Sweet Ride

The Oregon Manifest held a contest in September of 2011 to find the “Ultimate Utility Bike for Modern Living”. They sought to find a bike that would meet the needs of Americans who want to live a healthier and more sustainable life.

The judges panel was made up of leaders in the bicycle industry including the President of the United Bicycle Institute and the VP of Innovation Design and Special Products at Nike. Tony Pereira of Pereira Cycles came up with a truly innovative, exciting, and winning design, and got  a $3,000.00 prize for his effort!

Although this bike is impressive, I think the true winner has to be the ‘People’s Choice’ winners, IDEO and Rock Lobster Cycles. In a contest where you’re designing a product to be used by people, this award is a big deal. I have to agree with the voters, this bike is pretty cool.

Let me introduce you to Faraday…

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The Perfect Evergreen

The Christmas season is one that is full of joy, laughter, and happiness as well as stress, hustle, and sky-rocketing gas prices. In the midst of all the Christmas commotion, there’s nothing better than coming home to the scent of a freshly cut and decorated fir tree. These days it seems Americans lean towards the pre-lit, store bought, perfectly symmetrical, mass produced Christmas trees. In my own home there was talk of ending the tradition of a live tree after this year! Blasphemy. So for all the Christmas traditionalists out there, here are the best trees to buy for your home!

Balsam Fir

Balsam Fir’s are known for their wonderful scent. They are very similar to Frasier Firs and are not very expensive. They hold their needles very well so they are perfect for a tidy home.

Blue Spruce

Blue Spruce trees are also a great choice. Many consumers consider Blue Spruce trees to be the most attractive you can buy. The down side is they are notorious for shedding their needles endlessly! But, if you don’t mind a little extra vacuuming they can add the perfect touch to your family room.

Scotch Pine

Scotch Pines are known for their fantastic bright green coloring. They hold their needles well, but aren’t great if you have an overdecorated tree or lots of very heavy ornaments.

Happy hunting!

Stained Glass

Recently I’ve been drawn to some really exquisite and beautiful pieces of stained glass. I used to think stained glass was tacky and not at all attractive, but I’ve given it another chance. Don’t get my wrong, stained glass can definitely be a little on the extreme side and not for everyone. There are instances though, when you cannot deny the beauty and intricacy of a piece.

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Don’t Judge a Book By Its Cover

The old saying is true, and sometimes impossible to abide by. When browsing for a new book to read, a cover can be as convincing as the material inside. Great covers can catch your eye, and bad covers can turn you off to a book in an instant.

Here are some covers that I think are brilliant, eye catching, and force you to break the rule.

We Are the Friction by various artists and authors, cover art by Lizzy Stewart and Jez Burrows

Pygmy by Chuck Palahniuk, cover art by Michael Collica

One Red Paperclip by Kyle MacDonald, cover art by Kyle Kolker

Leather Maiden by Joe R. Lansdale, cover art by Peter Mendelsund

An Ethics of Interrogation by Michael Skerker, cover art by Isaac Tobin

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Love of Nature Ring

Cool, non-traditional men’s wedding ring:

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The Georgia State Flag

We mentioned in an earlier post that our homestate was Georgia. While driving through the northwest part of the state last weekend, I saw a large state flag, the new one, flying from the roof of a roadside fruit stand (watermelonohmygodohmygodohmygodsogoodgivemenow). We felt proud. The new flag looks like this:

A few miles later, predictably, we saw the old flag, the one that flew above the state house from 1956 to 2001. It looks like this:

The flag was controversial from the start. Many state groups lobbied for the Georgia legislature to keep the old design, a simple but attractive flag that had flown between 1920 and 1956:

Some even asked for the return of the flag flown until 1879:

The little fellow in the middle represents the defense of the constitution. But back to the ’56 flag. Instituted and voted in as part of a package of bills aimed at fighting federal attempts to integrate Georgia schools, and specifically targeting the effects of the Brown vs. Board of Education decision two years earlier, it incorporated into it’s design a carbon copy of the CSA flag – the Confederate States of America. For over a century, the flag represented to many treason, racial hatred, institutionalized slavery, and a war that killed more Americans than every other international fracas we’ve engaged in. A war capable of slaughtering more than 50,000 men in a single battle. For others, it represented nebulous notions of “culture,” “tradition,” and “history, not hate.”

The flag was a bitter point of contention for decades. When the Olympic Games came to Atlanta in 1996, many participant countries and American business owners and athletes complained about having to play under such a flag. At the time, Democratic Governor Zell Miller attempted to make a change but got soundly defeated in the legislature. It would not be until 2001, when another Democratic Governor occupied the mansion (Roy Barnes) that the flag finally got changed. And boy did it ever, to this monstrosity:

Several survey tagged this flag as the worst in the country, in terms of design and aesthetic appeal. It also gets bad marks for compromise, with a strange an nowhere-near appeasing inclusion of the ’56 flag under the “Georgia’s History” banner. Many Georgians were furious, and the new Governor, Republican Sonny Perdue, was elected in part due to a campaign promise to put the flag issue up for referendum; he would allow Georgians to to vote on which flag they wanted.

Of course, when Sonny won, he was put in a bit of a pickle; follow through on his campaign promise and reinstate a symbol of racism, shameful history and hatred on top of the state house, or keep the flag the way it was and be considered a liar, coward and same-old politician?

In the end, Perdue pulled off a pretty neat trick. He did hold the referendum, but the voters were given but two choices; the current flag, seen at the top of this post, or the hideous flag, seen at the bottom. Again, indignation and relief rose in equal manner.

As for now, the issue is settled. However, it’s interesting and revealing to note how much design can mean, even when (or especially when) divorced from aesthetic consideration. It’s not just furniture, color and clothes.

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Presidential Signatures

Some of the best, some of the most famous, but the best first:

The signatures of Ulysses S. Grant, Grover Cleveland, and Calvin Cooldige. Not our most accomplished Chief Executives; too much time perfecting their signatures, perhaps.

Now the famous:

George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and John F. Kennedy.

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White House China

We here at Basis are in a culinary state of mind, having seen Julie & Julia this weekend (and, yes, having bought Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking from Amazon almost immediately). We got to thinking of dinner plates, and then to some of the most famous, and arguably most important, plates on earth; the White House china. Luckily for us, most of the White House china used over the centuries has been preserved in some form. Although it was not until somewhat recently that congress passed a law mandating that all White House china be either saved or destroyed. There’s a great story that when Lyndon and Ladybird Johnson didn’t like their dessert plates, the staff were allowed to smash them against a wall in the basement! For your edification, a selection of the choicest china our country has to offer:

George Washington, 1st President of the United States

Thomas Jefferson, 3rd President of the United States

Abraham Lincoln, 16th President of the United States

Woodrow Wilson, 28th President of the United States

George W. Bush, 43rd President of the United States

Let’s eat!

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