Art For A Fun Run Here Towards A Healthy Heart Weekend.

Saturday, February 8, 2014

Valentine Experience.

Priced at $675 for one night's stay as this hotel offers canvas and none toxic paint for a memorable conceptual experience. As streaks of passion and blurred action this Hotel invites couples to make love on canvas. To create Valentine's works of art In a bid to make this Valentine's Day a special night to remember, one hotel is inviting guests to cover themselves in paint and make love on canvas. The Tribeca Grand in New York told Art view that its special package, priced at $675 for one night's stay, 'is so unique it instantly reawakens those "first date" feelings and brings couples closer together as they express their love through art.' The 5ft by 4ft canvases, which will be left in each room along with pots of paint, chocolate covered strawberries, champagne, and candles, can be rapt put into a canvas pot taken home afterwards as a romantic keepsake.+9
Letting the creative juices flow theme in a bid to make this Valentine's Day a special night to remember, The Tribeca Grand hotel in New York is inviting guests to cover themselves in paint and make love on canvas. Artist Alexander Esguerra was behind the concept. 
As he has been running his 'Love and Paint' experiences for the past four years and collaborated with Tribeca Grand to create a special Valentine's Day-themed package. 'Love is a powerful creative force,' says the 32 year-old, who came up with the idea after a night of passion. Recalling his light-bulb moment, he told the New York Daily News: 'I woke up one morning after a sexual encounter and my normally organized room was a mess, A room for two. Here A photograph of one of the suites at the Tribeca Grand. Keeping it clean so that hotel guests don't damage furnishings while making their passionate works of art, a clear protective tarpaulin and slippers are provided.+9
All smiles: After an evening of artistry, guests will be treated to an 'extravagant breakfast' in bed - and so they can take time to admire their painting efforts, checkout has been extended from noon to 2pm 'I wanted to artistically capture those moments through the act of sex that our bodies interacted and affected the space around us without bringing in that whole played-out porn spiel.' So that hotel guests don't damage furnishings while making their passionate works of art, a clear protective tarpaulin and slippers are provided and to ensure that they don't come out in rashes after rolling around in layers of paint, a special non-toxic, water-based formula was selected. Novel idea: Artist Alexander Esguerra was behind the concept - He has been running his 'Love and Paint' experiences for the past four years and collaborated with Tribeca Grand to create a special Valentine's Day-themed package+Getting into the swing of things: Mr Esguerra says that he usually tells people to take the paint, lay on top of the canvas and pour it over their bodies.

Friday, February 7, 2014

Blue Motion.

Consensus on demand as this is a new way of exchanging social interactions delivered with sensuality. As with social media its for a partners underwear, featuring a wearable massager. This can be controlled by a partner using an applet even in rush hour traffic. It has been unveiled at the 2014 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas. The 'blue motion vibrator' was created to bring couples closer using smart phones. Who might otherwise ignore each other and pay more attention to emails and text messages. Now your boyfriend can use his smart phone to control your underwear and turn you on. The massager can be fitted inside underwear and can be controlled remotely using an Android or iOS app. Blue motion vibrator aims to bring couples closer using smart phones. Device will go on sale in the U.S. in March 2014 and will retail for $129. It is not clear whether the device will be rolled out in other countries. Couples in long-distance relationships might already use their phones to send raunchy photo messages to one another but now smart phones can be used to keep the passion alive in a new way as an OMG.

Blue motion, a wearable massager that can be operated using an iPhone or Android app, has been unveiled at the 2014 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas. 
It is designed for single women and couples, as it is possible for a partner to take control of the toy to surprise the wearer (stock image)The smart underwear features a Bluetooth enabled massager that can vibrate in unlimited patterns and promises to be 'completely discrete'.‘For some couples, the explosion of the digital age has resulted in a shift in intimacy, as many pay more attention to devices than their partners,’ said Suki Dunham founder of OhMiBod.The smart underwear features a Bluetooth enabled massager that can vibrate in unlimited patterns and promises to be 'completely discrete' A stock image is pictured ‘blueMotion breaks down those virtual barriers by encouraging couples to interact both physically and emotionally using technology. 'They can experience the thrill of unlimited vibration patterns and total discretion whenever the mood arises.’
The lightweight blue motion device, which can be fitted inside underwear has a motor that is controlled by an app for Android and iOS smartphones in numerous ways. It connects to a smart phone via the 'remote' app to make use of phone features including the accelerometer, touch screen, and volume controls to operate the massager. Sound clips can be recorded using the app, which generates vibrations though the device based on a partner’s voice or a 'favorite song'. The company says that the number of vibration patterns that can be created is limitless. The massager will go on sale in March 2014 and retail for $129. 
As the ubiquity of this quite vibrator massage message as more than 50 per cent of American women have used a vibrator, making them nearly as ubiquitous as a coffee maker. The vibrator was the fifth domestic appliance to be electrified, following the sewing machine, fan, kettle, and toaster - and it beat both the vacuum cleaner and the iron to market. The sizable market has estimated sales at $1.3billion a year. A 2009 study from Indiana University found that 53 per cent of women in the U.S. - and nearly half of all men - have used vibrators, making them twice as common among adults as condoms users.

