
Rose and Radish is selling these babies and they're calling them "Ornamented Metal Lace Drains." It's an interesting idea and it wouldn't surprise me if it caught on. Anybody looking for a million dollar idea? Check out how much these things cost!

Completely unrelated to interior design, kitchen design and sustainability I know. Well maybe not completely unrelated, the set designs on this program are beyond belief and beyond words. What am I talking about? Why, AMC's Mad Men of course. Mad Men is quite simply the best program ever aired on American television. I know that I have a penchant for exaggeration, but this is no exaggeration.
Mad Men returns to AMC for its second season on Sunday night, 27 July at 10pm eastern time. Season one is already out on video so if you don't know what I'm talking about, there's still time to catch up. DO NOT MISS THIS SHOW.
I love living in an urban neighborhood. The framed art shown here is one of my most prized possessions and it is a home made wanted sign I ripped off a telephone booth down the street ten years ago. "Found Art" everyone called it then; but whatever you want to call it, it makes me laugh. Its cryptic and provocative warning makes me wonder who on earth this subject is and what did he do to the person who made the sign? This framed piece of paper has spawned more conversations than I can count. I have people over and invariably, "St. Pete Beware" finds its way into the discussion. So thank you anonymous sign maker.



I have a dear, dear friend whose yard is his pride and joy. The photo above is not his yard, though I wish it were. Hah! Anyhow, despite my incessant demands that he replace his resource-intensive and inefficient lawn, he persists. Like a lot of people, he spreads fertilizers on said lawn and then basks in the glory of an all-American patch 'o green surrounding his home when they kick in. Then, just like a lot of people, he cuts and trims that now lush and full lawn then throws away the clippings. So the nitrogen and potash and phosphate he spends all that money and effort on in their powdered form go into the trash in their grass clipping form. That makes no sense to me. Why not just buy a bag of fertilizer and then set it out in the trash immediately and save the effort extended on the intermediate steps?