Monday, November 9, 2009

Rodarte for Target comin´ in Dec.20th!!!



No more pictures relieved.

`Target is certainly making the best out of a troubled economy. First they sent us into a frenzy when it was revealed that the retailer would be collaborating with Anna Sui and now, there’s another designer range in the pipeline. Up-and-coming label Rodarte, who paraded crotch-high boots and tattered knitwear in their Fall 09 collection, are set to create a 55-piece line for Target that will be available in stores and online from December 20th through February 6th. Prices range from $9.99 for knee-highs to a $79.99 leopard-print jacket; a far cry from the $3,000 knits in their Ready-to-Wear collection. But Target promises that, while the sky-high price tag may be missing from the line, the immaculate attention to detail that Rodarte have become renowned for will not. A spokesman said, “It’s very feminine, yet very modern. The collection incorporates a rich mix of patterns and fabrications and everything from sequins and bows to faux fur. The key with Rodarte is layering.” Here’s to Rodarte clothing we can actually afford!`, writes Newyork Joonbug.

The New Guinness World Ad - Bring it to Life

Chinese Female Chef Twirling Knives – Don’t Mess With Her!

Back To The Future


Still yearning for Tokyo in the 80s? Pick up one of Casio's new Poptone Cubic Puzzle watches and you'll be transported right back.

What makes this watch so retro? It's just a watch! The features are simple: 12 or 24 hour time settings, a stopwatch, an alarm clock, and a backlight. via

Alnwick Poison Gardens





Inspired by the legendary botanical gardens in Padua where the Medicis plotted the untimely, frothing ends of their enemies, an English duchess created this garden, dedicating it entirely to flora which are deadly and/or narcotic. Behind big black gates, the carefully curated garden contains about 100 legendary killers like Atropa belladonna (deadly nightshade), Strychnos nux-vomica (strychnine), and Conium maculatum (hemlock). Guides explain their deadly properties while keeping ne'er-do-wells and curious children away from the plants, warning them: "Do not touch any of the plants, don't even smell them. There are plants here that can kill you."

The duchess herself is an unlikely patron. Until 1995, she was just Jane Percy, mother of four. Then in 1995 her husband unexpectedly became the twelfth Duke of Northumberland following his brother's untimely death, and the next thing they knew they had a castle to deal with. As she inspected her newly inherited digs and expansive gardens, much of which had been meticulously designed by the famous landscape designer Capability Brown, she came across an overgrown, neglected section. Formal gardens had been planted in that spot by the first duke in 1750, and it passed through several incarnations until World War II, when it was converted from a place of Italian ornamental splendor into a victory garden of vegetables. By 1950, it had closed. She decided to restore it, not to its former glory, but into a new, modern garden.

The poison garden opened in 2005 as just a portion of the ambitious 14-acre new gardens. Wanting in part to hark back to old apothecary's gardens, the duchess shied away from planting healing medicinals and instead sought out hard-to-get deadly poisons. Also included in the gardens are narcotic plants like opium poppies, cannabis, magic mushrooms, and tobacco. Because the danger posed by poisonous plants is very real (some can kill or sicken just through touch), some plants are caged, and the garden is secured each evening behind gates under a 24-hour security watch.

Other parts of the garden include an enormous multi-level treehouse and a bamboo labyrinth. You may also find the looming Alnwick Castle strangely familiar, having seen it stand in as Hogwarts in the first two Harry Potter films. Via

Another superb artist!












Diane Özdamar, see her art in DeviantArt.

Sunday, November 8, 2009

The funniest fish in the world!

Via