I suppose there's no accounting for taste, and the mission-planners behind the selection of code-names, patches and mascots and free to choose whatever they see fit—surely within there own obscure rules for naming conventions, but there also seems no limits for hubris and insensitivity.
Sunday 8 December 2013
homeland and high-ground
catagories: ๐บ๐ธ, ๐ญ, ๐ฅธ, foreign policy
trim up the tree with christmas stuff or persistence of memory
If such could be demonstrated about successive displays, I wonder if the vintage and the spirit of the season contribute to tracking the whereabouts of a festive moose out of place. It's more of oh—I remember this guy rather than there's too much or where did we put all this before, probably the effects of the above experiment magnified. Trim up the tree with Christmas stuff, like bingle balls and whofu fluff. Season's greetings with more to follow!
catagories: holidays and observances
Friday 6 December 2013
window dressing
Collectors' Weekly has a pretty keen feature on the long and faceted history of the mannequin and how they reflect our sense of style. The figures advanced from a tailor or dress-maker's form, going back to ancient times, to basic racks to display garments to a growing, mechanized middle-class, to their present form—converging with dress-up dolls that came before and becoming the afternoon-idols of window-shopping they are today.
The story of their development is spiced with some interesting vignettes, like the dressing-dummies found in the tombs of pharaohs, that in an earlier career, L. Frank Baum (The Wonderful Wizard of Oz) worked in the advertizing business and was a key advocate of using life-like mannequins to sell the “romance of Merchandise and Merchandizing,” the genre of horror films that came out as they became more sophisticated and idealized, and lighter cases of agalmatophilia that teased and vexed returning war veterans. The history is augmented by a few individual collectors who are curators of these objects of fashion and make-believe.
native address system or context-clues
I had heard the term native advertising and its appeal by integrating itself—maybe a reinvention of the guerrilla-technique of piggy-backing, but I don't suppose I could articulated what it was. Mashables presented this handy infographic—framed in more traditional banner advertisements, of course—which presents the analytics fairly well.
catagories: ๐ง , networking and blogging
and they're all made out of ticky-tack and they all look just the same
Spiegel International reporters interview the former neighbour of the Fugitive at her home and from her perspective in suburban Maryland.