A captain’s bed, a computer desk, a bookcase and a chest drawer are “must-have” items for any young lady. We particularly liked this simple and white collection from starlight as it inspires innocence and we consider that this would be a very stimulating room for a little girl to start writing her diary, study or think of her black nights to come. The details are what make this particular room dreamy: the pictures on the walls, the dolls, flowers and pink carpets, they all bring a nice and cosy touch to the interior and make it more personalized. {via}
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Low Profile Beds with Adjustable Headboard to Fit Your Needs
Designed by a Swish furniture company named De Sede, these low profile beds are crafted from the highest quality leather, and feature an adjustable headboard to fit your needs (see images below). This feature makes it a true premiere in bed design. These beds bear eloquent witness to how daring design can play delightfully with sensuality to conjure up unique new vistas for the human imagination. Added to this comes an intriguing choice of shapes. But the practical element has not been forgotten: standardized elements can be used for the slatted frames and mattresses thus allowing customers to choose their beds “inner selves” to suit their own individual requirements. These beds provide the ideal spot for virtually untrammelled dreaming both by night and by day. {via}
Labels:
Bedroom
Interesting & Multifunctional Bedside Cabinet and Table by Maria Cichy
This very interesting multifunctional piece of furniture designed by Maria Cichy combines a table and a small bedside cabinet as you can see in the pictures attached below. Although stylish finished, it appears to be low-priced furniture with a distinctly graceful surface. This piece of furniture exhibits fine craftsmanship and a sense of modern home styling. The idea can be also very practical for small places because the small table can be deatached from the cabinet just when you need it. {via}
Labels:
Bedroom
Friday, February 12, 2010
Lincoln's Bicentennial

The bicentennial celebrations kicked off last February 12 with ceremonies in the small Kentucky town of Hodgenville, near his birthplace. That day also saw a national teach-in from Washington, where Harold Holzer and Doris Kearns Goodwin helped teachers bring Lincoln's stories to students across the country. The first of three events were held at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C. in order to re-dedicate it to the memory of Abraham Lincoln.
New statues of Lincoln were unveiled in places such as Louisville, Kentucky and Lincoln City, Indiana, near his boyhood home site. Television programs like "American Experience" and "Bill Moyers Journal" (both on PBS) held specials to commemorate Lincoln, one about the assassination and one about Lincoln's lasting legacy.
Arts performances were held throughout the United States at halls like The Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. and in far smaller venues such as E.J. Thomas Hall in Akron, Ohio. I had the great pleasure in attending "Our Lincoln" put on by the Kentucky Arts Council at the former location, and "A Lincoln Portrait" performed at the latter location. Both were moving and full of meaning.
Exhibits such as "Abraham Lincoln: An Extraordinary Life" opened at The Smithsonian's National Museum of American History. The Library Of Congress began "With Malice Toward None," a nationally touring exhibit of fantastic artifacts associated with Lincoln. The Smithsonian exhibit continues until 2011 and should not be missed. The touring exhibit is currently in Indianapolis, Indiana at the Indiana State Museum. Speaking of museums, this past year also saw Indiana State Museum "win" the competition to host the largest private collection of Lincoln items, formerly in the possession of the now-closed Lincoln Museum in Fort Wayne.
Of course this past year saw the publication of numerous new books about Lincoln, adding to the nearly 17,000 books already in existence. Notable among these books a massive two-volume biography by Michael Burlingame, an important new biography by Ronald C. White, and a delightful children's book titled "Lincoln And His Boys" by Rosemary Wells.
Lincoln was further honored by new commemorative coins by the U.S. Mint. A special silver dollar sold out almost immediately. Four newly designed cents were released as well, depicting various stages of Lincoln's life. Just yesterday, a permanent redesign of the Lincoln cent was unveiled in Springfield, Illinois. The reverse will now feature the Union shield instead of the Lincoln Memorial.
It's been a wonderful year of celebrations and performances to honor the memory of our country's greatest president. I hope that Mr. Lincoln doesn't fade from the headlines now that his big year is over. After the exhibits close and once the new books are read, I wonder will our nation still honor the memory of Abraham Lincoln as vividly as it has this past year?
Debate continues over just what Abraham Lincoln's legacy means to our nation. Should we remember him as helping to create a stronger federal government, for good or bad? Does he have relevance to the continued struggle for freedom and justice for all Americans?
On this 201st anniversary of Abraham Lincoln's birth, it is my wish that all Americans come to a better understanding of him and his continuing relevance to our nation today.
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