Damn You, Lowes (& Other Fun Things)

Decor10
Decor10

I can always feel a little somethin’ missing when I haven’t posted in a while. What can I say? I’m chatty.

Anyway, these past two weeks have been a little more unpredictable than most. While it wouldn’t be fair for me to share other people’s business on the blog (at least, not until they gave the ok), sometimes, you just need to be there for the people who have been there for you. And that’s how I find myself instead on Instagram, posting all sorts of randomly connected things:

1. Damn You, Lowes.

You did it to me again, Lowes. I go to your store, just to get ideas, and then I have to spend my whole afternoon hurriedly planting flowers before the sun sets. Also because I’m sick of winter and need some color in my life. I even fought off an ant hill. All for you.

lowes flowers

2. Vegetable Car

Joshua Radin is like one of those guys in college who always had his guitar, and thought that if he played it long enough out of his dorm room window, all the girls would flock to him. Only he has a shitload of talent, is really good friends with my #1 celeb crush Zach Braff, and girls actually did. Boyfriends occasionally attend the shows too, but only because they were probably bribed in some way (not that I’ve ever done that… coughcoughKateNash2010). Cary Brothers and Rachel Yamagata were amazing performances, too. (Oh, and in case you were wondering, Vegetable Car is one of Radin’s fun little songs.)

rachelyamagata

3. Meh, I guess I’ll Have Prosecco?

St. Patrick’s Day came and went, but with zero green beer. I gave up beer for Lent, and had NO idea just how much I’d miss my favorite brews. I honestly really, really do miss it! I also gave up shopping, but am not missing that nearly as much. Perhaps it’s because I don’t find myself anxious to jump into bikini weather quite yet (though I am making a huge amount of progress and still sticking to my New Years goals on that front!). But jumping into a hoppy IPA? That sounds pretty good, actually.

prosecco

Don’t let the sparkle fool ya: I chose it for the lower calories than regular wine!

 

4. Making a Freaking Mess

Ever feel a spark of creativity that winds up destroying your whole office? Happened to me on a recent DIY challenge for Pinterest (more on that next month though). The office has since been restored to normal, but still… it was like a craft tornado. (#craftnado)

craftnado

5. Saw Ya Later

I had a date last week that wound up being 15 minutes late. So, naturally, in my brain, that translates to 20 minutes (see what I did there?) of extra time for a quick DIY. Which meant cutting down some crown molding for the laundry room in the exact same clothes I was going to wear for my date. Which isn’t exactly unusual. But still funny. Sawdust isn’t the same thing as dirty, right?

saw date

6. More Crown

Finally, in keeping with the molding theme, my dad asked me to install a product called Easy Crown in my parents’ living room while we looked after my grandmother (Mom was out of town for her birthday, and installing things while she’s away is a gift she seems to enjoy). This product was kind of interesting… simply thin molded plastic that sticks on the ceiling (not what I expected) with strips of super-sticky tape. It looked surprisingly less cheap than I initially thought, and allowed me to do the entire room in about 45 minutes.

easy crown

I still have to caulk things before its finished, so that will mean caulking in my Easter dress for the second year in a row. I don’t know that I would install it in my own house, but I’ve heard that this product is what they use in some before-and-after DIY shows when the designers only have a few days to get all of the decorating completed (which, I can attest to, doesn’t sound nearly as crazy when you’re in the middle of it!).

There you have it: a full week (or more) of haphazard that was both unusual and still full of humor and fun. There’s more to come later this week (5-year blogiversary on Wednesday!). And if you’re not yet following The Ugly Duckling House (@uglyducklingDIY) on Instagram, you might want to consider it this spring and summer. I’ve lined up a few giveaways that will take place there, and you won’t see them on the blog.

How was your week? It feels like we haven’t talked in forever 😉

The post Damn You, Lowes (& Other Fun Things)

The Ugly Duckling House

Damn You, Lowes (& Other Fun Things)

Decor10
Decor10

I can always feel a little somethin’ missing when I haven’t posted in a while. What can I say? I’m chatty.

