Sunday, October 31, 2010

Trick or Treat









Jean says: I love Halloween because all of my skull jewelry is suddenly uber-fashionable. I wear my skull rings, earrings, necklaces and scarves year round, but they're truly "in season" on All Hallows Eve and Dia de los Muertos. Although you can't see them in the photo, I'm wearing vintage Kenneth Jay Lane red plastic bee clip-on earrings.





With the exception of the left pinky (a vintage bakelite cube ring) and the right middle finger (gold signet ring from high school with initials worn smooth), all of the others (three black, three white and one red) rings are Made Her Think skulls by Meredith Katz. As regular readers know, I do my own nails. For this manicure, I used Romantic Red aka Brucci Nail Hardener #212.

My skull rosary necklaces and choker are also from Made Her Think.








The skull ring, pendant with bird and earrings with pearls or crystal are all by East Village jeweler extraordinaire Kirsten Hawthorne. My all-time favorites are the silver skulls with white pearls because their jaws are hinged and swing open and shut. They are amazingly comfortable to wear.

Heck, even my valve caps on my bike and my car are chrome skulls! (Courtesy of my Vegas connection! Here's a shout out to my peeps TW & JK.)








Valerie says:
This is my sole contribution to the skull thing - I don't want to infringe on what might by now be Jean's intellectual property. During a trip to Mexico to see Day of the Dead, I bought a bright yellow plastic tourist bag imprinted with one of the well loved skeletons of renowned Mexican cartoonist Jose Guadalupe Posada (see the original cartoon at the top of this posting), and her hat and dress rendered in lush green. I also bought a tiny doll, also dressed in green, whom you saw two weeks ago if you read our Adut Toys entry. Since I did an impersonation of my red, green and black velveteen doll in that entry, I thought impersonating my teeny weeny Santa Catarina doll would be an appropriate follow-up. So I xeroxed (oops - I COPIED - wow - talk about infringing!) my tourist bag at a 170% magnification and made this paper mask, then put on my big green vintage hat (not nearly as vintage as the calavera, who dates back to the turn of the last century), white wool gloves from Strawberry, and my full length green Issey dress and had a little fun.


Jean says:
On Thursday evening, Kirsten took me as her guest to Our Lady of Sorrows Food Pantry's Annual Benefit. Although the food pantry is on the Lower East Side, the event was hosted by Calvary Church at 61 Gramercy (aka E. 22 St between Park and Lexington Avenues). The featured event was a Wearable Art Performance with fashions by Michael Calloway, shown here taking his bow at the conclusion. Michael volunteers at the St. George Thrift Shop, one of Kirsten's favorite haunts. Since "wearable art" usually makes me cringe, the fact that I was still in my front row seat to photograph the finale is a testament to how fabulous it was.

Kirsten has been raving about Michael's style for years. I finally got to experience it in a concentrated dose. I loved the fact that the male and female performers represented a remarkably diverse range of age and ethnicity. Although none were professionals, they aquitted themselves wonderfully well. Their movements were beautifully choreographed. Entering from the left and slowly strolling in front of and behind fabrics draped across a rope as backdrop, they silently worked themselves across the length of the room, variously sitting in a chair, formally bowing to one another, draping across a divan and circling back across the stage. The classical background music and the languid pace of the models created a very dreamlike effect.

All of the outfits had elaborate headpieces that stayed firmly in place and contributed to the theatricality of the event. Some were ethereal -- great frothy, foamy creations like this veil on steroids. The silvery, shimmery dress is hand-decorated with black stenciled designs. The performers' faces were painted in almost tribal designs.


Some headgear, like this bowler version, had jewels, fabric, pieces of broken mirror, glass, buttons and feathers for texture and design.







The costumes had a wonderfully retro feel. Some, like this black number, sans headpiece, would look right at home on one of the characters in HBO's new series, Boardwalk Empire, set in Prohibition era Atlantic City.





Another of Michael's creations was this lacy number that had a decidedly Gibson Girl feel, complete with parasol.









Other characters looked like they'd stepped out of a technicolor Steampunkt version of Oliver Twist, complete with Fagin.








Most of the men's fashions included brightly colored plumes. sometimes suggestive of military full dress uniforms and other times of tribal headdresses. This gentleman really rocked this variation on a man's suit, pared down to the bare essence, complete with arm bands.






