Saturday, February 7, 2009


Sometime Hills and The City guest star Kelly Cutrone has found a home for that reality show she's been shopping around. She'll be joining fellow fashion insider Rachel Zoe on Bravo — the network has ordered up eight episodes for a reality show based on her PR company, People's Revolution; the focus is said to be "strong women in the workplace." [Page Six]

This is a delicious flump sweater


Alexander Wang sweater, Sam Edelman boots

Dream Bedroom

I want an all white bedroom some day-they seem so relaxing. It wouldn't be two seconds before I fucked it up though, but then my all white maid could come in with some all white cleaner and clean that shit up.

Friday, February 6, 2009

if only manfriend had a bigger apartment...

Fabulous Dior Galliano





Super fab wallpaper


click here

heroin recession special

weee-ierd


via planet fabulon

pretty



via planet fabulon

"The Revolution Will Be Fabulous: A Weapons of Mass Designer Show" by Artist Peter Gronquist



via Wicked Halo

Shark tea infuser by By Pablo Matteoda

via Kanye

United Arab Emirates is building a system of driverless taxis and when the system's fully built, planners say the podcars will be able to deliver riders within 100 meters of any location in the city. The whole network of tracks for the cars will be two stories beneath street level.

Can I have one in Harlem?

via Kanye

Pretty freakin cool


French outdoor installation artist JR continues his epic 28 MILLIMETER: WOMEN Project with the unveiling this week of his most ambitious stage yet in KIBERA, KENYA.  With the help of enthusiastic residents, JR managed to cover 2,000 square meters of local rooftops with photos of the eyes and faces of the women of Kibera. The material used is water-resistant enabling that the photo itself to protect the fragile houses in the upcoming rainy season. In order to further spread his message throughout the massive city, JR also encapsulated the local train that runs through the area twice daily with the eyes of local women alongside those of women photographed in Brazil, India, Cambodia, and other parts of Africa whose stories and images reveal a global solidarity of plight and purpose. The pinnacle of the experience, however, comes when the eyes on the moving train align with the static bottom halves of the subject’s faces posted along the train’s embankment, completing the smiling portraits for a split second in rapid succession before moving on to the next village where the experience is repeated.

via Kanye