Categories
Character Design2 Wishlist

Old (Vintage) Stuff, Gorgeous

I’ve just spent a good amount of time browsing through Factory 20‘s selections. I’ve learned they are particularly adept at styling old (vintage) stuff, and making me want it desperately.

From top: Heavy Patina’d Steel Mutli-Drawer Cabinet, $920; Old Shamrock Vintage Industrial Elevated Laundry Bin, $345; Neo-Bauhaus Wall Mounted Wooden Coat Rack, $1070; Regent Balboa Portrait Wall Mirror, $480; Bus Station Waiting Room Clock, $465; Vintage Industrial Steel Laboratory Single Drawer Table/Desk, $885; Mammoth Green School Chalkboards, SOLD; High Victorian Articulate Accordion Beveled Oval Portrait Mirror, $535.

Categories
Character Finds

Lest you missed it…

This is an official White House photo of President Obama working on a speech, with all his edits up close and personal. Awesome, eh?

via Bobulate.

Categories
Productivity Work/life balance Workplace

Re-Thinking Workaholism

“Work is the only thing which makes life endurable to me,” Charles Darwin wrote, later remarking that work was his “sole enjoyment in life.” Darwin’s work allowed him to withdraw from the world to concentrate entirely on his genius.

Burying yourself in work is so ingrained and glorified in our culture to survive, that nowhere is safe, even the previously safe haunts of creativity where the tradition of daydreaming and an idle nature were once protected rights. Such inefficiencies are now subject to intense bright-lights examination.

One ad agency describes the process they went through to obtain ISO 5000, a certification previously reserved only for factory lines and manufacturing. The process revealed some “surprising inefficiencies” but came at a price. “All the hyper-efficiency can be exhausting,” reported the Chief Creative Officer Jeff Gabel. “You’ve removed your slop factor.”

Exhaustion is now the modus operandi. As such, workaholism is not a reaction to passion, but the inefficiencies of the modern workplace.

“The fact is,” Dave Balter, founder and CEO of BzzAgent, says, “few white-collar employees work 9-5 at all anymore. We’re expected to address work issues on weeknights and often on weekends. We’re constantly reachable and it goes without saying that many are reviewed on the merits of their ‘always on’ capacity.” (via Max Kalehoff).

Most of us are working the usual 9 to 5, but also when inspiration strikes. Whereas in the industrial revolution, work was indeed done when you completed your widgets for the day, the knowledge society demands your energy when it’s seemingly most inconvenient. Right before bed and long into the night, for instance, or first thing upon opening your eyes in the morning.

There’s a credible explanation for these 9 to 5 outliers, which is that the productivity pockets are cushioned by breaks – a tweet, sleep, dinner, interaction with friends and family. Such idleness is great sustenance.

Alain de Botton, best known for his philosophies on everyday life, agrees. There’s a glorious stubbornness to human nature, he says. We need a break, we need a pause, we’re not made for continuous action. Looking out the window is a fundamental part of human nature, he argues.

“Periodic breaks relieve our conscious minds of the pressure to perform — pressure that can lock us into a single mode of thinking,” argue the authors of Creativity and the Mind, a landmark text in the psychology and neuroscience of creativity. Their research suggests that regular breaks enhance problem-solving skills significantly, Wired reports.

We’re working all the time, not because we need to, or even because it’s effective, but because our jobs require us to show up, be seen, and scrub through the afternoon slump. But the truth is, no one is working at 3 pm. That should be nap time, argues De Botton. (Interestingly, those who nap have a higher capacity to learn).

The culture of workaholism, worn with a badge of narcissistic and perfectionist pride, isn’t mixed with a lot of real work, he says. In our squeeze for uber-efficiency, we’re making a giant mess of inefficiencies.

A recent Wall Street Journal post profiled a young “superhero” who “rises at 3:30 a.m., works out before work, takes three of his four kids to school, works flat-out all day, gets home for dinner and bedtime with the family and then works until midnight.”

If you were counting, the young superhero gets a whopping three and a half hours of sleep. Disgusting.

Workaholism is sick and it’s wrenching to watch the pedestal we build for it.

We are not drones,  and we should not  indenture ourselves to workaholic servitude. Our rhythms, what truly brings about the bliss of efficiency, require not the constant ticking of the clock, but a restful mind, a glance in the other direction, a check mark in a box that doesn’t exist on any spreadsheet.

That is, sometimes work needs a little life.

Categories
Character Quotes

Kanye on Creativity

There’s no such thing as fact anymore, only opinion. The closest thing we have to fact is “common opinion”. Everything is an opinion. The way you dress is an expression of your opinion. Your religious beliefs are your opinion. The music you turn up loud is your opinion. For most people it’s easier to just agree. For me the hardest thing is to ‘just’ agree and that is what sparks creativity, the feeling that something can be better, the feeling that something’s missing. The feeling that something’s needed.

– Kanye West (via Frank Chimero)

Categories
Character Style

May 28th Watches

Elastic bands and yet totally mod. Loving these.

$39 each at May 28th Watches.

Categories
Character Style

Alexander Wang / Spring

I’m particularly coveting the outfit in the middle.

Spring ’10 Collection from Alexander Wang.

Categories
Art & Photography Character

Nightscape

By Nathan Ward.

Categories
Character Style

Sublet

Fall ’10 Collection from Sublet via Wilkstenmade.

Categories
Character Design2

Modern Light / Jan Eleni

By Jan Eleni via Decor8.

Categories
Character Quotes

Nothing is original…

via Pikaland.

Categories
Art & Photography Character

Fear Not

What’s your worst fear? Ignorance? Credit cards? Smallpox? Illustrator Brian Rea has collected so many fears over the years that they fill up a 7-meter-by-3.5-meter wall. An exhibition entitled Murals that opened at the Joan Miró Foundation in Barcelona last week gave Rea a chance to not only face, but also trace, his worst fears.

via Fast Company.

Categories
Art & Photography Character

Hiroyuki Hamada

By Hiroyuki Hamada via BOOOOOOOM!