19 June 2009

Jamie takes Manhattan

One of the great developments of 2009 has been my discovery of the great designer Jamie Goldberg and her blog Gold Notes. Jamie lives on the other side of Tampa Bay from me and it's been a real boon to make a live connection with someone I've met through the blogosphere.

Jamie just returned from a Manhattan Showroom tour and she's graciously written the following post in which she shares some of her discoveries. Take it away Jamie...

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Visiting New York City as a designer is like visiting Disney World as a child...Exhilarating, energizing, overwhelming and not a little exhausting. Oh, but so worth it!!! I promised my friend Paul Anater, proprietor of this splendid blog, that I'd share my favorite Gotham goodies with you, his dedicated readers. Hope you enjoy!

FIXATED ON FIXTURES

The trend I've been observing this past year or two is the flattening of the vessel sink from its earlier bowl-like existence to a more contemporary, close-to-countertop style. This trip largely took things in the completely opposite direction. The first showroom I visited in New York was Hastings Tile & Bath, also in the A&D Building. Right in its entry was a gorgeous lav called the Grande Ceradur Basin.


In this same shape, but glossy white, is Duravit's Bacino.


Duravit had some other fab fixtures at its Madison Avenue showroom, and in its press kit showcasing upcoming releases.

Starck K is its first-ever kitchen sink, now available in the U.S. market. I love the shape, the optional cutting board and drain board sections and the Anthracite, Chestnut and Pergamon color additions to white that you can choose from.


Its Starck 1 barrel lav is now also available in high glass black and white finishes. Its popular 2nd Floor series also added a white lacquer finish option, and an ultra-cool revolving mirror and mobile storage base. The ebony finish is pretty cool, too. I especially love it on the tall storage cabinet with sliding mirrored door.




I also really liked Duravit's PuraVida lavs with their "pillow-style" concealed drains. (It also includes the option to add the coordinating faucet by Hansgrohe.) PuraVida is scheduled to launch in the U.S. in October.


TILE STYLE

I've always loved tile, even when I was a college student studying Greek and Roman antiquities. Here are some of my fave tile finds in New York.

Artistic Tile's Effervescence adds fun and flair to your roomscape.


Always an old world enthusiast, I enjoyed Country Floors collection of Pedralbes terra cotta tiles from Spain.


Hastings Tile & Bath featured a large selection of Casamood tiles in traditional and contemporary styles. Lovely collection, including this Iki thin tile.


Seeing Bisazza mosaics on a display board is one thing. Visiting its Soho showroom was another experience altogether - sheer bliss! This is its restroom.


Sicis, another art tile company, has a spectacular four-story showroom in Soho. The Italian firm not only offers floor and wall tile, but also mosaic-encrusted tubs and its brand-new pendant lights.


NOTES

(c) 2009, Jamie Goldberg, AKBD, CAPS. This posting was excerpted from Gold Notes: Nuggets from the World of Residential Design. Gold Notes is written by Tampa-based kitchen and bath designer, Jamie Goldberg, AKBD, CAPS. To see more New York finds, please click here.

18 June 2009

Achtung baby


It's come to my attention that there's a wee problem with the redirect from my old URL. For whatever reason, that redirect no longer seems to be automatic and there's now an added step to the process. Based on the drop in my traffic yesterday, this added step must be too great a burden to bear and I'm taking this as a sign that it's time to update links and feeds. Please.

In English, what this means is that around three months ago I bought and changed my web address from the old http://paulanater.blogspot.com to the shiny and new http://www.kitchenandresidentialdesign.com. My old URL still works, though there's a redirect message that appears when somebody enters that web address.

So, I'm asking my regular readers and anybody who links to me to update that link address please. The best way to ensure that I'll be here to enhance your life every morning if you navigate to me through http://www.kitchenandresidentialdesign.com.

The old URL will stay active for the next couple of months or so but it will be going away eventually, just as soon as I figure out what I want to do with it.

Many, many thanks for reading me and spending time at Kitchen and Residential Design.

'Tis the season for updates

Check this out. If you've spent any time around this blog, you know that I'm mad for Google's SketchUp 3-D modeling software. SketchUp is a powerful (and free) program that designers, architects and regular Joes and Janes use to model three dimensional objects. It's as equally adept at drawing houses as it is at drawing carpet tacks. If there's a three dimensional object in life or in your imagination, SketchUp can draw it.

SketchUp users have at their disposal a primarily user-created collection of objects and models called the 3D Warehouse. The models and objects in the Warehouse can be downloaded directly into a SketchUp model. This is really helpful if you're doing a room layout and you need an Eames Lounge or two. Rather than drawing it from scratch, you can go grab one on the Warehouse and then download it directly into your model. The Warehouse is a real time saver.

