Cool Hunting
| 01 July 2008view entries from: this week | this month | view previous day | view next day |
FAVA Store
by Max Gold

A new hybrid retail concept mixing fashion and art, walking into FAVA (FAshion/Vintage/Art) feels more like walking into somebody's warmly-lit living room. At a recent opening, a live acoustic blues guitarist set the tone while strangers wandered shoulder-to-shoulder, inspecting eccentric dresses and looking at art for sale.

In spite of my doubts, I was quickly reassured when Meda, the owner and founder of the new East Village store approached me with a bottle of red wine and gave me a complete tour of the backyard garden, the clothes and the spectacular art that filled the walls.
FAVA's current exhibition includes the work of several talented local artists. Each brings something special to the table, from Jason Yarmosky's minimalist pen drawings to Rada Marin's use of aged film in her self-portraits.
We love FAVA Store because they not only cater to a "growing art and funky fashion savvy local community" but also because they're driven by interaction with people who wander in. FAVA creates a venue that taps into collective inspirations of the neighborhood and yields a cornucopia of new art and ideas.
"We're gonna sell style—In FAVA Store, everything comes together in one pod."
Livescribe Pulse Smartpen
by Brian Fichtner
The Livescribe Pulse Smartpen is the kind of invention that marries a brilliant idea with the best available technology of an era, provoking a gee-whizz response rarely experienced in this age of rapid advancement. While smartpens have been around for some time, previous models have been riddled with problems and failed to gain a following. Livescribe nails every feature on the dot.
Essentially, the Pulse is a miniature personal computer that captures your pen strokes with an onboard high speed infrared camera, all the while recording audio. The company dubs this a paper-based computing system. Fundamental to the functionality of this system is the requisite interactive dot enabled paper (a two-dimensional GPS for your pen). While you write or draw, the infrared camera is also tracking the pen's movements across a microdot covered page. Because every page contains a unique dot matrix, the software can assign specific file codes and sync the digitized pen strokes with the recorded audio.


Later, when reviewing the file on your PC, you can simply mouse-click on a word and the audio recorded at the time of that specific pen stroke will begin playing. For college students who have a tough time keeping up with long-winded professors, this could save the semester when old notes suddenly have the look of hieroglyphics. Livescribe is naturally focusing on marketing the smartpen to the collegiate crowd, but the device has broad appeal to journalists, lawyers, doctors or anyone who tends to take notes in a meeting. Down the line, the company plans to roll-out new applications to broaden the functionality of the device; translation software is a logical next step.
Introduced to rave reviews earlier this year at DEMO 2008 , the Pulse Smartpen will be available for purchase nationwide at Target stores beginning 13 July 2008 or online through Amazon and the Livescribe web store. The pen retails for $149 for a 1GB model (100 hours of stored audio) or $199 for a 2GB model, with a four-pack notebooks costing $20.
EcoTowl Bamboo
by Jacob Resneck
The EcoTowl Bamboo is a 20” x 12” super absorbent, washable natural cloth that replaces the convenient-yet-wasteful disposable paper towel (and the earlier non-bamboo EcoTowl).
Made from 82% bamboo—one of the world's fastest growing fibers—it was a finalist in the “Green By Design” category in the 2008 Gourmet Product Show.
Laudably, much of the company employs developmentally disabled workers to manufacture many of its extensive line of wares.
It's coming soon from Pacific Dry Goods.
