Posts Tagged ‘vw polo timeless’

Wooden Spoon as Culinary Staple

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

“Spoons, if not as old as the world, are certainly as old as soup,” said 19th-century French archaeologist Emmanuel de Laborde.  It’s no surprise then that the Egyptians were using spoons well before Christ, and such was their importance that they were individually owned, being willed from one generation to the next.  It wasn’t until the 16-17th century that metal cutlery usurped the wooden spoon’s place at the table, freeing it up to become the king of mixing and stirring at the stove.  A poor conductor of heat, and non-abrasive for pots and pans, the wooden spoon continues to trump all other materials in its special kitchen niche.

Their manufacture naturally lends itself to artistic carving, and the custom flourished during 17th century Europe as young men signaled their amorous intentions by gifting the targets of their affection with personally-carved lovespoons.  Today ornately-carved spoons come from all over the world, adding uniquely ethnic touches to the contemporary kitchen.

Beyond its culinary uses, the wooden spoon has also found its way into competitive culture, being symbolically awarded to the team or person coming last in a contest, is a (relatively harmless) tool for pranksters, and serves as a wonderful base for making children’s puppets.  Talk about versatility!

Desperate Housewives’ Secrets and Lies

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009
All's not what it seems in Wisteria Lane

All's not what it seems in Wisteria Lane

Behind the white picket-fenced veneer of suburbia in Wisteria Lane, all is not as it seems. A bevy of surgically enhanced wives spin a web of crime and secrets, with deceased neighbour Mary Alice Young narrating as she follows her former friends negotiating those timeless themes: life and love.

The cast includes former Lois Lane actress Teri Hatcher and glamour mag favourite Eva Longoria Parker.  Show creator Marc Cherry, also responsible for producing TV smash show The Golden Girls, is said to have based the character of Bree Van Der Kamp on his mother. Ah, but which character are you?

Currently in its sixth season, Desperate Housewives has millions of viewers worldwide. And the drama continues off the set as well. In 2007, striking Hollywood writers converged on the L.A. set as part of their industrial action to disrupt filming in the Toluca Lake suburb. While in September it emerged that Kathryn Joosten, who plays feisty neighbour Mrs McCluskey, is fighting a second bout of lung cancer.

Is Wisteria Lane up your alley enough to make it into your Timeless 50?

Arden’s Eight Hour Cream 80 Years’ Strong

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009
Elizabeth Arden's creation stands the test of time

Elizabeth Arden's creation stands the test of time

Created in 1930 and barely changed since, Elizabeth Arden Eight Hour Cream is a ‘miracle multi-tasker’, used to soothe and moisturise everything from cracked lips to dry elbows, sore cuticles to sunburn. Celebs rave about it.

With one tube sold every two minutes in the UK alone, its popularity should not be underestimated. Katie Campbell, deputy beauty editor of Grazia, names it as one of her top five all time beauty classics. “Is it a moisturiser? A hand cream? A healing ointment? A lipgloss? Brow fixer? Frizz-tamer? Elizabeth Arden’s indispensable Eight-Hour Cream is all of the above and more.”

Born in Canada in 1878, Florence Nightingale Graham later changed her name to Elizabeth Arden – partly inspired by Tennyson’s poem, ‘Enoch Arden’’. She is credited with introducing modern eye make-up to North America.

Eight Hour Cream became an instant success, with Arden even using it to soothe her famous thoroughbred horses’ legs. The name is said to have come about after a loyal client used it to treat her child’s skinned knee and “eight hours later” the skin was all better.

Interested in retro packaging? The range’s Cream Lip Protectant is available in a box inspired by the original.

Ugly Betty Woos the Critics

Monday, October 26th, 2009
Can Betty's charms put this sitcom on the Timeless 50?

Can Betty's charms put this sitcom on the Timeless 50?

The trials and tribulations of ‘ugly’ editorial assistant Betty Suarez are captured in this comedy series about the perils of working at a top fashion magazine surrounded by beautiful people.

Hired to assist the blundering, womanising Daniel Meade, who has been thrust into the editor’s seat of Manhattan-based magazine Mode, Betty finds herself at odds with the bitchy people she has to call colleagues. But her dogged insistence that being nice is what matters wins through, making her Daniel’s go-to gal, much to the annoyance of the others.

Film star Salma Hayek is an executive producer of the show, which has run since September 2006. She adapted the series for American television after acquiring the rights from a Colombian telenovela, Betty la Fea (yep, Ugly Betty in Spanish).  She also guest-starred as rival magazine editor Sofia Reyes.

Ugly Betty became a ratings hit and won a Golden Globe Award for Best Comedy Series in 2007. It has received both praise and criticism for its dealing of the position of the Latino community in US society.

The ‘B-shaped’ pearl necklace Betty wears is said to be a replica of the one worn by Anne Boleyn. So does this fashion world expose make your Timeless 50 or is it ‘off with its head’?