Anyway, these past two weeks have been a little more unpredictable than most. While it wouldn’t be fair for me to share other people’s business on the blog (at least, not until they gave the ok), sometimes, you just need to be there for the people who have been there for you. And that’s how I find myself instead on Instagram, posting all sorts of randomly connected things:

1. Damn You, Lowes.

You did it to me again, Lowes. I go to your store, just to get ideas, and then I have to spend my whole afternoon hurriedly planting flowers before the sun sets. Also because I’m sick of winter and need some color in my life. I even fought off an ant hill. All for you.

lowes flowers

2. Vegetable Car

Joshua Radin is like one of those guys in college who always had his guitar, and thought that if he played it long enough out of his dorm room window, all the girls would flock to him. Only he has a shitload of talent, is really good friends with my #1 celeb crush Zach Braff, and girls actually did. Boyfriends occasionally attend the shows too, but only because they were probably bribed in some way (not that I’ve ever done that… coughcoughKateNash2010). Cary Brothers and Rachel Yamagata were amazing performances, too. (Oh, and in case you were wondering, Vegetable Car is one of Radin’s fun little songs.)

rachelyamagata

3. Meh, I guess I’ll Have Prosecco?

St. Patrick’s Day came and went, but with zero green beer. I gave up beer for Lent, and had NO idea just how much I’d miss my favorite brews. I honestly really, really do miss it! I also gave up shopping, but am not missing that nearly as much. Perhaps it’s because I don’t find myself anxious to jump into bikini weather quite yet (though I am making a huge amount of progress and still sticking to my New Years goals on that front!). But jumping into a hoppy IPA? That sounds pretty good, actually.

prosecco

Don’t let the sparkle fool ya: I chose it for the lower calories than regular wine!

 

4. Making a Freaking Mess

Ever feel a spark of creativity that winds up destroying your whole office? Happened to me on a recent DIY challenge for Pinterest (more on that next month though). The office has since been restored to normal, but still… it was like a craft tornado. (#craftnado)

craftnado

5. Saw Ya Later

I had a date last week that wound up being 15 minutes late. So, naturally, in my brain, that translates to 20 minutes (see what I did there?) of extra time for a quick DIY. Which meant cutting down some crown molding for the laundry room in the exact same clothes I was going to wear for my date. Which isn’t exactly unusual. But still funny. Sawdust isn’t the same thing as dirty, right?

saw date

6. More Crown

Finally, in keeping with the molding theme, my dad asked me to install a product called Easy Crown in my parents’ living room while we looked after my grandmother (Mom was out of town for her birthday, and installing things while she’s away is a gift she seems to enjoy). This product was kind of interesting… simply thin molded plastic that sticks on the ceiling (not what I expected) with strips of super-sticky tape. It looked surprisingly less cheap than I initially thought, and allowed me to do the entire room in about 45 minutes.

easy crown

I still have to caulk things before its finished, so that will mean caulking in my Easter dress for the second year in a row. I don’t know that I would install it in my own house, but I’ve heard that this product is what they use in some before-and-after DIY shows when the designers only have a few days to get all of the decorating completed (which, I can attest to, doesn’t sound nearly as crazy when you’re in the middle of it!).

There you have it: a full week (or more) of haphazard that was both unusual and still full of humor and fun. There’s more to come later this week (5-year blogiversary on Wednesday!). And if you’re not yet following The Ugly Duckling House (@uglyducklingDIY) on Instagram, you might want to consider it this spring and summer. I’ve lined up a few giveaways that will take place there, and you won’t see them on the blog.

How was your week? It feels like we haven’t talked in forever 😉

The post Damn You, Lowes (& Other Fun Things)

The Ugly Duckling House

Cartoon Characters Perform A Disco Ritual In Fever The Ghost’s Source Music Video

Australian animator Felix Colgrave’s music video for Fever the Ghost follows a cartoon man and his pet serpent who flip their residence planet into a giant disco ball (+ film).

