Showing posts with label The Good Stuff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Good Stuff. Show all posts

Thursday, December 16, 2010

Ambassador Gil


Really excited for - and a tad envious of - my ex-colleagues at BrandBuzz for the world's first interactive wrap around digital out of home billboard for LG in Times Square.

Buzz worked with North Kingdom on it and this link is to the North Kingdom blog which does a very nice explanation. Which means I get let off the hook.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Brilliant Business Cards

A (bad, it's the Blackberry camera again!) picture of Eco3's business cards; well, stickers really.
Eco3 are an environmental and sustainability consultancy, see here for more details. Their business cards are terrific. They re-use other bits of card, for example a train ticket or a cut a bit of card from chocolate packaging and then put their sticker on it. Brilliant!

My first question was whether the 'sticker' method was more damaging to the environment than the 'print business cards' method. Of course they had done the research and it was a third less damaging.

Wonderful stuff.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Quaker Meeting House

I had wanted, for some time, to visit the Quaker meeting house in Chappaqua. For a start, it is one of the oldest buildings in Chappaqua and though we had lived in town for almost five years I had not visited it. Also, earlier this year, Graham Turner, the creative director at work had been enthusing about a Quaker school in Manhatten as he had done the rounds looking for a school for one of his daughters, which reminded me of my interest. Additionally, I felt some bizarre, though distant, connection with the Quakers as one of the few interesting things about my home town in England, Hertford, was that it was the home of the first Quaker Meeting house built in Britain. But as well as visiting, I also wanted to go to a Quaker service, or meeting.

One Sunday morning, whilst on a cycle ride, I stopped by the Meeting House and was shown around by a friendly Englishman, who worked for the UN, called John. He told me what happened at the meetings. I thought I would attend one. A week or two later I went.

The meeting room has no obvious alter or focal point. The friend who leads the meeting could sit anywhere. There is no 'set' service. People are encouraged to speak when they feel like saying something, and they stand when they do speak. However, nobody may want to speak at all, as was the case at my first meeting. There was 50 minutes of silence, only broken by the sound of people moving quietly on their seat or a muffled cough. Those 50 minutes of silence were interesting. They were simultaneously duanting and liberating; in the same way that following instuctions or a set of directions - like writing a creative brief with a series of boxes - can be comforting, whereas having to make it up yourself from scratch - like having to write on a blank sheet of paper - can be very challenging. Initially, I didn't know what to do with all this space. Quite quickly, I began to enjoy the openness within which to reflect.

I returned to the Quaker Meeting House twice more before we left Chappaqua. The first time was with George and Ollie, whom I persuaded to come with me. They managed to sit in silence a little before leaving the meeting to go to the kid's 'meeting' which they seemed to enjoy. The second time was the last weekend I was in Chappaqua, after Jill and the boys had gone. I stood up in the meeting to say "thank you". I had only been to the meeting house three times but there was something good happening there and I had been touched by it.

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This post is a revised version of an unpublished post I started in June 2008, whilst we were still in Chappaqua.

Sunday, September 07, 2008

Inishturkbeg

Imagine owning your own island. 63 acres of island off the West Coast of Ireland in fact. Imagine that when you bought it, the only buildings were the remains of some stone cottages inhabitated over a hundred years ago and a little stone jetty: no running water, no power. That is what Nadim Sadek, the owner of Inishturkbeg did. He has spent the last four years turning it into an amazing place for companies to get away, for large parties to holiday and for his family to get away. And what's more he is giving it an identity, which was created by my new employer, Coley Porter Bell. It hasn't been officially launched yet so I daren't post anything prematurely. I will do in time. Instead, here are some pictures of the weekend we spent there as part of a thank you from Nadim.

This is the view from the Pavilion of the jetty:

And the sunset from the main house:

And a different view from the main house the next morning:

And the small motor boat dropping us off on a nearby island for in the afternoon. The weather had deteriorated a little.

A great couple of days, and what's more, a great idea.

Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Cliff Stoll

This is Cliff Stoll given a TED Talk. It is fabulous stuff.

Monday, April 07, 2008

TED Talks


TED stands for Technology, Entertainment, Design. It is a conference that started in 1984. TED's mission is "Ideas Worth Spreading". TED invites speakers to speak for 18 minutes and has posted over 200 of the speeches online at TED Talks . It is a treasure trove of wonderful stuff.

Monday, December 31, 2007

Penny Harvest Field



We came across the Penny Harvest Field at Rockefeller Center yesterday.

Penny Harvests are run by an organisation called Common Cents. All the one cent pieces (pennies) that are collected are turned into grants for community organizations that help young people do good in their communities. It all grew out of the desire of 4 yr Nora Gross wanting to feed a homeless man in 1991.

As well as what must be millions of pennies, and many other types of coins, there were big dispensers filled with little brown bags for people to start their own collection. Have a look at http://www.commoncents.org/