• half day diet
    @halfdaydietreview
    http://www.invitromeat.org/half-day-diet-review/
  • Greenfab
    @greenfab
    Greenfab is the perfect company for the design-conscious individual who wants to build a custom, healthy and energy-efficient home. Our transparent and streamlined prefab process allows you to create a custom home in about half of the usual time. Since every one of our projects is crafted in our own Pacific Northwest factory, the homeowner can be guaranteed of the cost and quality of their dwelling up front— All the benefits with no surprises. Toll-free 877-846-4445 info@greenfab.com greenfab.com
  • Enrico Fratesi
    @enrico_fratesi
    Enrico Fratesi is an Italian architect and one half of design studio, GamFratesi.
  • Stine Gam
    @stine_gam
    Stine Gam is a Danish architect and one half of design studio, GamFratesi.
  • Alex Temblador
    @alextemblador
    Alex Temblador is a Mixed Latinx writer with publications in outlets like Dwell, Architectural Digest, Real Homes, Artsy, GEN by Medium, Conde Nast Traveler, The Daily Beast, Travel + Leisure among many others. In addition to being the award-winning author of Secrets of the Casa Rosada and the upcoming novel, Half Outlaw, Alex is a public speaker and creative writing instructor. She is based in Dallas, Texas, and is best known for her coverage on diversity, equity, and inclusion in the travel, arts, design, and culture spaces. When she's not traveling, Alex is working on her 100-year-old home, reading, and enjoying the outdoors. Follow her at @Alex_Temblador and learn more at AlexTemblador.com.
  • Blu Homes
    @bluhomes
    Blu Homes is changing the way your dream home is brought to life. As designers of premium prefab homes, we believe in building with the highest quality craftsmanship and technologies, in half the time of custom homes. OUR MISSION Blu’s mission is to make beautifully designed, high quality, green homes available to more American home buyers and institutions.
  • Metal Roofing
    @scooterxavier6431
    https://www.metalroofingonline.com.au/products/guttering/half_round/
  • Office of Mobile Design (OMD)
    @officeofmobiledesignomd
    Office of Mobile Design (OMD), a Jennifer Siegal company, is dedicated to the design and construction of responsible, sustainable, beautiful homes. Championing mass customization and celebrating individual choice, they provide a wide range of options and configurations in their prefabricated homes, schools and other building types. They assert that OMD Prefab homes cost about 15% less than conventional building, take less than half the construction time, and employ more sustainable building methods. From careful building orientation to the specification of green materials, they employ sustainable design concepts and details in all their work. They provide design services from feasibility to permitting and construction observation.
  • Brendan Crain
    @brendan_crain
    Brendan Crain is a blogger (thewhereblog.blogspot.com) and nonprofit renaissance man living in Chicago, Illinois. He took a two-hour bus ride north to Milwaukee, borrowed a relative's car, and then turned around and drove an hour and a half south to get to the Edstrom Residence featured in the article "Opened House." As a result of getting lost on the backroads of rural Wisconsin–the drive south was only supposed to take an hour– Crain now considers himself an intrepid reporter.
  • Nigel Rigden
    @nigel_rigden
    Nigel Rigden is an Architectural and Landscape photographer now based in the Highlands of Scotland. He trained at Salisbury College of Art and for the past two and a half decades has worked throughout the UK and Europe for a range of editorial clients as well as on a variety of books. Working mainly for magazines, including Grand Designs, Homebuilding and Renovating, Ideal Home and Real Homes, as well as architects and commercial clients, he also finds time to pursue his own personal projects. Having worked in the past with a range of traditional film and printing techniques his work is now exclusively produced using high quality digital imaging equipment.
  • Floto + Warner
    @floto_warner
    “Shooting the cabin [“The Answer Is Risom,” December/January 2013] was a challenge because there are photos taken for Life that are pretty iconic,” says Jeremy Floto, one half of New York photography duo Floto + Warner, with his wife, Cassandra Warner. “It was interesting to revisit the place decades later and see how much it’s changed and evolved,” he continues. Warner braved an airplane ride in a Piper Cherokee Six to capture aerial views for the story: “When Jens [Risom] built that house, there was nothing surrounding it,” she says. “Up in the air you see all of these patches of development, but on the ground you still feel very isolated. You wouldn’t know that there are neighbors just a couple acres back.”
  • Three Blind Ants
    @three_blind_ants
    Three Blind Ants is a team of designers, illustrators and creatives who care about design and the environment and prefer to view life's glass half full.
  • Tiny Birds Organic Baby
    @tiny_birds_organic_baby
    Tiny Birds Organics is a small business and we donate our profits to non-profit groups such as Half the Sky Foundation. We really appreciate your support.
  • Arshad Ali
    @arshadali7264
    Although nearly half of ecommerce patrons across all age brackets currently prefer sustainable brand packaging, about the same percentage pay attention to package design.
  • Yamagiwa
    @yamagiwa
    Yamagiwa, establed in 1923, has been well known in Japan for its top quality design and service in the manufacturing and distribution of high end lighting products for more than a half century.
