performer on the screen he's become a different person."
"I have yet to see one competely unspoiled star, except for Lassie."
"You can lead a horse to water and you can even make it drink, but you can't make actresses wear what they don't want to wear."
[1977 comment on Jacqueline Bisset] "One of the greatest bodies I've ever worked with. But besides that she is rather the opposite, because she is so damned intelligent. It's a strange combination, almost a double personality."
[on Grace Kelly] "I've dressed thousands of actors, actresses and animals, but whenever I am asked which star is my personal favorite, I answer, "Grace Kelly." She is a charming lady, a most gifted actress and, to me, a valued friend."
[on Kim Novak] "I don't usually get into battles, but dressing Kim Novak for her role in Alfred Hitchcock's "Vertigo" put to the test all my training in psychology."