Yves Saint Laurent’s Touche Eclat Hides Those Late Nights

Monday, October 26th, 2009
YSL's light touch stands the test of time

YSL's light touch stands the test of time

A saviour for party animals and new mothers alike, Yves Saint Laurent’s Touche Eclat concealer is considered the best at hiding the evidence of a late night. Using light-reflecting pigments to ‘brighten’ the face, its creamy formula has won legions of fans. A simple click pushes the cream out on to a brush, making it quick and easy to apply.

Not the best for actually covering dark rings, the success of this ‘magic wand’ lies more in distracting from them. Applied not just under the eyes, but to all shadowy spots on the face – eye hollows, jowl creases and under the chin – it banishes signs of fatigue. According to YSL, it is ‘eight hours of sleep in a pen’.  The recent inclusion of a men’s version is evidence of the subtle yet effective results.

Touche Eclat was launched in 1992. By this point, YSL was struggling as its leader battled ill health and addiction. Although the illustrious couture house closed in 2002, the concealer, now firmly established as a make-up bag must-have, lives on under YSL’s parent company, Prada.

Vote the concealer onto the Timeless 50 over on the main Timeless 50 site.

Enrique’s Hero Worship

Monday, October 26th, 2009

enrique iglesias as hero

It’s all in the timing. Enrique Iglesias – son of Julio, for those miraculously not acquainted – came along with Hero just at the moment millions of Americans were seeking a way to get through the traumatic events of 9/11.

Picked up by radio stations and used as backing to audio testimonies from police, firefighters, politicians and civilians commenting on the attacks, it became a symbol of strength and hope, topping the Billboard adult contemporary chart for fifteen weeks. And that’s despite a a steamy, violent video featuring Jennifer Love-Hewitt and a Bonnie-and-Clyde-esque storyline, ending with Iglesias apparently being shot by Mickey Rourke.

Nevertheless, one year later, Hero became the first song ever to re-enter the chart’s top ten. In the UK, it was a breakthrough song for Iglesias, staying at Number One for four weeks and securing his place as one of the nation’s best-loved crooners.

So does Enrique’s Hero make your list Timeless 50?

Lancome’s Tubes Pay Lip Service

Monday, October 26th, 2009
Lancome pays lip service

Lancome pays lip service

A make-up bag staple, Lancome’s Juicy Tubes are flavoured lip glosses in subtle colours. Next year sees their 10th anniversary and the range is being added to all the time.

There are colours and effects to satisfy every whim, from ‘jelly’ shades to sorbet colours in a fragranced, gel texture. And there is every flavour from lychee to mint. Ultra glossy, they are a hit because, in a word, they last. ‘It’s smooth and truly ultra-shiny without that unfortunate ‘pork chop’ affect. And, very impressively, it lasted through a meal,’ writes one beauty blogger.

And the tube-tip applicator means no sticky fingers. Now there’s even a World Tour collection of ‘iconic’ Juicy Tubes. Inspired by New York, Paris, Tokyo and Rio, the limited-edition tubes were each decorated with a chic dress by British fashion designer Christopher Kane. But perhaps best of all is that Lancome has now produced an all-natural version. Created with naturally derived oils and shea butter emollient, even the packaging is 100% recyclable.

Vote Lancome’s Tubes to your Timeless 50.

Anglepoise Lamp Gave A Name to Functional Lighting

Sunday, October 25th, 2009
The lamp strikes a timeless pose

The lamp strikes a timeless pose

The Anglepoise is a bit like the Hoover or the Biro. Designed in 1933 by George Carwardine and still in production today, the lamp has had such a great impact on its industry that the term has now come to represent an entire category of design: the flexible, articulated task light.

It’s an iconic piece that continues to influence and be reinterpreted: Fosters and Partners based their three-sixty table light on its simple form back in 2005; Okay Studio recreated the lamp in bread last year as a comment on sustainable design for a show at the Aram Gallery and more recently the Anglepoise company itself has been reinvented by owners John Terry and son Simon, descendents of Anglepoise founder Herbert Terry.

Armed with some new lines like the Giant Anglepoise, and the Anglepoise Fifty, the brand is making a resurgence proving that like the Biro or the Hoover, this is a creation that will always be in demand.

But does it have the poise to make your Timeless 50?

Ab Fab’s One for the Ages

Sunday, October 25th, 2009
Absolutely Fabulous will be regarded as a British TV classic

Absolutely Fabulous will be regarded as a British TV classic

No other sitcom typifies 90s lifestyle culture quite like Jennifer Saunders’ Absolutely Fabulous. Through wit and sharp dialogue the two protagonists, Edina and Patsy, shone a lens on the superficial PR/media world of that time.

According to the media the character for Edina was a parody of PR consultant Lynn Franks, a once central figure on the London fashion scene. Although much of the humour was slapstick, with Eddie nearly always falling over at some point in the show, the script was very knowing and sophisticated; layered with contemporary references that poked fun at the designer or socialite of the month.

And it’s this savviness that makes it a classic. The 90s were about an increasingly metropolitan Britain, fast becoming urbane, knowing and consumed by media and image. Absolutely Fabulous is a timeless representation of this burgeoning lifestyle culture which the country still revels in today.