fly me high, high up.

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Eco-friendly Cups

themannequeen is in the process of refining its business directions and we are looking into selling lifestyle items! It’s sorta dream come true for me. Excited! Swamped with reworking the backend web stuff right now.

We will be selling gift and home & decor items like clocks, mugs, cups, mousepads etc etc that we source from all over the world!

But these will only be available prolly August onwards. Sneek peep – we will be selling eco-friendly cups similar to these:

(Via TheDieline)

Wear your polaroids

I want to wear my own polaroids too.

(Via snap happy)

So Sweet

Twitter-instruct David what to do

David is a recruiter for Leo Burnett Chicago. He wants to go Cannes Advertising Festival. To do that, his boss challenged him to take this task of being watched , tracked and instructed upon online (via twitter) for a week.

Ok, people in the industry would know this may only be half the truth. Very obviously, it’s Leo Burnett testing a web experiment here, riding on the trend of live streaming online. Even my Android market has popular apps which allow phone users to stream live videos to the entire Android users all over the world. Voyeuristic society we have here.

Anyways, twitter-talk to him here.

There is a CNN article about this too.

Aussie Land Tourism Promotion

Really have to give it to the Aussie Tourism Board for coming up with innovative ideas to promote tourism Down Under.

Best job in the world last year, and a nine week journey across Aussie land this year.

Cabbie ends 13,650km ride

SYDNEY – AN EPIC nine-week Australian taxi journey to promote tourism Down Under ended Sunday after taking in pristine beaches, desert wilderness and the rugged Outback.

The campaign, similar to last year’s highly successful ‘Best Job in the World’ promotion which netted a young British man to publicise Queensland’s attractions, included competitions to select the trip’s driver and passengers.

Doug Slater, chosen to be the driver for the 13,650-kilometre (8,460-mile) journey from the Western Australian capital Perth to the northern coastal town of Broome, said it was the ‘opportunity of a lifetime’. ‘The driving wasn’t the real concern for me… the rest of it kept me pretty busy,’ he told AFP, referring to the constant commentary on Western Australia’s attractions he maintained throughout.

Slater said the 11 couples who were his passengers, who came from Australia, Malaysia, Singapore, Britain, New Zealand and Germany, were amazed at the amount of wildlife they saw – including deadly snakes, sharks and crocodiles. ‘My passengers’ minds were boggled by the wildlife we saw on the journey,’ said Slater, who was used to travelling the state thanks to his previous job as a livestock agent.

The campaign was inspired by that of a spinster who in the 1930s travelled thousands of kilometres over three months along Australia’s east coast from Melbourne to Darwin in a soft-top taxi. Officials believe it has already generated media exposure worth more than 2.6 million dollars (S$3.08 million), and reached a potential audience of 60 million people globally.

Slater, who beat more than 400 other people to win the role of driver, said he was sad the journey was at an end. But after flying back to Perth, he will begin the trip to Broome all over again – this time with his wife. — AFP

(Via ST)

This coffee table eats up paper

The Papervore from Pigeontail Design on Vimeo.

A Popsicle Picnic Wedding

What a simple and creative wedding affair! Love the pastel hues of the photos.

The couple “asked their friends and family to bring picnic style food and everyone sat on blankets in the grass with all the beautiful paper cranes hanging on the tree limbs above.”

A hotel so ‘Netherlands’

Stunning. The hotel is made to look like stack houses, and in a way that reflects the country’s rich cultural/architectural history.

I so wanna go there and take photos of this fine architecture from all angles.

(Via designmilk)

Ferrari World Theme Park

Largest indoor theme park in the world.

In Yas Island, Abu Dhabi. Somehow, Abu Dhabi seems to be the hip town now. 3.5 yrs back, when I had to spend 2007 New Year Countdown in Abu Dhabi, nobody had a clue where the funny-sounding country is. But now, it seems to be the country to be in.

Anyways, back to the theme park. According to the official news we found on the Ferrari site: “Ferrari World Abu Dhabi is set to be the world’s largest indoor theme park, sitting under a roof designed in the style of a classic double-curve body shell of a Ferrari. There is energy, excitement and passion for the entire family at Ferrari World Abu Dhabi. With over 20 rides and attractions, including the world’s fastest roller coaster, Ferrari World is more than a theme park – it is the total Ferrari experience.

(Via freshome)

Seth Godin: Hope and the magic lottery

Entrepreneurial hope is essential. It gets us over the hump and through the dip. There’s a variety of this hope, though, that’s far more damaging than helpful.

This is the hope of the magic lottery ticket.

A fledgling entrepreneur ambushes a venture capitalist who just appeared on a panel. “Excuse me,” she says, then launches into a two, then six and eventually twenty minute pitch that will never (sorry, never) lead to the VC saying, “Great, here’s a check for $2 million on your terms.”

Or the fledgling author, the one who has been turned down by ten agents and then copies his manuscript and fedexes it to twenty large publishing houses–what is he hoping for, exactly? Perhaps he’s hoping to win the magic lottery, to be the one piece of slush chosen out of a million (literally a million!) that goes on to be published and revered.

You deserve better than the dashed hopes of a magic lottery.

There’s a hard work alternative to the magic lottery, one in which you can incrementally lay the groundwork and integrate into the system you say you want to work with. And yet instead of doing that work, our instinct is to demonize the person that wants to take away our ticket, to confuse the math of the situation (there are very few glass slippers available) with someone trying to slam the door in your faith/face.

You can either work yourself to point where you don’t need the transom, or you can play a different game altogether, but throwing your stuff over the transom isn’t worthy of the work you’ve done so far.

Starbucks didn’t become Starbucks by getting discovered by Oprah Winfrey or being blessed by Warren Buffet when they only had a few stores. No, they plugged along. They raised bits of money here and there, flirted with disaster, added one store and then another, tweaked and measured and improved and repeated. Day by day, they dripped their way to success. No magic lottery.

What chance is there that Mark Cuban or Carlos Slim is going to agree to be your mentor, to open all doors and give you a shortcut to the top? Better, I think, to avoid wasting a moment of your time hoping for a fairy godmother. You’re in a hurry and this is a dead end.

When someone encourages you to avoid the magic lottery, they’re not criticizing your idea nor are they trying to shatter your faith or take away your hope. Instead, they’re pointing out that shortcuts are rarely dependable (or particularly short) and that instead, perhaps, you should follow the longer, more deliberate, less magical path if you truly want to succeed.

If your business or your music or your art or your project is truly worth your energy and your passion, then don’t sell it short by putting its future into a lottery ticket.

Here’s another way to think about it: delight the audience you already have, amaze the customers you can already reach, dazzle the small investors who already trust you enough to listen to you. Take the permission you have and work your way up. Leaps look good in the movies, but in fact, success is mostly about finding a path and walking it one step at a time.”

(Via Seth’s blog)

Guess this is what I need now – hope, and less reliance on my lottery luck.