Selective Lifestyle Trends
To anyone studying or working in home decor, learning about trends in interior decorating is one of the most exciting parts of life. And it should be, aside from work, the home is where we spend the bulk of our time, and like clothing it needs to be a reflection of us. Style Bust searches the web for the latest and greatest trends for the home; our hope is that you can use some of our findings in the environment you’ve created at home!
How Does this Taste?
Flipping through a magazine or typing Diet in Google’s search engine will reveal well over 100 posts about “live by diets” for “die hard bodies.” I’m an eighties baby, and my fascination with food started with my mother. Each week, there was a new cook book or can of chocolate Slim Fast on the kitchen counter. From then, DIET has been a major area of interest and since trends are ever-changing, I will always have something new to research and obsess about.
Meat vs. Raw:
Atkins – We are all familiar with this diet. The watered down instructions are to eat meat and low carb vegetables. ONLY. Over the years amended versions have popped up, but the goal is to push your body into ketosis. Then the body will start to munch on fat reserves and convert them to ketones. Weight drops off quickly, but beware. There can be a significant amount of muscle loss, too. I’d know. I did the Atkins diet years ago and swore I’d lost a good two inches from my calf muscles. My legs were swimming in my knee-high boots!
Fruitarians and Vegan Raw Foodist – would absolutely clench at the mention of Atkins. Raw foodies have blamed toxins, poor enzyme preservation, and pesticides for weight gain not carbohydrates. Cooking foods over 116 degrees is said to destroy or alter its mineral make up. There are more foods on this diet than popular belief. Beans, rice, millet, sprouts and buckwheat can be soaked and safely consumed. I completed a 30 day raw food challenge in 2008. Social events were the worst!!!!! Besides passing up finger foods and having a hefty grocery bill from creating raw cheesecake and lasagna (which I had to toss out), I enjoyed the clean, renewed feeling of eating mostly organic live cuisines.
I have fallen victim to countless hours of research on food fuel. Yet, I am still surprised by some of the diet plans I’ve seen and subsequently attempted:
Some New New:
Negative Calorie Diet aka Eating Your way to weight loss – Celery, asparagus, lettuce, broccoli, beets, onions, and cabbage are all said to have a negative caloric property. If celery only has 15 calories in it, but takes 30 calories to digest, by eating a few celery stalks more fuel is used than it takes to absorb the celery. In turn, (and in theory) losing weight and burning calories is achieved by eating more. I suspect that ingesting some of the listed foods promote weight loss because they are diuretics.
Mono Diet – Pick one food and eat it. Preferably something deemed healthy, but I suppose eating only French Fries every Wednesday will suffice. This past Sunday I had a watermelon feast and ate 2 mono meals of watermelon meat. Afterwards, I felt light and satisfied…and during sleep I dreamt of eating cornbread with sugar sprinkled over it.
Really:
Kangatarian – I have not tried this one…but I probably would if I had access to hopping meat. Kangatarians only eat kangaroo meat. Enough…
Breatharianism – is a related concept to Inedia, in which believers claim that life can be sustained without food and possibly water. No more tall glasses of Uptowns, rosemary chicken, or greek yogurt sprinkled with ground flax seeds.
It’s believed, that humans can flourish solely by Prana (the vital life force in Hinduism), or according to some, by the energy in sunlight (in Ayurveda, sunlight is one of the main sources of Prana). Throughout history, Hira Ratan Manek, Prahlad Jani, and The Fasting Girls (Catherine of Siena, Lidwina of Schiedam, Mollie Fancher and Therese Neumann) were all spectacles of the growing communities interest in non-eating.
While there is no verified scientific support for these claims, some promote the practices of Breatharianism as a skill which can be learned through specific techniques. Jasmuheen, a leading expert of Breatharianism in the 1990’s received great ridicule after several of her followers starved to death after an extended period of non-eating. Jasmuheen insisted that some of these deaths were brought on by a psycho-spiritual, rather than physiologic deprivation. I love food; the way it feels on my tongue, how it looks on a stranger’s plate. I even enjoy staring into my lover’s mouth as he chews breakfast…but I am still very intrigued by non-eaters. I visited several naturopathic and spiritual advisors and asked them about Breatharians. I needed to find one in Atlanta and quick! The answers varied; some dismissed it to severe and delusional cases of anorexia nervosa and one chiropractor said he’d met a “gang of Breatharians at a conference and around midnight saw them stuffing handfuls of grapefruits and Frito Lays into their mouths in the hotel hallway.”
