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Friday, January 22, 2010

I always wanted to know more......

So here is some info for you and me.

"1708 When the white gold was born
In 1708, Johann Friedrich Böttger and his team discovered the secret of the porcelain production, arcanum. Since that time Dresden is known as the cradle of the white gold, which brought wealth and glory for Saxony."

"1872 The foundation of the „Saxon porcelain manufactory of Carl Thieme zu Potschappel-Dresden“
In the 19th century, there were many porcelain painters in Saxony who did their job at home and brought many new impulses to the traditional porcelain art. They creatively decorated white porcelain bought somewhere else. One of them, Carl Thieme, decided to manufacture his own white pieces. For this reason, he founded the today’s Saxon Porcelain Manufactory in Potschappel in the year 1872. On September 17th 1872 he began with the production of decorative porcelain and man-made porcelain. A broken wall bracket was registered as very first model."


"1888 The death of Carl Thieme
One of Thiemes best employees was Karl August Kuntzsch, a talented flower modeller and later his son-in-law and business partner. He founded the big tradition of opulent flower covering which is still very characteristic for Dresden Porcelain. After the death of Thieme he proved himself as a far-sighted entrepreneur who continued the business successfully and introduced Dresden Porcelain to the international markets.
Around 1900 the triumphal course around the world
Kuntzsch travelled to the United States, organised the export throughout Europe and won international awards and medals for example at the international industrial exhibition in Brussels 1897, at the World exposition in Paris in 1900, and various art exhibitions. He made the Dresden Porcelain world-famous."

"1901/02 Registered Trademark
There were different trademarks for Dresden Porcelain in the past. Since 1901, the blue "SP Dresden" (for Saxonian Porcelain Factory Dresden) is a protected trademark guaranteeing the authenticity of Dresden Porcelain."
"Famous Exhibitions
The company often took part in industry, art, and world expositions. Numerous gold medals from Antwerp, Chicago, Paris, or Dresden document not only the high quality of the finished goods but also the significant artistic skills of the modelers, sculptors, and painters. Outlet stores were opened in the European capitals of Berlin, Stockholm, London, and Paris.

1914-1971 Difficult times for the Saxon Porcelain Manufactory
In the first world war, these stores needed to be closed for a time. To replace the missing workers, women were trained and a continuous training program was started. Once Karl August Kuntzsch died in 1920, his two sons took over direction of the company. The industrial town of Potschappel was joined together with other towns in the Plauen area to found the new city of Freital. 
Although Kuntzsch's brothers rebuilt the foreign market, the work force of the factory was reduced to not even one hundred in 1929 due to the impending economic crisis. Reduced working hours became the norm. Enamel plates and key fobs were even produced just to keep the painters employed. When the British court ordered a multi-figured coronation set, crockery, vases, and lamps in 1936, the foreign contacts paid for themselves once again.
Starting in 1936, no gold was allowed to be used on the edges of cups, bowls, boxes, or vases. An inconspicuous gold-brown color was used as a substitute. Luckily, the factory remained untroubled by the Second World War.
After 1945, Emil Alfred Kuntzsch slowly started up production again. Since he didn't want to hand the family business over the the state, he was charged with criminal economic activities under false pretenses and, in 1950, lost control of the factory. The factory was held in trust but slowly transformed into a public work by 1971.

1972-1990 The lost brand
In 1972 the manufactory was transformed completly into a public work. The factory was focused exclusively on exporting their goods at low prices to obtain foreign currencies. This brought a number of orders to the factory. In order to double production capacity, three modern kilns were imported between 1978 and 1980, and up to 1990, between 160 to 180 workers were employed. At the same time, however, the building fell into disrepair.

Reprivatization
After reunification, the factory faced a problem it had never faced before. The company, whose products sold without a problem last year, was now facing foreclosure. As a result, many employees were laid off so that the workforce was reduced by 75%.
For the reprivitization, the factory allowed a French banking consortium to act as a trust. After they went bankrupt, they were bought out by a West German group of companies.

Optimism
After this, two former employees again attempted to protect the company and its 33 employees from closure by putting it back on the market with new concepts. 
Since then, the quality of the finished goods in the painting and sculpting workshop has steadily improved. Form, decor, and techniques have been further developed and, in 1998, the training of specialized staff began again.
Since then, the quality of the finished goods in the painting and sculpting workshop has steadily improved. Form, decor, and techniques have been further developed and, in 1998, the training of specialized staff began again."



