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Showing posts with label furniture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label furniture. Show all posts

Tuesday, 10 January 2017



Photography by Ulrike Blasor

The unimaginable
is there to be imagined.


~~ J.M. Coetzee



THE DESIGNER WHO LOVES PALMS

Palms embody the sultriness of the tropics and can be found
throughout Puerto Rico. Look at them long enough and if
you are a young designer you might suddenly get inspired.

That's the case of Alexandre Gradin who turned to the
Puerto Rican Royal Palm as the source material for a
line of simple but useful bowls that he makes in different
sizes and can be put to many different uses.


Courtesy of A. Gradin






















Gradin uses the woody leaf sheaths of the palm (yagua)
as his raw material for the bowls which he fashions using
a special mold.

Right now he is focussing on the small-size version. These
small bowls that look like vessels that might sail away were you
to place them on a passing sea wave are also reminiscent of
origami, Japan's gentle art of folding paper, but don't be fooled into
believing this is a delicate object as its organic material is
sturdy and was once used in Puerto Rico in the construction
of rural dwellings.

"The Yagua bowl is an economic, eco-friendly, biodegradable,
reusable and very versatile product," says the designer on his
website which offers information on other attractive products
produced by his company, 10 Gradin.



Courtesy of A. Gradin



The line concentrates on a few but well-crafted items nicely suited
for the home: an attractive lamp with wooden base, steel stem and
an acrylic lampshade with a pretty scalloped edge; a minimalistic
coffee table (wood choices for the top include mahogany, red oak,
maple or blue mahoe); a wood cutting board shaped as a painter's
palette and fashioned out of teak or eucalyptus wood; and a very
distinctive arm chair in a neo-art-deco style made to order out of
birch and cedar plywood.


Courtesy of A.Gradin

A graduate of the School of Plastic Arts in old San Juan, Gradin holds
a regular job at an engineering firm but devotes his week-ends to
working on his designs which he also exhibits at local design fairs.
He is part of a growing number of talented young men and women
who are finding their voice through design and starting businesses to
promote their distinctive aesthetic for the home and other areas of life.

In his work, Gradin said he seeks ways of echoing nature through
organic curves and shapes suggestive of flowers. His is a "minimal
but functional aesthetic in which almost pure geometric forms
predominate." Gradin likes working with local woods, stainless steel,
plastics, glass, textiles or renewable materials (such as the yagua)
and creating interesting combinations of these materials.

As a designer,  "I want to create awareness that local products
can be competitive by adding value to design, quality of materials
and of construction."

10gradin.com


There are nights when
the wolves are silent
and only the moon howl
s.


~~ George Carlin


☛ A simple tip: Sifter to the rescue



A sifter is used to lighten flour that is too packed down or clumpy.
But what if you don't have one readily at hand, what to do? Not to
worry as a fine mesh strainer will do the job just fine, which goes
to show that something that does two jobs for the price of one is
definitely a good thing to have in the kitchen.



HAPPY NEW YEAR!

© 2017 LORRAINE BLASOR, all rights reserved


Thursday, 28 May 2015


In the sunset of dissolution,
everything is illuminated
by the aura of nostalgia.

Milan Kundera



UPHOLSTERY MAKEOVER



SAN JUAN -- An upholstery makeover can be less expensive than
buying a new piece of furniture but is only as good as the craftsman
you hire. Good craftsmanship requires time, patience and skill, all
of which Miguel Figueroa has in spades.

A graduate of the Miguel Such Vocational School, Figueroa
can transform a beat up old piece of furnishing into an attractive
new version of itself that will provide many more years of useful
service.

No need to discard the cherished old family couch. Just purchase a
nice piece of fabric and Figueroa will do the rest. His prices are
fair and his work is impeccable and meticulously executed.

With his 28 years of experience, Figueroa is up to any challenge
though he concedes that arm rests and tufting (capitonné upholstery)
can sometimes prove demanding.

An example of tufting, courtesy of Miguel Figueroa

By his own estimate, Figueroa is one of around 300 to 400
upholsterers plying their trade in metropolitan San Juan. In addition
to upholstery, he also paints furniture, builds beds and headboards,
and makes window cornices.

A tall courteous man, Figueroa will come to your home and give
you a free estimate for a job. Additionally, he will pick up the
piece of furniture to be upholstered and deliver it when the work
is completed. He can be reached by phone or contacted via e-mail.

787.360.0797
tapiceriaspecialedition@yahoo.com

Photography by Bill Santiago

Within me, 
I have all the dreams of the world.

Fernando Pessoa



JUNE WEDDING: A PIECE OF CAKE

June is traditionally a month for weddings and any wedding
worth its salt calls for a cake, especially one that reflects the
celebrants -- i.e. the happy bride and groom -- and astounds the
guests.

Local pastry chef Carlos Morales has no trouble meeting this
double bill: he is a veritable genius in the kitchen and his
confections can replicate just about anything under the moon.

Consider the cake he created for a couple with a passion for
travel. Each tier alluded to traveling: the bottom featured a
map of the Caribbean and Puerto Rico, the wedding locale;
the next tier represented an expensive, two-toned suitcase
with a chocolate bottom and a vanilla cover, down to such
details as the carrying handles, gold metal hardware and the
luggage tags; a map on the top tier highlighted the honey-
mooners' destination: Africa.

The result: an amazing cake, every bit of it edible.

Trained at the Culinary Institute in New York City, Morales
and his sister Maricel teamed up to launch C + M Contemporary
Master Cake Designers. That was 17 years ago and he's still
going strong with plenty of enthusiasm.

"My greatest satisfaction is to see when a bride arrives at
the reception hall and sees my sugar art work and they get
emotional," Morales said.

"That's my applause."

http://www.cmcakedesigners.com
           




A SIMPLE TIP

Lamp shades can be expensive
but a simple basket with an
open weave is a dandy
alternative with the added
bonus of creating a
lovely lighting effect.







Photography by Denise Blasor

You can tell when people don't have pets,
because they start to look like their plants.


Drew Dernavich




©2012 Lorraine Blasor all rights reserved☀