Not only did the outfits have headgear, they also had footwear to go with each look. Although the men's looks favored boots, in this instance, the model wore black stretch gaiters above her black pumps, contributing to the old-time feel.






In addition to the gowns, Michael embellished jackets and sweaters with fur, lace, fabric and paint. The model doffed this sweater at some point as she wafted across the stage to be later retrieved and donned by another cast member.





Here's another example of the multiple embelishments of face and sweater.









This was my favorite performer and outfit of the evening. The gold Converse high tops were the icing on the cake.








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Tompkins Square Doggie Halloween Parade:

Shark!







Sailor Girl!





Sherlock Hound!





Hell's Angel!





Inspector Clouseau!







Rabbi!





Turtle!







Super Dog!












And if these were all treats, here's the biggest trick of all:


Cat in a Dog Suit!

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Kaleidoscope Soul

Transparent - (adjective) having the property of transmitting rays of light through its substance so that bodies situated beyond or behind can be distinctly seen.

I had peered inside the side window when it was still surrounded by rusty scaffolding and rubbery orange construction cones. The floor was blanketed in a layer of thick dust and debris, but you could see its potential. One day those wooden floors would shine under bare feet and reflect the shadows of the bendy bodies that gracefully contorted themselves behind 15ft high panes of glass. I stood there imagining what it would look like, the room flooded with so much natural light and all that peaceful energy radiating from every warm body that filled it. Backs sitting up nice and straight. Legs crossed. Arms relaxed. Minds cleared. Hearts open. I could see them there now. I just couldn’t see myself among them.

Ever since my sister introduced me to yoga a few years ago, I’ve wanted to give it another try. Friends had been encouraging me to take an official class, but I was afraid of being the token straight guy in the class, the guy that’s viewed as a creeper. I know me. And I know I’m highly distracted by cute 20-something girls in form fitting yoga pants bending over infront of me. I didn’t want my eyes bouncing from mat to mat and my head filling with impure thoughts. I didn’t want my head filling with ANY thoughts! I didn’t want to feel anything. I was so sick of all my fucking feelings! Repressing my feelings. Exhausting my feelings. Too many emotions can turn a sane man crazy! I wanted to just be. To allow nothing else to exist in my head space for 60 solid minutes.

I decided that Ashtanga (Power Yoga) would be a good choice. It’s light on meditation, but heavy on developing strength and stamina - absolutely perfect for someone like me who would find long meditation periods both frustrating and boring. And surely Ashtanga would be beneficial in conjunction with my MMA training. So I signed up and waited for construction to finish and the doors to open.

I wander in nonchalantly like a stray off the streets and grab a spot towards the back of the class, hoping to fly under the radar unnoticed. I’m a lost soul that’s woefully out of place, but is looking to blend (should have worn camo). We are instructed to clear our head. Only 30 seconds into class and I’m already failing! I’m unable to still my mind. And like an untrained puppy, it starts wondering off. Of course I fully expected that to happen. While I may be physically strong, I’m mentally weak. My inquisitiveness is what brought me here. But that same inquisitiveness has caused a noisy conversation to sprout between my lobes.

I can’t keep focus. I start to question this Yogi standing before the class. A woman whose body is fueled by tofu and mineral water. She is a shapely figure modestly concealed under layers of earth toned colored hemp with only naked toes exposed. Cleaned faced and locks of strawberry blonde hair falling at freewill across high porcelain cheekbones. Although beautiful in her own right, she is not the kind of woman that I’m normally attracted to. Her happy, peaceful energy has drawn me in though. Not in a sexual way, she's more like a kindred spirit. I feel calm and comforted just in her presence. An aura surrounds her, if I can be so Zen-like in saying.

Then I notice she’s staring at me, or rather through me! She’s making a lot of eye-contact, almost as if she’s reading all the thoughts currently in my head and mentally scolding me for not clearing my mind as I was instructed to do earlier. That calm and comforting feeling I had quickly vanishes leaving me insecure and somewhat defensive. It’s the same uneasy feeling I had the day of my sister’s wedding when the priest directed nearly his entire sermon at me! Staring at me the whole time like I was some type of heathen child in need of spiritual guidance. This is exactly why I no longer go to church and this is exactly why I felt like packing up my yoga mat and leaving. Apparently I was transparent. And how dare they judge me!