I think all the pieces featured in this post 
are stunning and best of all...
CLASSICS.
Now prepare yourself....when you go to the site and look around....
it is more like pieces at granny's place.
I don't really know where these gorgeous pieces are hidden, and I love them!
NOT SO MUCH the granny stuff.

Do you like this Dresden Porcelain?
Did you know 
the info about the white gold ?

To Shop go here.  or just go to the site if you want to know more.
It is a great site.
Other credits are from A.D.

And if you are reading this and it is 
Saturday or Sunday....think of me. 
Please send me good thoughts, for I will be in 
'Retail Hell'.


Renee Finberg 'TELLS ALL' in her BLOG.....

Interior Design, Palm Beach, Boca Raton,Ft.Lauderdale,Design Service, Window Treatments, TurnKey Interior Design Service,Paint selection, Floor-Plans,Online Interior Design,
Design Center of The Americas, D.C.O.T.A., Dresden Porcelain, white gold
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Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Who Needs Arms Anyway ? * Part ll


These are fun.
You can use them in a dining room as seating at your dining table
It would be used  instead of a ready made banquet.
And if you did that you would gain at least 30"
in the room by putting the armless piece it against the wall of the dining room.
Just pull the table up and slightly over it. I have found that pedestals work best,
that way there are no table legs fighting you to get in or out.
 Right?

The Juliet from Lexington



An armless sectional * heaven.

Liz Claybourne by Lexington


This is an armless sectional I designed and had made for that boyfriend .
It was no less than fabulous.






These 2 are divine anywhere
Don't you agree?.

This is just elegant.

This is a bit too funky for me, but it is certainly armless.

Again....these could be perfect in the right fabric, and in the right room.

She does armless too.








Just remember if you do a banquet for dining,
remember it must be armless.
If it is not it is too hard to get in the seat with out moving the whole piece.
And most of the time others are sitting on it too at the same time as you.

Would you use a banquet for a dining area 
in your home ?
Do you think it would look cozy 
and elegant ?


Renee Finberg 'TELLS ALL' in her BLOG.....
Interior Design, Palm Beach, Boca Raton,Design Sources, Window Treatments, Custom Design, Paint, Color Coordination, Online Interior Design, Floor Plans,Design Center, Bespoke , armless sofas, banquets

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Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Kenny Rankin Dead At 69





OBITUARIES.....

I never thought about them really.
I have been listening to Kenny Rankin all of my life. 
Seriously. 
All of my life, starting at 16 years old.
If you haven't heard his music, or even heard of him as an artist I have included just 3 of my favorite songs of his.
It never crossed my mind that he would die someday. 
I have seen him in small concerts, and you really end up staring at your friends, 
(who love him as well) 
and cocking your heads saying; "is that really his voice ?" 
"it can't be that perfect and beautiful
" can it ?"
I was surfing around trying to find a music widget for my blog.
I wanted to load Kenny Rankin. 
So I googled him and this is what I found. I had no idea that he had died.
I was shocked.
Shocked enough to blog about it, and share him with you. 
Oh how I loved his voice first, and the man later.
When he was young, he was pretty cute. 
Do you agree ?


*This is taken from The La Times
Kenny Rankin dies at 69; 
singer-songwriter's long career almost defied categorization


"A well-regarded guitarist, he wrote the hit song 'Peaceful' for Helen Reddy and played in Bob Dylan's backup band on the influential 1965 album 'Bringing It All Back Home.'
June 09, 2009|Jon Thurber


His career, which spanned more than five decades, almost defied categorization. A well-regarded guitarist, he played in Bob Dylan's backup band on the influential 1965 album "Bringing It All Back Home." He also spent several years on the road opening for comedian George Carlin.


Rankin appeared on "The Tonight Show" with Johnny Carson more than 25 times. Carson was such a fan that he wrote the liner notes for Rankin's 1967 debut LP, "Mind Dusters."


As a singer with a velveteen tenor voice, he had highly successful covers of the Beatles' "Blackbird" and "Penny Lane" in the mid-1970s and in 1976 recorded an LP of standards, "The Kenny Rankin Album," with a large orchestra conducted by Don Costa." (Don Costa used to work with Sinatra)


"In a review of a 2000 Rankin performance at a San Fernando Valley jazz club, critic Don Heckman wrote in The Times: "Rankin has been -- for a decade or more -- a singer whose unusual improvisational skills and innate capacity to deliver a melody with a strong sense of swing stamp him as a consistently appealing jazz artist."


In addition to Reddy's version of "Peaceful," jazz singers Carmen McRae and Mel Torme recorded versions of Rankin's and Ruth Batchelor's "Haven't We Met."