With whatever diet choices you make, measure your success on how that food makes you feel. Some people can flourish on fried chicken and some cannot! For help on settling into a healthy eating plan visit Fit Day and Nutrition.gov.
‘Melting Men’ a project by artist Nele Azevedo
This story isn’t new, but I was thrilled to come across it and thought it was worth sharing here.
Last year, Brazilian artist and environmentalist Nele Azevedo created an art project called ‘Melting Men’. This project was meant to draw to the World Wildlife Fund’s warning, that melting ice caps could cause sea-levels to rise more than 3.3 ft by the year 2100. Azevedo’s ‘Melting Men’ consisted of 1,000 man figurines carved out of ice that were then intricately placed on the steps to the Concert Hall in Berlin’s Gendarmen Market Square. Since it’s summer in Berlin, with temperatures well into 70-83 degrees, the ice carved man figurines began to melt within 30 minutes.
Image sources: Reuters and Nele Azevedo.
Watch this video about the project to learn more. And please, spread the word about this project, Nele Azevedo deserves the credit.
Modern Marvels at the MoMA
Ever fall in love with a museum piece and want to take it home? Well, at the Museum of Modern Art Store you can! (For a price, of course.) With their reproductions of iconic works from modern art history, fun gifts and accessories for art lovers, and collectible miniatures from their exhibitions, there’s something for everyone at their online store (www.momastore.org). My favorite section? The furniture and lighting products, of course! Designed by the masters of design themselves, these life-sized reproductions of visionary works are now available to the homes of the public. Have a look!
(You’ve probably seen this chair before. For those of you who don’t know, the name Eames in the furniture design world is treated with god-like reverence. Designed by Charles and Ray Eames in the 1940s, Eames chairs are universally recognized, admired, and coveted even today.)
-Beryl
Modern Urban Wall Decals
Change your mind every 2 weeks and can’t commit to wall decorations? Too lazy to put up wall paper and too scared if it’ll leave gunk on the walls? Tired of “grandmother prints” and looking for bolder, artsy graphics to add instant energy to a room? I present to you, ladies and gentlemen, they’re quick, they’re affordable, they’re customizable, chic, and gunk-free–they’re wall decals!
Made of a thin vinyl that is easy to apply and peel off, wall decals leave no residue on surfaces and can be peeled off, stored away, and swapped out at any time. And they’re not just for walls–any other smooth surface will work too! These featured wall decals come from the Surface Store (www.thesurfacestore.com), which specializes in artsy, modern, urban prints. But if you’re looking for something more traditional or want to put up a prints of your parakeet, no problem! Just search online for wall skins/stickers/decals for amazing selections of graphics. Other sites, like http://wallskins.skinit.com, give you the option of creating your wall designs that they will make and deliver.
College kid approved prices! (Relatively speaking…) Seriously. There’s no excuse for a blank wall.
(Other colors available for wall decals shown. Images linked to product pages.)
-Beryl
Sassy Seating: more haute femme chairs
Last week, my post on haute femme chairs (link here) received positive reviews, so I thought I’d do another story on fun chairs! (Okay fine…the positive reviews were just from my friends, but still. They count.) So this week I thought I’d share some more fabulous and zany renditions of traditional chair designs. Yay!
We defined haute femme as bringing back the romanticism and plush comfort of eras past and adding whimsical modern twists. Perhaps the first person to introduce this idea was Italian designer Alessandro Mendini in 1978 when he came out with his Proust chair (Poltrona di Proust) as a part of his Redesigns Furniture series. He believed that modern design was running out of new ideas and turned to redecorating classics as a solution. Here, he painted a Louis XV chair with imagery that evokes the work of 19th century writer Marcel Proust.
