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AUTOMOTIVE
THE WALLYTENDER

The WallyTender is a pure expression of the joy of open air living on the sea and the sheer pleasure of navigation.

The 13.6 metre (45-foot) runabout is fast, comfortable, spacious, simple, safe and stylish.


Source: Wally
Publisher: Charles Nobert
Date: 2009-05-10
FASHION
HIGH HEEL BOOT CAMP - WATCH AS ANASTASSIA K. GOES DRILL SERGEANT ON A PAIR OF NEW YOUNG MODELS.
Coming to you from the Fashion Capital of the World, NY ? Modelinia is the first video centric entertainment brand dedicated to the life of the Supermodel, beyond the pages of fashion magazines and far off the catwalks of New York, Paris and Milan. Yes, they're tall. Yes, they're thin. And, YES, they eat! And play chess? Can you guess who?

If you've ever wondered what charity is close to Iman's heart; what Daisy Lowe is listening to on her iPod; how Elettra Wiedemann finds time to study at the London School of Economics; or, if you want to hear Chanel Iman rap... become of Citizen of Modelinia.

Modelinia allows users unprecedented access to the lives of the world's most glamorous and beautiful women. The site includes series like Conversations: Model Muses, Playlists and Giving Back, features in-depth interviews with models about their personal lives and charitable works; behind-the-scenes footage from Fashion and Awards shows, movie premieres and A-list events; fashion and beauty tips, model blogs and original content created by and starring today's top models. We hear... that Heidi Klum battles evil villains to save Fashion Week, and it's all caught on film.

Fashion experts unite. Modelinia also features editorial essays, video footage, and entertainment news from the industry's chicest, most knowledgeable and all-around coolest, such as editor and muse Camilla Morton, filmmaker Douglas Keeve, casting savant John Pfeiffer, agency vet Annie Veltri, web wonder kids The Barbarian Group, music video innovators Coodie and Chike?the list goes on and on?kind of like Hana Soukupova's legs.

Modelinia's unique technology includes the Model Matrix ? snapshots of models that can be sorted by more than just their name, but also their zodiac sign, favorite cocktail, best vacation spot? Is pizza your guilty pleasure? It's also Heidi's, Aggy's, Daisy's, and Selita's?

Modelinia is visually rich with buzz worthy content. It is the only news source with a unique perspective about, by and for Supermodels. It is insider access to who they are, what they do and how they made it big.
Modelinia is funded by Polaris Venture Partners.

Modelinia. Because models don't get enough attention.


Source: www.modelinia.com
Publisher: Charles Nobert
Date: 2009-04-02
TRAVEL
$54,000 CHAMPAGNE TRUNK FOR ELITE TRAVELERS
Harrods?luxury Krug Trunk is meant for true aficionados constantly on move. The champagne trunk is just perfect for carrying your bubbly with you! The luxury trunk is corrosion-proof and features a classic red calfskin interior with three bottles of Krug Grande Cuvee champagne and an ice-bucket designed by Francois Bauchet.

Besides storing your coveted champagne the trunk?s lid also serves as a table to come in handy on your outdoor trips. The well-crafted champagne crate is available in limited edition of 30 pieces only with a price tag that?s as ornate as it is for $54,000.



Source: BornRich
Publisher: Charles Nobert
Date: 2009-03-08
COCKTAILS
I LIKE MY ICE CHILLED JUST SO
PARDON us, but was that Hoshizaki or Kold-Draft that you wanted with your Vodka?

Did you say you like your cocktail with a cube or a lozenge or a tube with a dimpled end? Do you want that iced tea served over crushed or would you prefer fragmented?

Questions like those may seem kooky or even risible to those content to cool a summer drink with chunks of ice from the sturdy waffle-bottomed tray parked next to the prehistoric peas in the freezer. But for some, the idea of consuming generic ice is enough to raise goose bumps and not the good kind.

There are those ? and don?t wear yourself out looking for statistical surveys on this one ? for whom water in chunky frozen form is a source not merely of interest but also obsession. You can find them, of course ? alongside every other compulsive with an affinity group or microcohort ? on the Web.