But the Warehouse is more than just a collection of objects, it's also a place where SketchUp users can upload, store and share models. And as of last week, Google enhanced the ability of an existing SketchUp model to be shared.

Here's a simplified example. Suppose I'm a humble architect at the firm of Shreve, Lamb and Harmon. For the sake of argument, let's call me Gregory Johnson. Now, let's say I have an idea for a cool building that would look great on Fifth Avenue in Manhattan. I stay up all night one night and draw a model of a building. The next morning, I want to show it to my boss. Again, for the sake of argument, we'll call my boss William Lamb.

I decide that I want to e-mail my boss and tell him about my idea. Because I'm smart, I uploaded my model to the 3-D Warehouse as soon as I finished it. So rather than adding a bulky attachment to my e-mail that won't work unless Mr. Lamb also has SketchUp installed, I can just e-mail him a link.

Mr. Lamb,

I have an idea about what to do with the vacant lot on the corner of Fifth Avenue and 33rd Street. Follow this link:http://sketchup.google.com/3dwarehouse/details?mid=ce8a4aa401c82e92776079129397a44

If we do this project, I will let you take all the credit.

Best,

G. Johnson

Cool, so now my boss knows about it. If I can generate some buzz about my idea, Mr. Lamb will hear about it from his friends in addition to hearing about it from me. This will make a better case for my idea than I can make on my own.

I, Gregory Johnson, know that the reigning who's who of Manhattan society are currently enamored with MySpace, so I decide to embed an interactive copy of my model in my MySpace page. Snap! 3-D Warehouse generates the embed code for me. A couple of clicks later and this baby is gracing my MySpace page.




So here it is, moments after I completed my model and already there's a buzz building about it. As luck would have it, Pierre S. DuPont came across my embedded model moments after seeing it and fell instantly in love. He decided he wanted to be the principal investor and by nine o'clock Mr. Lamb had a check on his desk for $24 million. And the rest, as they say, is history.

The point of all of this is that now 3D Warehouse users can embed interactive, 3D models on blogs and other web pages. Check this thing out again:


Once you click on the model, you can use the flywheel on your mouse to zoom in on it as you spin it around. That's really cool!

As always, anyone can set up his or her own private section of the Warehouse too. This is especially helpful if you're collaborating on something that needs to be kept from public view. In that case, the same linking and embedding are still fully functional, but for members only. Slick!

So, they did it again. SketchUp gets more useful and usable with time and that is a very good thing.

17 June 2009

The dragon's lair

The lovely and talented Adrienne Palmer from Susan Palmer Designs in Honolulu sent me a photo yesterday in the hopes of getting a rise out of me. It worked. Wow. Here it is.


I'll ask you what she asked me: how does something like this make it into production? This faucet's made by a big player in the world of specialty faucets and these things don't come cheap. But really, who gets an idea at a brainstorming meeting and shouts, "That's it! We need a dragon tub filler! It's perfect!" Then somebody else agrees with the original guy who thought it was a good idea. So much so that the dragon gets designed and produced. Then it shows up in a showroom and somebody buys it. Who are these people?

I've hauled my share of existing swan faucets and tub fillers out of homes I've renovated. Somebody thought they were pretty once. Chances are though, she thought that in about 1968 and her house is being renovated because she's dead and her kids sold the house to somebody who hired me to de-old lady-fy it. Can I say that? Let me tell you, it's a very special kind of a person who buys a gold, swan-shaped faucet.


Believe it or not, I once talked someone out of buying a dolphin-shaped tub filler like this one.


But a dragon? Honestly, I wouldn't know how to react if a client introduced that thing as an idea.

Well, I suppose that there's something out there for everyone. But I'd rather not know about some of that stuff.

A requiem of a sort


My bestest friend moved to New Orleans last week. He moved there on the heels of another good and great friend who moved to New Orleans about a year-and-a-half ago. Sigh. It's starting to feel that the spell cast by the Crescent City is taking my St. Pete friends away one by one. I'm thrilled for both of them, though life around here will most definitely be a lot less animated.

I have visions of them sitting in the dim light of louvered windows on a sweltering afternoon as they sip lemon cokes with chipped ice à la Blanche Dubois. That is when they're attending the many festivals, parties and costume balls the people of Nawlins throw to keep themselves entertained. Ho hum, and here I am stuck in work-a-day Florida. Poor me.

I got a phone call on Sunday morning that detailed their plans for an exciting Sunday. They were planning to go to town to go to a food festival and then to take in as much high and low culture as they could get their hands on. I hung up the phone and went back to scrubbing my floors. Scrub. Scrub. Scrub.

I have an idea about what their lives look like over there on the other side of the Gulf of Mexico and it looks a little something like this.


If this is not what their lives look like I don't want to know about it. Allow me this fellas. Please.