I’m not one to quit and run from anything that makes me uncomfortable or feels too difficult to endure. I pride myself on being able to push through – mentally, physically, emotionally. Because I know that muscling through such adversity will only make me stronger and I will be a better person for it. So even if it hurts, it’s a good hurt. While the rest of the class was chanting some Sanskrit mantra, Radiohead’s song "Creep" was blasting on continuous repeat in my head, attempting to drown out the noise of all the other thoughts that were consuming me. But instead the lyrics only reinforced the internal dialog I was desperately fighting to silence...

"I don't care if it hurts. I wanna have control. I want a perfect body. I want a perfect soul... But I'm a creep. I'm a weirdo. What the hell am I doin' here? I don't belong here."

Still, I stuck the 60 minutes out. I didn’t find the poses as challenging as the mental aspect of it was. Although for someone who normally has great balancing skills, I webbled and wobbled more than an egg! While standing on one leg, I nearly tumbled into the girl beside me! She caught me, but was unable to catch her giggle from escaping. "Head up and fix your eyes on one spot," she whispered tips to me and helped me re-root myself as a strong Maple as opposed to the Weeping Willow I had become. She seemed more sympathetic rather than judging. She seemed to understand. She put my mind back at ease. And my body shortly followed.

While I may never experience that brilliant blue light that supposedly shoots through your body during periods of deep meditation, I experience something nearly as odd. When I’m told to close my eyes, I see a kaleidoscope of images, similar to when you think you’re about to die. But instead of scenes from my life flashing before my eyes, I am presented with a highlight reel of emotions I’ve experienced over the years. They present themselves to me as tiny snapshots. Joy, sadness, rage, etc. Strong and sometimes graphic still images from periods in my life I either willingly forgot or never want to forget. Perhaps this is what the Yoga teacher saw when she stared into my eyes. Perhaps this is what that Priest saw as well.

And that’s what transparency is. It’s exposing every beautiful, ugly and misunderstood part of yourself. It’s nailing your soul to a wall without the wooden frame that boxes you in. A canvas painting for all to see. And judge. There’s always judging. But I’m learning to be ok with that.

Perhaps today, on my birthday, this is the best gift I can give myself.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Mind Mapping comes to iPad with iMindMap Mobile HD

When it comes to taking notes or putting together thoughts and ideas no technique comes close to MindMapping. This amazing way of starting with a central idea then branching out from there is one of the best ways of taking notes. The key to using this type of technique is to use only 3 - 4 words per branch. Giving yourself key words and ideas to branch out your thoughts.

This form of note taking has been found to stick in peoples minds for longer periods of times and also when students have come back to notes years later, the ideas and thoughts seem to come back even faster then the conventional way of taking notes.

The Mind Mapping software has been available for years for your computer. But, now it is out for the Apple iPad. This gives you the power to take your thoughts and ideas with you where ever you go. Plus, you can sync back to your desktop to edit your thoughts there too.
Check out the link on ThinkBuzan to see how awesome this app really is to use. At the bottom of the page they have a video showing how easy and fun it is to use too. Watch the whole video because at the end they show one even more incredible feature available.

This feature is to connect it to your external projector and give presentations right from your iPad on to the screen. As you give it. You start with the central idea and you can build your branches out during the presentation. Giving you a great way to walk your audience through the material.

Monday, October 25, 2010

New Chicago Apple Store - Lincoln Park


This weekend i had a chance to visit the new Apple store in Chicago. It is located in beautiful Lincoln Park on the corner of North Ave and Halsted. The store opened its doors at 10:30am. From what i heard people had been camped out all night to be the first to walk into the store.

I got there at about 12:30pm. There were still some small lines to get into the store even then. As you walked in, store Associates were passing out these white small boxes with T-shirts inside commemorating today's event. The T-shirts were black with some multi sized/colored apple leaves on the front with green text on the back calling out the store and a white apple logo in the middle of the wording. They were a nice simple design and fit in perfect for a Fall Chicago Day opening.

The T-shirt boxes were a one piece giant folded cardboard item. It was actually pretty cool. The outside was white and the inside was green with a white Apple logo inside the box. The one thing i love about Apple is they really do look into everything down to the box itself.