Band Hand.

As one architect is set to transform a New York landmark by building a giant tower made of fungus. It will be built from blocks composed of corn and fungus which will grow and mesh together. 
Tower of fungus set to grow in New York: Self-building blocks will be planted for outdoor 'air-conditioning' New York's Museum of Modern Art PS1 will host the organic structure. The brick work will be grown from a combination of corn husks and mycelium and used to build the structure, which is designed to draw cool air downwards. As Architect David Benjamin's Hy-Fi design will be almost carbon neutral in its construction and even reflective bricks used in the structure will be recycled. 
As these moulding and buildings are usually a unique combination never been tied. Called Hy-Fi, the building (illustrated) will be built predominantly fugus bricks - as well as some light-reflecting ones - and is set to open in June. It was designed by New York architect David Benjamin. The bricks will be composed of corn husks and mycelium - the vegetative part of fungus.They will be grown in block-shaped moulds where roots will knit together to keep their shape.Once used in the eco-friendly building, the 'self-assembling' fungus bricks will carry on growing and bond together to strengthen the overall structure.The building will incorporate reflective bricks to throw light downwards onto the organic blocks so that they can carry on growing.
The Museum of Modern Art PS1 will host the eco-friendly organic structure, which has been designed to generate no waste and provide shade and seating for visitors to the gallery’s summer music concerts. 
Called Hy-Fi, the building was designed by architect David Benjamin and will open this June. The self-assembling' bricks will be made of a combination of corn husks and mycelium, which is the vegetative part of fungus. The tower will be grown and return to the earth with hardly any environmental impact. The shape of structure will be three open towers joined together and will include a bricks that will be coated with reflective film to bounce sunlight onto fungal root bricks below, to encourage them to grow. The two organic materials will be placed in block-shaped moulds where they will grow and once assembled, will continue to grow and mesh together, to strengthen the tower. 
The shape of structure will be three open towers joined together and will include a bricks that will be coated with reflective film to bounce sunlight onto the fungal root bricks below, to encourage them to grow reported. The structure’s strange shape is designed to push hot air upwards and draw colder air down to where people can sit and cool down, according to the Museum of Modern Art PS1 (pictured) will host the eco-friendly organic structure, which has been designed to generate no waste and provide shade, seating and water for visitors to the gallery's summer music concerts. 
Pedro Gadanho, a curator in MoMA’s Department of Architecture and Design, said: ‘This material could really change the way people build.
‘It reinvents the most basic component of architecture - the brick - as both a material of the future and a classic trigger for open-ended design possibilities.’Mr Benjamin, whose architecture firm, The Living, is based in New York, won the chance to build his organic structure at the gallery in the 15th Young Architects Programme competition, which demanded that designers create structures that do not create waste once their period of display is over. 'Self-assembling' bricks will be made of a combination of corn husks and mycelium that can be grown and returned to the earth with no environmental impact. 
The structure's strange shape is designed to push hot air upwards and draw colder air down to where people can sit and cool down. Pictured is a view of what the structure should look like from the cool oasis inside. As His Hy-Fi design is almost carbon neutral in its construction and the reflective bricks will be returned to the company that makes the coating, while the other completely organic bricks will be composted.Mr Benjamin told Art club vie ‘We love the idea of testing new ideas by putting them out into the world so this is a huge opportunity for us.'Mr Benjamin won the chance to build his organic structure (illustrated) at the gallery in the 15th Young Architects Programmer competition, which demanded that designers create structures that do not create waste once their period of display is over The organic building is designed to provide shade, seating and water for visitors to the gallery's summer music concerts as illustrated.