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Timepieces commemorating the sport of golf are not new. One name that echoes in every mind on the mention of timepieces celebrating golf is the Omega Constellation Double Eagle series of watches. The popular line that marks Omega’s relationship with golf has now added one more timepiece to its range. The new member is christened the Omega Constellation Double Eagle 4-Counters Orange Gold watch. The new model flaunts an 18k orange gold case. In Omega’s terms, 18k gold means metal is composed of 75% gold and nearly 24% copper which is responsible for the orange color. Powered by the Swiss automatic Omega in-house caliber Co-Axial 389, this timepiece boasts of a black dial with a truncated inverted “Clous de Paris” motif. The watch gets its name from the counters whose hands are made from 18kt orange gold.
The sub-dials stand for the small seconds, a seven-day recorder and 12-hour and 30-minute counters. The hour markers are also fashioned in 18ct orange gold. Besides the hour markers the dial features facetted and truncated Dauphine hands, and the applied Omega symbol and name.

Featuring a solid gold bezel, black rubber Arabic numerals, with crown and pushers crafted from brushed orange gold, this timepiece is as sporty as it is elegant. Complete with an integrated black rubber strap featuring the Omega name in red rubber and a satin-brushed stainless steel fold over clasp, this timepiece beckons the true watch connoisseur.

[Timezone]
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Reserved for revealing in Pitti Fragranze 8 exhibition in Florence, Manoa by Memo Paris is the newest fragrance to join the line up of the niche brand, masterminded by perfumer Clara Molloy. The inspiration comes from the El Dorado myth (the words meaning “gilded”) and the fragrance is warm and luminous, as befitting the tale.According to that a Muisca tribal chief covered himself with gold dust


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Paris Hilton in a “behind the scenes” for Paris Hilton Tease.


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Aug 252010

New at bloomingdales: Donna Karan Pure DKNY.

New at boots (UK): Calvin Klein Beauty, Guess Seductive, Gucci Guilty, Davidoff Champion, Paco Rabanne Lady Million.

New at harrods (UK): Orla Kiely, Love Chloe.

New at macys: Donna Karan Pure DKNY, Nautica Pure Nautica.

New at neimanmarcus: Van Cleef & Arpels Midnight in Paris Pour Homme.

New at nordstrom: Estee Lauder Sensuous Noir.


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And finally socialite Paris Hilton seems to be catching up with the family business! But she doesn’t want a piece of an already baked pie; she wants to bake some herself, by launching her own chain of hotels. After launching her own line of line of designer beach handbags, and bridal footwear collection, the great-granddaughter of tycoon Conrad Hilton who lay the foundation for the Hilton Hotel chain, wants to do it all! The blond bombshell asserts, “I’ve pretty much done all you can do, but my next project that I’d like to do is get more involved in real estate…It’s always something I’ve been interested in. And right now that I’ve done everything I’ve wanted to do, that would definitely be the next step, to open my own hotels.” Talking about donning a recycled hat in a chic way!

[Starpulse]
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Pablo Picasso works never cease to appeal to art lovers. If you are a fan of this great artists work, you must definitely visit the Victoria and Albert Museum. The museum has just unfurled the largest work by Picasso. It is so big that it was in storage for nearly 80 years before it was unrolled and put up for display. Stretching over more than 34ft by 38ft , this canvas was created for Russian ballet impresario Serge Diaghilev. With the help of a tower of scaffolding and five riggers the museum staff managed to hang the front cloth. A front cloth is a theatrical creation, which is designed to hang behind the red velvet curtain and to be viewed by an audience while musicians play the overture. This particular piece was designed for the Ballets Russes performance of Le Train Bleu, in Paris, in 1924. In fact this work is just a larger version of an original painting titled Deux Femme Courant, which Picasso had gifted Diaghilev. Picasso agreed the design could be enlarged to an enormous stage canvas and theatre artist Prince Alexandre Shervashidze created the enlarged version in just 24 hours. Impressed by the copy, Picasso added his signature and a dedication. The artwork was spread out for various performances of Le Train Bleu over two seasons.
The cloth, which has long been stored rolled up, has been occasionally used for gala fundraisers. Picasso fans will however have to wait till September 25th to view this gigantic piece as it will be showcased as part of an exhibition titled Diaghilev and the Golden Age of the Ballets Russes 1909-1929.