Rankin was born Feb. 10, 1940, and grew up in the Washington Heights section of New York City. He was signed to Decca Records as a teenager and released a few singles. He later signed with Columbia Records.


One of his major influences was Laura Nyro, the late songwriter who wrote "Wedding Bell Blues" and "Stoned Soul Picnic," whom he met in Greenwich Village in 1960.


"She profoundly changed my musical life and affected it to this day, more than anyone or anything else," Rankin told the Globe and Mail newspaper in Toronto in 2007. "She was deep, dark and light, the spectrum of passion."


His peak recording years were in the 1970s, when he released the LPs "Silver Morning," "Inside" and "The Kenny Rankin Album."


Paul McCartney was so pleased with Rankin's covers of the Beatles hits, he asked him to sing a medley of them when McCartney was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1987.
Rankin is survived by his son, Chris; daughters Gena and Chanda; and a granddaughter.
A memorial service is being planned in Los Angeles."
jon.thurber@latimes.com
download his songs here
http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewArtist?id=141142

I have loved this song forever.

This is the absolute most fabulous song ever. I love love love love it.

You really need to own this one album.
Do You Like His Music ?
Do You Like His Voice ?
You can tell me. Really.


Renee Finberg 'TELLS ALL' in her BLOG.....
Interior Design, Palm Beach, Boca Raton,Ft.Lauderdale,Design Service, Window Treatments, 
TurnKey Interior Design Service,Paint selection, Floor-Plans,Online Interior Design,
Design Center of The Americas, D.C.O.T.A.,OBITUARIES, Kenny Rankin
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Sunday, January 17, 2010

One Smart Designer


"In 2007, Grant K. Gibson, an interior designer, offered his future landlord a deal: in exchange for two months' free rent ($3,000), he would renovate the San Francisco apartment. Above, Mr. Gibson sits before 18-century architectural drawings of Rome from an old book that he mounted in $20 frames."


So, he  sanded the floors and stained them walnut.


"Mr. Gibson installed mirrors at the back of this cabinet, which is built into the wall, to create an illusion of depth."
Brilliant.
I think I may do the same thing.

"To make the room more dramatic, Mr. Gibson placed sculptural fig tree branches on a table in the bay window"



"Mr. Gibson bought an iron canopy bed at Pottery Barn Teen on sale for $500, but he attached a headboard his seamstress made by padding and wrapping a sheet of wood in caramel-colored mohair that cost $20 a yard. "If I buy something at a retail store, I try to think how I can make it even more comfortable, more functional, more beautiful," he said. "



I love the classic detailing on the leading edge of the drapery panel.

"Mr. Gibson spent several weekend afternoons retiling the bathroom with 99-cent, black-and-white linoleum tiles. An aversion to toilet paper holders prompted the purchase of this $50 silver-plated trophy from eBay, which hides the roll."
This article was taken from The New York Times

I was cruzing my normal blogs and found this blog that looked interesting on the sidebar at one of my regular haunts.
The blog was called Grant Gibson "The Blog"
I hit it and am looking around .... then I decide, this guy looks familiar, the black and white floor looks familiar, and suddenly a dim light bulb goes off in my head.
I run over to my files of a post I am working on and what do you know.....?
It's the same guy.
'Gibson' is Gibson !!! The blogging world is a small one.


#1. Don't you think that his idea 
to trade 'rent' for fixing up the apartment was genius ?
(The reason why I think he is brilliant is because he would have fixed it up anyway, but his business head was in full gear)
#2. How small do you think the blogging community is?



Renee Finberg 'TELLS ALL' in her BLOG.....
Interior Design, Palm Beach, Boca Raton,Ft.Lauderdale,Design Service, Window Treatments, TurnKey Interior Design Service,Paint selection, Floor-Plans,Online Interior Design,
Design Center of The Americas, D.C.O.T.A.,Grant K. Gibson
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Thursday, January 14, 2010

Who Needs Arms Anyway?

The Chloey Sofa from Drexel.
Did you know that when you lose the arms on a sofa
you often gain between 14 and  24 inches in a room?
And that is huge!
This is 84W x 40D x 39H named Chloey Sofa from Drexel Heritage
This is just 'okay' in my opinion.

This is 'Juliet' from Lexington.
This is really sharp.
The back contours around on the sides, I like that.

This also the Juliet from Lexington. about 83" Long and it is high in back...about 38."


This is a Liz Clayborne Sofa from Lexington.