As we walked in to the store, the place was filled with people. They also had a lot of cops in uniform and plain clothes walking around too. I don't blame them esp. with how some people might be tempted to try to grab and run. Although i think that would be the worst mistake they could make. But you know what they say "Stupid is as Stupid does". lol

The Apple associates wore these nice blue long sleeve shirts with a white embroidered Apple Logo's in the center. It reminded me a bit of Apple meets Iron Man. I loved the shirts and i got to talking to one of the associates about getting one. But he said it was just for Apple employees. The material was like that of a polo shirt. Really sweet. Apple if you are reading this please make some of these shirts for sale. They look really really nice and yes i know a ton of us would buy them.

The store had all the goodies Apple is know for, from the beautiful new MacBook Air to the amazing iMacs. The store was just gorgeous. I loved walking around looking and being able to play with everything i could. It had a nice clean, comfortable look & feel to it.

The Apple associates were very friendly and always there to help or assist you with any questions. The one thing that stuck out that i loved was how everyone working there was being themselves. You had people with long hair, short hair, big giant afros, multi colored hair, tats, body art (aka piercings),etc. I love walking in a place where people are people no covered up so they don't scare the clients. This is one of the reasons why i love Apple, they don't styfile the creativity people have deep within.

The store is huge, it has a stainless steel panel finish on the outside with three entrances made out of primarily Glass with a bit of steel in some places. Really nice, clean and sleek design.It also has a nice modern sit down park on the side between the store and the newly renovated North and Clybourn Train station. Apple plunked down $4 million to bring it back to life.

If you have had a chance to visit. I would def. encourage you to do so. They did a fantastic job on the store, train station and the people are very warm and friendly who work there. Plus, you can always find something to bring home with you, what ever your price range, Apple has it all.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

LOOT - Museum of Arts and Design (MAD)

Jean says: Last Thursday afternoon, Valerie called to say that it was "pay what you wish" night at the Museum of Arts and Design, and they would be open till 9pm. Say no more! The LOOT show had opened the previous evening and I was dying to see it. It is a biennial juried exhibit and sale of one-of-a-kind contemporary art jewelry. We made plans to meet there after work, tentatively at 7 PM, but I was supposed to call Valerie when I left my office so she could time her walk over. Suffering some kind of brain freeze, I left the office without calling her and arrived at MAD a little before 7. Since Valerie is ALWAYS on time, after I didn't see her in the Museum store, I paid my admission and ran upstairs to see if she'd already arrived and started to view the show. When she wasn't there, it suddenly hit me: I was SUPPOSED to call her. To add insult to injury, I'd left my cell phone in my nightstand. I ran out onto the street in search of a pay phone. After finally locating two, neither of which worked, I fled back to the Museum lobby, checked the shop and the show again and then returned, forlorn, to the lobby. (Valerie, STILL without a cell phone in 2010, says: welcome to what is all too often my world.)

That's when I approached Hennamari and Heikki, two adorable Finnish designers, to borrow a cell phone to call Valerie to beg forgiveness and ask her to take a cab to meet me. (Valerie demurs a bit: I'm not always on time - that's impossible under the current Manhattan Transit Authority regime [it's straight out of Superman's Bizarro World] - but I do possibly get madder than anyone else I know at lateness - mine or anyone else's. I hated taking the taxi [I'm only a 15 minute walk away], and, like Rumpelstiltskin, demanded Jean's first born child when I arrived.)

Suzanne Golden:
When I first ran upstairs looking for Valerie, I ran into Suzanne Golden who gave me a big welcome and introduced me to her friend who was wearing an outfit made out of multi-colored drinking straws. The hula-skirt and neon blue wig almost made Suzanne's outfit look sedate - which is extremely hard to do. Suzanne herself was a vision from the top of her flame-red curls to the bottom of her red patent pointy-toed oxfords with rhinestone buckles. In between were her cherry red spectacles and a fabulous mix of polka dot shirt, patterned sweater and plaid dhoti-style pants. Only she can combine so many different colors, textures and patterns and still end up looking absolutely drop-dead fabulous.

These are two of Suzanne's beaded bangles. She uses vibrant graphic and highly colorful beads. Suzanne is passionate about creating wearable art, and uses beading to combine her creative ideas with her love of fashion. The black and white bracelet is titled Evolution #5 and is made with a peyote stitch of seed beads. Her colorful bracelet is called Netting and is made with seed beads and acrylic beads. For more of her fab stuff, go to www.SuzanneGolden.com.