Anthropologie, known for its artsy, soulful aesthetic, carries upholstered furniture that follows Mendini’s vision.
Personally, I think Mendini’s experiment became an enormous success. -Beryl
Going Green from the Inside Out
With the advent of high-speed blenders and “Cadillac” juicers, it’s time to take the extra step in Green Living. After swearing off plastic bottles and going on recycling rampages, clean up the ecosystem that really matters. We can go green on the inside by introducing fresh, raw vegetable juices into our lives.
Why? This is the #1 Question.
Green Juices Provide The Following:
- Chlorophyll
- Trace Minerals
- Vegetable Protein
- Enzymes
- Alkalizing
It’s Gross!! This is the #1 Complaint.
Ok…OK. My first swallow of green juice nearly brought a tear to my eye. I was use to drinking Grape Soda and then washing that down with Hawaiian Punch. It’s an acquired taste. The more it’s consumed, the easier it is on the stomach.
Getting started is simple. A $20 blender will do. Toss in your veggies, cover with water and blend! If you’re lazy (like me) stop into your local Whole Foods Market or an equal and they’ll juice it up for you. Rookies should consume “light greens.” Romaine, butter and endive lettuces have gentle/sweet flavors. From there, easily digestible veggies can be added…a cool cucumber and celery mix…
Once the stomach adjusts, graduate to more bitter greens like collard, kale and mustard. If the green drink is too sour, drop in a few of pieces of Granny Smith Apples or a sliver of mango.
Soon enough a chilled green drink will be as appealing as an iced Corona with a lime perched on top…maybe….
Drink of the Week – Green Lemonade – Kale, Cucumber, Lemon, Lime, Ginger – it burns so good going down!
For Green Drink Recipes and Fancy Tools visit:
Visual Displays at Septieme Etage and Au Dela du Septieme Etage in Geneva, Switzerland
While searching the web for some interesting visual store displays for a side project, I stumbled upon Paperstorm, which was produced by Cut Paper artists Mia Pearlman, for two Swiss stores in Geneva called Septieme Etage and Au Dela du Septieme Etage. Pearlman has been known for whipping up some pretty nifty looking paper art installations for various venues across around the globe (she has a pretty impressive portfolio, and a wonderful website). Her work seems to be themed around weather, and particularly dark and stormy weather. These installations for the Swiss stores were up in 2008, so this in not current, breaking news, but I thought the visuals were so beautiful that they were worth sharing with you.
Liv-Chic: modern baroque will get my heart broke
Oh my god, oh my god, oh my god! Cue the Korean drama montages—I just fell in love!! There I was, hopefully surfing the internet for furniture manufacturers that carried playful, bold renditions of rococo-era chairs for my story on King Louis XV design (“Coo coo for Rococo!” it was going to be called), when I stumbled across my DREAM CHAIR.
I know, I know. I’m silly. Other people have dream cars; I have dream chairs. But I had seriously been yearning for the sure to be amazing visual effects of modernizing 18th century French furniture when I came across the online furniture Liv-Chic (www.liv-chic.com) and realized that I was not alone. Founded in 2007 by New York interior designer Hilary White, Liv-Chic specializes in modern, sassy Baroque furniture that is custom-made to fit your every last whim down to color, fabric, and finish (because, according to the website, a Liv-Chic girl “wants what she wants, how she wants”).
The trend is called haute femme—bringing back the romanticism and luxurious plush comfort of eras past and adding whimsical modern twists. “There is a trend away from colder, contemporary environments to something that’s a little bit more plush, warm and eclectic,” says Wid Chapman, a Parsons School of Design professor. With its gilded frames and ornate curves (and endorsements from Madames Pompadour and Antoniette), it’s no wonder that French furniture has recaptured our hearts and fancies.
Each furniture design in the Liv-Chic line is given a female name, which is perfect as each piece pops princess personality. Add one or two of these lovely ladies to your home for instant drama and pizazz. Meet some of your royal highnesses here:
More haute femme in the weeks to come! I’m so excited!! -Beryl