They post recipes for making ice with a level of internal clarity greater than that of a D-flawless diamond. They make YouTube videos of a deliberately Captain Kangaroo-style naïveté that demonstrate the beauties of cubes formed by boiling distilled water once to release any trapped air molecules and then boiled again and frozen before being plunked in a glass.

They forego refrigerator ice altogether in favor of the commercially produced kind, ordering products like the Air AI-100S portable ice cube maker, capable of producing fresh ice in 10 minutes, up to 28 pounds of it a day. Some aficionados, like the country singer Vince Gill (who has a Scotsman), even raise the ante by installing commercial-grade ice machines in their homes. And some set out on a kind of gourmet ice hegira (Safeway to Gristedes to Fairway) whenever friends come to drink.

CAROLYN POLK did not start out as ?an ice snob.? For most of her life, Ms. Polk, a 41-year-old St. Louis native, staved off the blistering heat of Midwestern summers with the generic cubes that clunk into a freezer bin like clockwork or drop down a mysterious chute in the refrigerator door.

A couple years back, though, Ms. Polk noted a change in the habits of her guests, who casually started bringing their own ice, she said. Her ice, as it eventually turned out, was apparently not to her friends? liking.

?Maybe the cubes were the wrong shape or they didn?t taste that good, I?m not sure,? Ms. Polk said last week. ?But it got to the point where people came for cocktails, and they were bringing different bags of ice.?

?B.Y.O.I. was a turning point for me,? Ms. Polk said of the moment at which she exited the world of generic ice use and entered another. It is one where a cube, formerly a common and readily available commodity heaved out of supermarket freezers or convenience store cases, is transformed into a symbol of yet another type of consumer connoisseurship ? not ice but ?ice.?

?Ice is a food,? said Jane McEwen the executive director of the International Packaged Ice Association, voicing a mantra often heard in an industry laboring to lend gourmet associations to something seasonal, perishable and cheap.

The average American buys four bags of packaged ice each year; 80 percent of all packaged ice is sold between Memorial and Labor days. Promoters from within the $2.5 billion packaged ice industry would like to change ice?s hoi polloi associations, give it some of the swank that marketing geniuses injected into bottles of designer water.

Ice, as Ms. McEwen said, is water?s ?sister product.?

As a sibling, ice is both mutable and fickle. ?There are different forms of ice,? Ms. McEwen explained, and while every cube of ice has the same essential end point ? and a purpose little understood in countries like, say, England or France ? its use can be manipulated, ice experts say, to improve the quality of the drink it cools. Thus, there is fragmented ice (soda fountain drinks), nugget and cube ice (mixed drinks) and ice that is shaved. There is ice with dimpled ends that is ideal for chewing. There is ice manufactured using patented Japanese methods for eliminating the air bubbles that cloud a cocktail, inhibiting it from becoming a beautiful elixir, frigid and mystically clear.

Bottled water, of course, has lost some of its marketplace luster to consumer impatience with the plastic Everest generated from packaging a substance that runs safe and free from the tap. Ice, on the other hand, seems to be making gains in the market, however modest they may be.

?I never use refrigerator ice because it sucks up smells,? Phillip Redding, a visitor to Napa Valley, in California, said last week, his breath frosting as he plucked a 10-pound bag of Arctic Glacier from a freezer at the upscale Vallergas Market. At $1.79 a bag, the ice was good value, if not exactly top of the line.

The very finest ice, in Mr. Redding?s opinion ? a true cube that provides greater surface area for faster drink cooling and does not melt as quickly as fragments do ? is not easy to find outside a restaurant.

The worst, he added, is easily identified. It is the kind produced by a certain luxury refrigerator that he has at home. ?The ice is crescent shaped and when you tilt the glass, it all rushes to the mouth and hits you in the face and spills your drink,? he added, as he made for the cashier.

Ice snobbery, to be certain, is no trend in the making. Packaged ice accounts for a mere 0.5 percent of all sales at American convenience stores, according to Don Longo, the editor of Convenience Store News, a number that has stayed flat for years. (Cigarettes, on the other hand, clocked a brisk 31.36 percent of all convenience store sales in 2007.)