Robert Lee Morris:
Robert Lee Morris (RLM) started out as a sculptor in Soho. Since the 1970s, he has been producing sculptural jewelry in sterling silver and 18 karat gold. A long time collaborator with Donna Karan, he has reworked and reissued some of his iconic pieces in honor of her 25th anniversary. The famously sensual elongated metal belt buckles are now much lighter. Robert, now one of the members of MAD's Board of Directors, was one of the few male artists in the show. It was interesting to note how even his earlier designs continue to resonate decades later.


At LOOT, Robert was showing some of his vintage pieces such as the sterling silver cross necklace and the big golden choker being modeled in this picture by Gail Shields-Miller (far left). The neck piece was featured in his first Vogue Magazine cover. I read somewhere that RLM loves comic books and super heroes like Wonder Woman. The neck piece was positively Amazonian. It retailed at the show for about $8,000 - partly because of its classic design and partly because of its provenance. Also in the photograph are Leslie, Boo, Nadia and Lorelei. Nadia and Boo were visiting from Rochester. Boo Poulin is a jeweler in her own right. Check out her work at www.boopoulin.com.


Valerie adds: What a treat it was just to say hi to Mr. Morris. I've loved his work for decades. His shapes were so organic they were quite startling at the time, and such a treat in juxtaposition to all the formal straight-laced jewelry I grew up with. So I gushed like a school girl, and Mr. Morris let me gush and get it out of my system. We were so flustered I don't think we got it together to give him our business card, even though he's in our age group (if not strictly in our demographic). Here are a pair of earrings and a piece that I wear as a pendant, which I've owned for ages. It took years before I spotted the teeny scrawled signature that was scratched into it.


Nirit Dekel:
Israeli artist and jeweler Nirit Dekel creates beautiful necklaces from glass beads made of Italian Moreti glass using traditional lampworking. Nirit the person is a wonderfully warm individual with beautiful long locks and very cool black framed glasses who was sweet enough to pose with us for a picture.





Nirit's necklaces in the show ran the gamut from combinations of small, delicate round and wavy beades to large gumball sized globes, some of which were see-through crystal with silver and others were opaque. These photos illustrate the variety in her styles. The darker colored glass was deceptive, looking almost solid. To see more of her work, go to www.niritdekel.com.

Here is another of Nirit's designs using much smaller beads. Although a number of artists used glass, it was amazing how different they were from each other.



Sandra Enterline:











Valerie and I met San Francisco artist Sandra Enterline. We were both impressed with her delicate perforated metal jewelry. The pieces in the photograph are called "perforated box brooches" and are made of oxidized sterling and 22K gold. They ranged in size from about 1 3/4" x 3" x 1/2" to 2" x 2 3/4" x 1/2". The pin-holes, just barely visible in this photo, but far more evident in the work we saw, made the metal pieces appear light and airy. To view more of her work, go to www.sandraenterline.com.

Monica NeBeler:
I was first taken by German jeweler Monica NeBeler's great outfit - her balloon skirt was set off perfectly by short leather booties and striped stockings. Only after I got a grip on my fashion A-D-D was I able to focus on her jewelry. Kettenmacherin NeBeler makes wonderfully colorful coiled necklaces and jewelry. The piece she was wearing last Thursday evening looked like a large copper beaded and curled telephone wire.




In researching her online after the show, I was thrilled to see that she is showing at this year's Philadelphia Craft Show, where we will be making our annual pilgrimage. Pictured is one of her smaller blood red coiled necklaces that also appears on her postcard. For more, go to www.Kettenmacherin.de.


Jung-Gyu Yi:
Korean artist Jung-Gyu Yi makes beautifully layered necklaces and jewelry with jade and other semi-precious stones. My description does not do her work justice. Unfortunately, despite much looking, I was unable to unearth any images of her jewelry to show you. She wore a beautiful black round-necked dress with tiny pleats down the front and a very graphic black and white felt vest that was made by one of her friends.