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[Dailymail]
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I am not into antique furniture pieces, so the name François Linke definitely didn’t ring a bell. But if you are an avid antique collector and own some of the most exquisite antique furniture pieces, you probably know that Linke was a master cabinetmaker. And if you wish to expand your antique collection by adding a Linke piece, then here is your chance. The excellent Régulateur Louis XV surmounté du Motif le Temps clock, which was constructed especially for the 1904 St. Louis Exposition by Linke is actually available for sale. The second of only six known to be made by the master, this piece was built form the collaboration between Linke and designer Léon Messagé. A magnificent piece, it stands 10 feet tall and its inlaid tulipwood and fruitwood case is embellished with mythological and natural motifs rendered in cast bronze ormolu.
A bespoke piece, the detailing in the different motifs like the star-studded globe dial surmounted by a scythe-wielding Chronos, or the simple oak branches all leave you mesmerized. What is more, it was reportedly ten years in the making! The clock was based on a design by Messagé and was hailed as the chef-d’oeuvre on his Gold Medal-winning stand by critic Charles Dambreuse at the 1900 Paris Exposition. The mounts of this masterpiece are signed and stamped “LINKE 1803, FL, and LIN,” the clockworks stamped “ETIENNE MAXANT/BREVETE/R DE SAINTONGE PARIS/17965.” The Exquisite creation measures 42″ wide, 23″ deep, and 123″ high. Boasting of a $1,250,000 asking price, this antique creation is available for sale here.
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Imagine flying from Paris to New York in four hours and 14 minutes or making it to Asia from the US East Coast in a mere nine-and-a-half hours flight, making your business activities more swift and help you pack a more extensive itenary. After the Concorde disaster in 2000, Nevada’s Aerion Corporation is all set ensure that the Supersonic Business Jet age returns with the launch of its Aerion Supersonic Business Jet (SBJ), which can hit speeds as fast as Mach 1.5 (1,840 km/h). While the $80 million, super fast executive plane is a mere 12-seater for now, a 50-seater is in the offing as well. The company also has a receipt book that totals to $4 billion in orders, from the Middle East alone for a 2014 launch.
The development cost for these super jets is estimated between $1.2 billion and $1.4 billion. Apart from Aerion, other companies like Cessna, Sukhoi, Russian aircraft giant Tupolev, the US’s Supersonic Aerospace International and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency is also in process of getting SBJs back on track.

[G And D]
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Minimalistic bathrooms don’t really give you too much room to have every possible amenity at your disposal. So if you really want a bathtub experience, it’s advisable have something with multiple uses like the Bathtubs-cum-bookshelves, giant speaker bathtubs or the eccentric translucent bathtubs. And if space isn’t a contsrain, and you want to make a style statement instead, check out the SICIS Shoe Bathtub, the Art Deco gold decor Bathtubs or the sunken bathtubs from Blubleu. If you don’t like any of the above, designer bathing firm Condor is giving you something that will take you to Paris right inside the comfort of your bathroom. Inspired by a travel trunk, the exteriors are crafted in leather decorated with leather straps and a removable matching leather cushion head and neck rest.
The look is completed with brass jets and a fleur-de-lis pattern set in brass just below the head rest. A one way ticket to your private piece of Paris, in the comfort of your own home!

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[Trendir]
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Great Stink of ParisFill up your pomanders, take out your nosegays: it’s going to be a hot summer. “In the late summer of 1880 in Paris, death was in the air and it smelled like excrement.” So begins David S. Barnes’s history of the birth and dissemination of public health in France. The author shows that scientific discovery alone did not change the way a nation understood sanitation and the spread of disease. Eberth and Klebs’s isolation of the typhoid bacillus (1880), Roux’s diphtheria antitoxin (1884), Pasteur’s work on anthrax (1881) and development of the rabies vaccine (1885) were the talk of the town, but that wasn’t enough. It took a convergence of ideas (new scientific knowledge, persistent folk etiologies of contagion, a shift in political thinking toward Republican positivism, increased secularization, France’s mission to “civilize” the peasantry and colonies) to garner acceptance of germ theory and support for sanitation control.

Barnes focuses on the years between 1885 and 1895, a period framed by two “Great Stinks” in Paris intrusive enough to spark public outcry, political debate, and relentless commentary in the daily papers. One front-page cartoon, lampooning the government’s slow response to the stench disaster, includes a transposition of the city motto fluctuat nec mergitur [it is tossed by the waves but it does not sink] to fluctuat et merditur [it is tossed by the waves and it — well, you get it]. Each smelly summer incited outrage, but by 1895 — though offended and disgusted — the public no longer feared that the fetid stench of Paris streets would cause death and disease. The author coins the term ”sanitary-bacteriological synthesis” (SBS) to explain how during the time between these two events, public health reformers brought pre-Pasteurian beliefs (that foul smelling emanations are bad for you) into harmony with new scientific knowledge about the dangers of microbes (which might be accompanied by foul smells).

Why did Paris stink in the nineteenth-century…

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