Among the rare notable developments on the packaged-ice front is an uptick of interest in chewable ice ? ?like something to eat?? and a growing concern with purity, Mr. Longo said. To satisfy the Freudian cravings of the legions of ice chewers (www.icechewing.com), manufacturers have begun making products like Pearl Ice, Nugget Ice and Chewblet, commodities that in texture fall somewhere between the tongue-numbing chips of a snow cone and the molar-shattering hunks from a freezer tray. As for consumers worried that their ice, like their water, may have picked something up on its way from the icy depths of underground aquifers to the supermarket shelves, groups like the I.P.I.A. have pushed to certify ice made by its 240 members.

?You want to be sure you are getting good ice,? Ms. McEwen said. ?If it isn?t certified, how do you know??

Two years ago, the issue of ice purity was unexpectedly brought into focus when a Florida seventh grader, Jasmine Roberts, made national headlines for a science project that compared the purity of water from ice machines to that from the toilets in a variety of fast-food restaurants.

Testing the samples at the University of South Florida, the student discovered that the water from the toilets was purer than that from the ice machines, some of which were contaminated with E. coli bacteria, among other unsavory things.

?Not all ice is the same,? Ms. McEwen said.

And that, among other reasons, is why Ms. Polk uses the stuff pumped out by her refrigerator ice maker strictly as cooler-filler. Back home in St. Louis, she now buys all the ice intended for consumption at Ladue Market, where a 10-pound bag ($1.75) is dispensed from a Kold-Draft machine.

ASKED what it was about Kold-Draft cubes that made them special, Jerry Meyers, the owner of Ladue Market, who was 13 when the apparatus was installed 40 years ago, explained: ?It?s one-inch square, a solid cube, no dimple, no hole in the middle. Plus, there?s something in the ice-making process ? they use hot gas ? that makes it clear when it?s released down the chute from the machine.?

The result is a finely transparent and classically shaped chunk of frozen water that might have brought a flush of pride to the cheeks of the 19th-century ice king Frederic Tudor, the pioneer who first harvested and shipped ice commercially from frozen water bodies (Walden Pond was one).

Can one, though, truly tell a Kold-Draft cube from one made from distilled and double-boiled water? Is there a quantifiable distinction to be drawn between store bought and homemade? The answer is yes, or at least for Ms. Polk it is.

?I never really thought ice mattered that much to me,? she said. ?At first, all I wanted to do was make my guests happy. But once you go there, you go there, I guess.?



Source: NYT
Publisher: Charles Nobert
Date: 2009-03-08
COCKTAILS
HAVANA CLUB - MáXIMO EXTRA ANEJO
More sensual, more opulent, the most refined rum born using the oldest and most mature rum reserves that silently rested in Havana Club?s cellars. Handcrafted carefully under the strict eyes of Cuban traditions and the famous Primer Maestro Ronero, Don José Navarro.

Navarro formulated the class of this blend as precisely as taking a dram for yourself ?There will never be a rum that better expresses the Cuban rum culture and its rich tradition than Havan Club Máximo Extra Anejo?. A rare rum experience limited to just 1.000 fillings enshrined in beautifully hand-blown crystal decanters adorned with Paul Miller?s master signature.



Source: Havana Club
Publisher: Charles Nobert
Date: 2009-03-08
COCKTAILS
HENNESSY XO EXCLUSIVE EDITION
Renowned cognac brand Hennessy has now unveiled the XO Exclusive Edition cognac festooned with 422 Swarovski crystals. The rich character of the Hennessy XO is enhanced by a unique decanter designed back in 1947, which is adorned for evening festivities. Hennessy X.O blends the spicy aromas of oak and leather with the essences of flowers and ripe fruit. The new Hennessy XO exclusive edition preserves the ?Eaux-de-Vie? with their elegant aromas. The cognac is delivered in a glittering metallic box that is decorated with diamonds in trompe-l?oeil. Add some ice cubes to the masculine Hennessy XO Exclusive Edition cognac and you will get to know what subtle flavors and aromas mean. It has been designed to appeal to admirers of XO and collectors.

www.Hennessy.com



Source: BornRich
Publisher: Charles Nobert
Date: 2009-03-07
HOTELS & RESTAURANTS
IGGY'S OF SINGAPORE TOPS MIELE GUIDE
Singapore restaurateur Ignatius Chan has scooped first place in the new Miele Guide of Asia's Top 20 restaurants.