Fever the Ghost - Source music video

Colgrave’s collaboration with the Los Angeles-based band began with a “really cryptic electronic mail”.

Fever the Ghost - Source music video

“We organized a video get in touch with more than a few far more cryptic emails, and then throughout the get in touch with the band was obscured by a big papier-mâché strawberry in sunglasses,” Colgrave told Dezeen. “I normally say no to carrying out music videos, but they had been enjoyable to talk to and had previously lured me that far through sheer ambiguity.”

Fever the Ghost - Source music video

The animator then set about making a clip for the band’s track Source utilizing visuals that he believed complemented its sounds rather than the lyrics.

Fever the Ghost - Source music video

“The band was adamant that I make what ever I want, to the degree that I asked for the lyrics multiple instances, and they refused since they did not want them to influence my imaginative selections,” stated Colgrave. “To this day I do not know the lyrics to Supply and I’m not even sure if they’re all genuine words.”


Relevant story: Dropbear Digital turns paper minimize-outs into quit-movement music video for John Butler Trio


Fever the Ghost - Source music video

Colgrave developed a story about a man and his pet serpent, who need to travel into the centre of his hill-covered planet and flick on a switch to transform it into a disco ball.

Fever the Ghost - Source music video

To attain the underground planet, the old guy rides the beast by means of the mouth of one particular of the hills, which Colgrave suspects is “in on the total factor”.

Fever the Ghost - Source music video

“All the other hills may or may possibly not know what’s taking place at all, but they are essential for the light to get out of the planet for the disco ball transformation,” he explained.

Fever the Ghost - Source music video

This ritual awakens a nearby “celebration planet” and its inhabitants, who then dance as a choreographed troop. “They’re just like dancers in any other music video,” said Colgrave.

Fever the Ghost - Source music video

While the revellers take pleasure in their disco, the old guy and the serpent have a picnic and play a game of cards until finally it’s time to flick the switch once more and flip the planet back to typical.

Fever the Ghost - Source music video

Colgrave designed the animated video entirely utilizing Adobe Flash software to maintain the manufacturing procedure as easy as attainable.

Fever the Ghost - Source music video

“Combining various application and mediums is good, but making it all in the a single issue had this immediacy, which is necessary if you genuinely want to make every little thing up as you go,” he stated.

Fever the Ghost - Source music video

“No undertaking backgrounds or animations separately or something like that, no wasting time arranging, just working my way from one particular finish of the song to the other, having greatest time for the idea to ferment, and applying the identical variety of imagined to every little thing,” he added.

Fever the Ghost - Source music video

The video took two or three months to full. Colgrave showed the band the initial 64 seconds and acquired their approval, then did not reveal the animation to them once more till it was complete.

Fever the Ghost - Source music video

“It’s just me drawing the way I draw, and animating it the way I animate,” Colgrave mentioned.

Fever the Ghost - Source music video

Source is taken from Fever the Ghost’s Crab in Honey EP, released by Heavenly Recordings final year.

Dezeen

JMY Architects Combines Living And Retail Spaces On A Narrow Site In Busan

An apartment, community area and shop are accommodated in this skinny building squeezed onto a narrow plot in the South Korean city of Busan by regional office JMY Architects .

Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY Architects

The website for the constructing in Busan’s Daecheong-dong district measures just five metres broad by 12 metres deep, so JMY Architects chose to mix the different functions by stacking them vertically.

Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY Architects

By uniting a three-storey apartment with a business gallery room utilized by the proprietor, the building aims to demonstrate the possible for limited urban web sites to merge accommodation with retail and leisure activities.

Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY Architects

“The undertaking promotes space as a medium for urban daily life, exactly where lifestyle expands towards the city and city lifestyle merges into 1 building,” explained the architects in a statement.

Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY Architects

“It introduces a new chance for little-scale housing and the expandability of human existence as an alternative technique for suburban revitalisation, rather than huge-scale development projects this kind of as new town developments.”

Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY Architects

A essential challenge was to include a mixed-use plan even though meeting laws governing the want for appropriate distance from neighbouring buildings, as nicely as the necessity for a direct evacuation route.

Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY Architects

Circulation troubles are resolved by positioning a staircase at the rear of the constructing. The stairs are enclosed by concrete walls interrupted by openings that incorporate metal mesh panels.


Relevant story: White Cone Home produces daylit residences on a restricted Seoul website


The mesh surfaces enable light and air to reach the stairwell, which is just a handful of inches away from adjacent buildings on three sides.

Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY Architects

On the ground floor, a total-height window facing the street displays the interior of the showroom space.

Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY Architects

The entrance to the showroom is set back from the pavement below a cantilevered corner of the building.

Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY Architects

The initial floor accommodates an open-program area that can be utilized by the regional community. The bulk of its glazed finish wall is taken care of with a frosted finish to restrict visibility into the space from the street.

Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY Architects

The apartment is found on the upper amounts, with the master bedroom suite and small lounge on the third floor a kitchen, dining and lounge area on the fourth floor and a guest bedroom at the prime.

Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY Architects

Both the master bedroom and main residing area culminate in glass surfaces, which incorporate doors that open onto sheltered balconies set back from the street-facing elevation.

Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY Architects

A staircase connecting the diverse ranges follows the boundary wall and is screened from see by frosted glazing.

A double-height void gives a visual hyperlink in between the prime two floors and enables the glazed end wall to lengthen upwards and offer better views of the sky.

Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY Architects

The very same precast concrete panels utilised in the stairwell are utilized during the interior and lengthen onto the balconies.

Photography is by Joonhwan Yoon.


Undertaking credits:

Architects: JMY Architects
Venture architect: Jaemin Yoon
Design staff: Hyukhyu Shin, Kwangjae Ryu, Minji Kim, Eunji Choi, Yeonjung Lee, Seongmin Lee, Jinsoo Kim
Collaborators: MOA Structure, HL Consulting Engineers, Wookdongbangjae
Development: CS Construction
Interior construction: Site individuals
Graphic design and style: Social Graphics

Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY ArchitectsWebsite program Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY ArchitectsGround floor strategy Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY ArchitectsVery first floor program Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY ArchitectsSecond floor strategy Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY ArchitectsThird floor strategy

Daecheong-dong Small House by JMY Architects

Dezeen

Philippe Malouin Experiments With Caesarstone To Create Collection Of Planters

Milan 2015: London designer Philippe Malouin has formed a collection of geometric planters in a variety of shapes, textures and colours using strong-surface material Caesarstone.

Movements planters by Philippe Malouin

Malouin’s Caesarstone Movements collection includes cuboid, cylindrical and pyramid-shaped vessels, which have a selection of surface textures, patterns and colors.

“For me the beginning stage was the exploration of the materials, as we tend to commence most projects,” mentioned Malouin.

Movements planters by Philippe Malouin

“We therefore centered on paying time in the workshop, except, this was not an ordinary workshop, but a entirely outfitted strong surface transformation facility,” he extra.


Connected story: Philippe Malouin produces circular swing set with Caesarstone seats


Caesarstone is an engineered quartz materials that is generally utilised to type interior operate surfaces.

Movements planters by Philippe Malouin

“Caesarstone is an extremely versatile material that is straightforward to predict and function with, and it delivers a variety of colours and finishes,” mentioned Malouin. “I as a result experimented with a series of techniques and applications ranging from the mundane to the more experimental.”

The planters show conventional carving tactics such as inlay and marquetry as properly as showcasing the assortment of colors in the Caesarstone assortment, which includes new hues for 2015.

Movements planters by Philippe Malouin

The collection will be shown at Milan’s Palazzo Serbelloni from 14 to 18 April, in the course of the city’s annual style week, along with a set of eight Caesarstone swings hung from a circular frame – also created by Malouin.

A twelve-seat version of the swing set was presented at Toronto’s Interior Layout Demonstrate in January.

Dezeen

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