This is my pick, and it is from Century. I love love love a 'bench seat'.
A bench seat is one single cushion rather than 2 ( or sometimes 3).
Did you know why they ( the furniture industry ) came up the brilliant idea of 3 cushions on a sofa where there would normally would be 1 ( a bench seat cushion ) or 2?
The smaller the cushions, the smaller the fabric you need.
Now they can utilize all the fabric that would normally be scrap.
I explain that to people all they time... and do you know what people say in the defense of the 3 cushion sofa?
" If I don't get a 3 cushion sofa I will have less seating, and besides how will people know where to sit?"
" And no one wants to sit on the crack "
HUH??? How will they KNOW  WHERE TO SIT ?
I say to them with a straight face;
" Well, you sit on a crack everyday and it doesn't seem you bother you, 
does it ?"
hahahahahahahahahha:)
I do really.......I say that ( to some ).
They are caught off guard and 'crack' up.
Then I try again to emphasize how much more attractive and costly sofas look with only 1 or 2 cushions.
If they insist on a 3 cushion sofa.....I write it off to the fact that most furniture stores mainly buy and sell 3 cushion sofas. The masses tastes have been tainted by the propaganda put out and into furniture markets.

This is called the Apartment sofa. It is only 36" deep, and this piece is part of a sectional.
But the sectional has NO ARMS. It has a corner piece, but that is it.
Very do-able if you are working with a small space,
and you want to add seating.

This is actually part of a sectional, from Century *Elegance Collection
* I just don't get why people (average peeps) insist on arms.
You can get all the same effect by using the right kind of pillows
next to you and under your arms/elbows.
I promise. This is true.






Armless sofas come in all styles.
You just have to look and dig.
Most furniture sales people are unaware of the armless
pieces in collection. So, you have to ask them to research it.

I would love this sofa.
I think it is exquisitely upholstered.

The armless Leigh Made to Measure is available in lengths 
from 28 to 120 inches. 
The Leigh Ottoman is available from 18 to 60 inches in length





You can always find an armless sofa in a sectional.
Well, not always, but it is more common than not.
(8 out 10 sectionals will have an armless love seat or sofa)
You can order just the armless love seat
or the armless sofa once you have it.
You sometimes can specify how many cushions you want if it is a better upholstery house.
*the price of the sofa will be based on the fabric grade
This is what the armless sofa will look like on the diagram
( most likely it will have different dimensions )
of the pieces that you can order to make a sectional.
Ask your salesman, they can show you.
It is there in all the catalogs that offer sectional sofas..
That is how THEY order it.
You will be presented with something like this below.
(less the silly green dots)



Here is the critical part,
make sure that you order it as
 a ' FREE STANDING ' piece.
This means that the sides will not have
the metal male and female parts on the sides of the armless sofa
that are used to attach the pieces of the sectional together
so that they do not come apart.
You definitely do not want that.
And get it in writing on your order.
*It also means that where extra fabric is needed on the sides,
(which are now the ends of your armless sofa)
the factory will take extra care in the finishing process.

*Well, this is the 3rd attempt at this post
it absolutely evaporated twice while loading and typing the original.
I am sorry if this is not a FABULOUS post.
It was hard to 'get into it' again.
Do you know what I mean?

Would you, 
could you ...
use an armless sofa ?


Renee Finberg 'TELLS ALL' in her BLOG.....

Interior Design, Palm Beach, Boca Raton,Ft.Lauderdale,Design Service, Window Treatments, TurnKey Interior Design Service,Paint selection, Floor-Plans,Online Interior Design,
Design Center of The Americas, D.C.O.T.A,.armless sofas and armless love seats
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About Renée Finberg

I have been in this business since the age of 22.

I love what I do and cannot imagine my life without Design.

Design Challenges are great.

And because of those challenges

I have imported fine antique pieces from Paris,

Designed and Manufactured Furniture,

Created Fantastic Window Treatments,

And solved all kinds of spatial & architectural issues

With my unique style.

If I can't find it, I create it.

My rooms would make excellent movie sets.

I am a visual, tactile and audio sensitive individual.

Creating is what I live for, not math, not spelling, not science.

Just Great Design.

Just imagine how it would be if each of us,

If only for a few hours of everyday,We could be in a space that is our very own.A place that is exactly the way we want it to be

Surrounded by all the things we wanted to see,

The atmosphere we wanted feel, smell and the sound we wanted to listen to.

Private Paradise

AS FEATURED IN:

AS FEATURED IN:

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Renee Finberg 'TELLS ALL' in her Adventures in Design by Renee Finberg is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Based on a work at www.reneefinberg.com.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at reneefinberg@gmail.ocm.

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