Chan, who had previously been named Singapore's Best Sommelier, is an acclaimed wine expert, former winner of a Vueve Clicquot Champagne scholarship and a member of the world's oldest wine fraternity, the Jurade de Saint Emilion.

Iggy's beat off competition from other high end restaurants, including L'Atelier de Joel Robuchon in Hong Kong and Les Amis in Singapore.

As well as its food described as 'innovative cuisine with discreet, yet attentive service,' Iggy's has an extensive wine list, built on the owner's superb collection 'with a focus on Champagne, Riesling and Burgundy wine.'

Accepting the award, Chan - who is also a Decanter World Wine Awards judge - said that his biggest fear had been that Iggy's wouldn't make the cut at all.

The judging process consisted of 84 food writers selecting a shortlist of 320 restaurants. A panel of 1,500 food experts, combined with 75,000 public votes, named Iggy's the winner.


Source: Decanter
Publisher: Charles Nobert
Date: 2009-03-07
FASHION
TARA SMITH
Tara?s celeb clients include Demi Moore, Lindsay Lohan and Teri Hatcher. She was a stylist on Sex and the City The Movie and has her own eco-friendly product range.

More Tara has worked extensively on Hollywood movies including Death Proof (directed by Quentin Tarantino) and Freaky Friday starring Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan.

Her clients include Natalie Imbruglia, Neve Campbell, Marisa Tomei, Angelia Jolie, Orlando Bloom, Patricia Arquette and Hayden Paniettiere. She has appeared on Celebrity Scissorhands and was involved with ?Stop and Chop? at the Clothes Show Live.

Vote for TARA at http://www.loveyourhair.com/choty.php




Source: loveyourhair
Publisher: Charles Nobert
Date: 2009-03-07
BOOKS
NEW YORK THE MAGNUM EDITION
Magnum launched a towering book: New York The Magnum Edition, with an event at the National Arts Club in New York City.
Published by Gloria, this giant of a book, weighing in at 12Kg is book as architecture: it comes with its own base and skeletal frame. 1500 images, 756 pages, and features the most iconic images of New York by some of the most respected photographers of our times - including 28 Magnum photographers. The editon includes a silver gelatin print by Leonard Freed (estate stamped). There are only 25 of prints available worldwide.

New York contains thirty three chapters covering every aspect of the New York story, including history, architecture, design, art, fashion, music, film, television, dance, sport and 9/11.

28 Magnum photographers have work featured in the book. Some of the photographers featured in this book include Berenice Abbott, Diane Arbus, Eve Arnold, David Bailey, Henri Cartier- Bresson, Bruce Davidson, Patrick Demarchelier, Elliott Erwitt, Philippe Halsman, Evelyn Hofer, Annie Leibovitz, Steve McCurry, Helmut Newton, Norman Parkinson, Jacob Riis, Jerry Schatzberg, Edward Steichen, Dennis Stock and Weegee among others.

Chapters have been written by the cream of New York literary talent including Ric Burns, Anthony DeCurtis, Don DeLillo, Paul Goldberger, David Halberstam, Pete Hamill, Michael Kantor, David Remnick, James Sanders, Gay Talese, John Updike, EB White, Colson Whitehead and Tom Wolfe.

New York?The Magnum Edition, $4000, Limited Edition of 25, Published by Gloria, for Magnum


Source: Code Nuit
Publisher: Charles Nobert
Date: 2009-03-06
COCKTAILS
VEUVE CLIQUOT DRY BLIZZARD

The concept ?Dry Blizzard? is a study of style and a new technical approach to an ice bucket for champagne Veuve Cliquot.

Using dry ice at the bottom to maintain the cold. A battery operated sytem is used to create a current of cold air around the bottle to allow champagne tasting at an ideal temperature while eliminating the usual water dripping.

Equally innovative is the double walled glass with an aluminum foot that keeps the champagne cool while holding and drinking.

www.VeuveCliquot.com


Source: Veuve Cliquot
Publisher: Charles Nobert
Date: 2009-03-06