Halloween-ish

Documenting Halloween decorations seemed an interesting exercise. Let us tell you-there is some CRAAZY stuff out there and some of it is NOT decorative.

Ofcourse there will be pumpkins-these find pride of place because they are cute and pretty and tame.
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And then they get wild…(via our friends Chicquero. Pumpkin carving work belongs to Ray @ Villafane Studios, New York.)

Happy Halloween!

LightSpace: Dekko Gekko

Interesting interiors of a restaurant in Odessa, Texas. So different from the austere palette one finds in NYC. This is from the desert and it is not afraid of color (and colored lights)!

Enjoy the vibrance
Pelican on the roof

Tiled Table-colorful food

Lights

Gekko on the wall

KidSpace: I’m feeling pink.

So what do you do if you have a festival in town?

Food? Check.
Maple syrup

Entertain the public? Check.
Scarecrow making contest
Pony rides

Sell stuff? Check
Soaps and other nice smelling objects

Buy stuff? Check
Buying Gourd Birdhouses

Color the public fountain PINK*?–Oh Absolutely!
Pink Fountain!

Color me pink

*Note: The fountain was pink for Breast Cancer Awareness week, not for the Halloween Festival.

An idea whose time has come

This write-up can be titled “You saw it HERE first” but we think that works better as a punch line. You’ll see why.

We also apologize in advance. Some parts of this post may be specific to a people in a time that you may not identify with. But that is the people & time that we are from. And this post is important to us.

So take yourself back in time to 1995. We were students of architecture, in a south asian setting. We learnt how to “live, breathe and dream” in the material. Drawings were hand-drawn and hand inked. Glass Curtain walls was not yet the norm; air conditioning rare; Raw untreated sewage was dumped in rivers. Many believed in sourcing and building local. Green Architecture was not a “brand”- it was the norm.

Forward to 1999: AutoCAD was introduced in architecture schools as the preferred medium of drawing. Few held out against the “mechanization” of the “art” of hand drawing. Others embraced it. We were somewhere in the middle. New technologies in building were introduced. Some held back and others embraced it. But raw sewage still found its way to rivers.

In such a time, where old ideologies were meeting the new, an idea was born. This idea was not special in the overall scheme of things. In retrospect, it was probably not even great design. But in a conservative society which was starting to question its conventional wisdom, this idea was trying to push the boundaries of its own circumstance.

An idea of a LIVING BRIDGE.

It was unheard of in India.

The technology to make it glamorous was not mainstream yet. So it stayed unglamorous and tried to do the best it could with what it knew.

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This BRIDGE would try to connect a highly affluent/developed area of a city with its low-income area. It would try to make a city LOOK TOWARDS its river rather than treat it like a sewage drain. It would try to bring RESPECT to the river in the hope that future generations may enjoy its beauty. And it would try to be an Urban street in a city that was slowly forgetting its own street life.

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3 copy
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This LIVING BRIDGE did not look like much, but it had great ideals for itself. It wanted to change the city and then change the world!

This idea was submitted to the then Environment/Urban Development authority.

And there it lay buried for years, waiting patiently.

In 2011, there are advertisements that a fabulous new “living bridge” will be built in a city in north India. This bridge will make the river’s waterfront a place to be. It will be shaped after the water side communities abroad. It will be GLAMOROUS, it will be GREAT and it will be BEAUTIFUL. It will make a statement to the world!

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It is an idea whose time has come.
But remember, you saw it here first…:)!

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KidSpace: Tile Tile everywhere

So what happens if you have an inspirational and famous parent? Either you become totally spoilt and squander away their legacy, or you carry their good name forward and make it your own.

The latter is what Katherine Wood of Antonia Tile is doing. Not only has she developed and refined her parent’s work of tile making, she has added to the legacy by introducing enamel tile-making techniques and developing some unique designs.

Check out her pieces below. She has an Animal, Nature and Abstract series. She also does custom murals! Definitely a different and “inspirational” piece for kids rooms/bathrooms! “Now remember Arthur, you make that towel rack in my name and do me proud.”

Mural

Animal

Poppy

Nature

Cathedral? Nope-its Weill Cornell

Amazing how it reminds invokes the aura of a modern cathedral.

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Even the UN Sec Gen was there- perhaps to pray…

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Presenting IGH: Green design is no picnic.

A friend from architecture school is now the Director of a prominent ‘green’ architecture/planning practice in India. We feel proud to bring you some of their work. IGH stands for Initiative for Green Habitat. This is just one of their recent projects, but it showcases how green design is an attitude-one that can permeate every aspect of our lives however small. Picnic table made from previously used wood packaging.

Treating the wood

Joinery

Joinery

Finished product!

LightSpace: Mercury Floating

Mercury floating or floating mercury best describes this light fixture we chanced upon recently. It is bizarre. We thought it was to be viewed from down below, being a ceiling fixture and all, but no. It looks just odd from down below. From the side it looks just passable. And the light reflecting off the shiny surface probably generates some artistic shadows somewhere but we were too blinded to notice.

Who designs these things? Probably someone famous.
Who specs these things? Probably someone famous as well.

Sigh.

Side view

Bottom view

KidSpace: Rothko but happier

Rothko Tile Page

Presumably everyone has heard of Mark Rothko. We were particularly attracted to his works early on in our explorations into art. Except that by that time he was famous and therefore unaffordable for the average small collector. We recently found an artist whose work suddenly prompted stirrings within–not felt since we saw Light Red over Black (1957) by Rothko at the Tate Modern several years ago.

Eileen R Miller’s art is strong and beautiful. She earned a BFA in painting from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1979. She lives and paints from Wilmette, IL. She has exhibited at several places in Illinois and in New York. We found her at the Architectural Digest Home Design Show and loved her work.

Perfect piece of REAL ART for your little tyke’s room. If all goes well for Eileen, it may also serve as their college fund!

The Medium Series
The Medium Series
The Light Series
The Light Series
The Dark Series
The Dark Series

Also see: KidSpace, More KidSpace, Even More KidSpace, Yet more KidSpace