Valerie says: Jean and I occasionally demonstrate the theory that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. I don't dress like I'm shy, but I am. I probably would only have made eye contact with two or three people if I'd gone by myself, and I doubt I would have taken any photos, since some artists suspect - understandably - that people can be out to duplicate their work. So when I arrived I was amazed that Jean had already met almost all the artists, and was out to meet the rest in the time left to us. And as you can see, she photographed quite a lot of people. (Except for the RLM pieces, all of these are Jean's photos or internet photos.) This would have been beyond my capacity. Traveling with Jean can be a great learning experience. Somewhere in my past I seem to remember a book called 'What Do You Say After You Say Hello'. I think Jean wrote that book under a nom de plume before I met her. On my own, I can talk to anyone wearing something I admire because I can see from a hundred yards that we have something very important in common. Without that clue, I can be stumped for an icebreaker, but Jean is never at a loss. Of course, watching Jean and following her example are two different things. Imagine a major reworking of the Fred Astaire (Jean) and Ginger Rogers (me) paradigm, where this Ginger does everything Fred does, except just backwards? And of course without high heels?

Jean says: Yeah, right. Once we were both at the show, Valerie was chatting up a number of the artists whose work she admired. And I was "Me too" in the background. She holds her own in any artistic venue. That said, I was really in my element at the show. The majority of the jewelers and the patrons were in my demographic, each was uniquely dressed and was very approachable.


Case in point, I started talking to Leslie Haber (far left) who was wearing a vintage Goldworm dress, cowboy boots and Cara Croninger leather belt and cuffs. She was sporting a ring with a green bakelite dice (with no dots) from Julie Artisans on Madison Avenue (www.julieartisans.com). Leslie introduced me to artist Sandra Llano-Mejia who was wearing a modern necklace that looked pre-Columbian and to interior designer Gail Shields-Miller (ShieldsInteriors.com) who was modeling the Robert Lee Morris choker. A friend of Gail's whom I did not meet joined them in the picture.


Nancy is a fellow New Yorker, an Upper East Sider to be exact. She looked positively Audrey Hepburnesque with her dark hair, short bangs, dark eyes and pale skin. We chatted for a while at the exhibit and then ran into each other again at the Museum Shop.






Valerie says: Atop his display case, designer Giorgio Vigna had two extraordinary pieces that I wish I could show photographs of. I’ll have to make do with this photo of the photogenic Mr. Vigna himself, from the web, and my woefully inadequate descriptions. One of the extraordinary pieces was a huge wooden bracelet covered in a thin sheet of silver. It had a wonderfully barbaric look to it. He also had a necklace of large hollow silver beads. Some were covered in silver granules; others were hammered, and again the whole piece had a very barbaric look to it, as if he’d coated small fruits and stones in silver and strung them together. Suzanne Golden said she proposed marriage to him before I arrived, so I stayed at a polite distance, in deference to her claim on him. Mr. Vigna is currently updating his website, but you should check back and have a look in the near future.

Before closing time, the last artist we struck up a conversation with was Virginia Estrada, who was showing wood and marble that she'd sculpted into very sensuous pieces of jewelry. Here's a picture of her carrying one of her larger art works (how fierce does she make that denim jacket look?); below are some of her sculpted marble jewelry pieces. They just beg to be stroked and caressed. I took both of these photos from her website. (Just click on her name, above). Virginia's work has appeared in some of the best New York stores you can name, as well as all the fashion magazines that come immediately to mind. AND she was lovely to talk to!

LOOT closes on Tuesday, October 26th, so shake your tail feathers and get over to 2 Columbus Circle before the doors shut.


Valerie is wearing: black rubber (?) and metal clip earrings; polyester origami scarf by Nuno; braided leather vintage Issey Miyake suspenders; white cotton shirt with buttons down the arms by Focus Lifestyle; metal cuffs from Matsuya Ginza; wool and rayon pants by Jones New York; gray leather open toed boots (without high heels) by Blowfish; and finally a vintage gray felt Sally Victor hat with pleated swirls (or a vortex, as an articulate architect once commented) and black and white herringbone wool jacket by Tamotsu, both unseen here.

Jean is hatless (because when she left for work that morning, she had no evening plans). She is wearing a black Marithe + Francoise Girbaud cropped jacket with orange faux mouton collar, black Brigitte harem pants, Dansko clogs and Moss Lipow glasses.

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Several weeks ago we had our first readers from Malta, Oman and Saudi Arabia, and last week we had our first reader from Andorra. It's great to see that we're being read worldwide. Thanks to all our readers for checking us out!