  • Advantas Property Group
    @advantaspropertygroup
    We minimise risk. You maximise profits. At Advantas we understand that saving and securing assets such as property is only half the story... https://www.advantasproperty.com.au/property-manager-baldivis
  • Modern Christmas Trees
    @mattbliss
    Update your holiday decor with the innovative and unique Modern Christmas Half Tree, created by Matthew Bliss. Lights and shadows dance on to walls and ceiling, while a battery powered mirror ball rotating device casts reflections throughout the room.
  • Morelato
    @morelato
    In the second half of the 20th century in the South of Verona, Aldo Morelato founded his "Casa Rossa" artisan workshop as the original core of the present company. Today, Morelato has become an internationally well-known firm able to communicate a contemporary and minimalist style aesthetic.
  • Luanne Sanders Bradley
    @luannesandersbradley
    Luanne Sanders Bradley is a San Francisco-based design and architecture writer. She is a community contributor to dwell.com and is co-writing a play about a Bay Area icon who left a lasting impression on the skyline. A former West Coast Editor of Ecosalon.com writing and editing blogs about sustainable design and mindful living, Luanne has covered groundbreaking trends in urban development and planning including contributing an in-depth series for Dwell on the history of sustainable architecture and strides in the industry, interviewing William McDonough of Cradle+Cradle and other visionaries implementing energy saving projects worldwide. Recently, she was appointed board member of the Berkeley City Club Conservancy, helping to promote the "little castle" and legacy of its brilliant designer, Julia Morgan. Luanne divides her time between heavenly Half Moon Bay and downtown San Francisco and has two artistic daughters in school on the East Coast, two delightful boy dogs, an amazing husband and partner and is sometimes succeeding in the goal of re-learning the maddening game of golf.
  • Richard Beard Architects
    @richardbeardarchitects
    Our studio's work is significantly informed by how architecture can integrate with interior and landscape design, to achieve a unified design that exceeds the sum of its parts. We begin every project with personal interaction and exchange—a bit old school, as we pride ourselves in our ability to really listen. Every client relationship is tailor-made, and every solution site-specific. This dialogue continues with an assessment of the site, culture, sustainability, and context. It’s an interactive process, enjoyable and creative; artful and engaging and always inspiring. In addition to our custom homes clients, we've collaborated with companies as diverse as Mumm Napa Valley, Polo Ralph Lauren, Half Century More Tokyo, the National Park Service and Agassi-Graff, LLC
  • Proto Homes
    @protohomes
    Proto Homes™, LLC is a Los Angeles-based prefab company whose mission is to build and sell modern homes as products for a wider range of design-minded consumers. Proto Homes™ houses are equipped with innovative, high-tech features, available for less than half the cost of custom-built homes, and build-able within three to five months. This product responds to an unmet demand for a living environment that truly complements the lifestyle of the 21st century. Into a flexible frame, Proto Homes™ builds premium features that have been tested in the custom-built market. Proto Houses can currently be built throughout Southern California, with regional and national expansion coming in the near future.
  • champu incorporaton
    @champu
    For the best quality custom t-shirts for corporates, events, company outings, group events and more, get in touch with https://champu.in/ With an impeccable track-record in providing timely deliveries with ZERO compromise on quality and nearly 100% client satisfaction, spanning half a decade, Champu.in prides itself in delivering services for t-shirt printing with company logos and offers customised t-shirts, hoodies, caps, mugs, and more in a variety of styles, materials, and budget options, to suit any requirement you might have for bulk custom printed t-shirts and more.
  • henkai architekti
    @henkai
    henkai architekti established their studio in 2012, after several years of working for the Atelier 111 in Prague. We are based in Rožnov pod Radhoštěm, about half way between Prague and Slovakia. Our ambition is to listen and transform the space around us by buildings and things that are functional, logical, simply beautiful, and constructible.
  • Damian Velasquez
    @damianvelasquez
    Damian Velasquez has been designing and building furniture in Albuquerque, New Mexico since 1990. Half13 is his current exploration of sculptural outdoor furniture. This collection represents another evolution in his design career, mastering the ability to make an ordinary material come alive in a world beyond its pedigree.
  • Fatboy
    @fatboy
    Once upon some time, there was this Dutch bum that lived under a bridge that was near a lantern that was on the corner of a narrow street that lead to an open park with dogs chasing balls and sticks thrown by regular ordinary dog owners that do not sit on the grass because it is a quite moist type of grass and they don't want to soil their khakis. On a certain sunny morning under that very same bridge this Dutch bum, who shall remain nameless because his mother might find out, found an old empty bottle of hard liquor right beside his old rusty bicycle that he used as a pillow. “Tough luck” one might say, because a full bottle of hard liquor would have been the nicest breakfast since his last supper. Nevertheless, he considered himself lucky, since he was a positive-minded man who always looked at the glass as half full, although the glass was always half full with poison, most of the time. Right before he threw something at his girlfriend to wake her up, he realized there was a really old-looking, thin scroll of paper inside the empty bottle, that turned out to be not so empty after all. It was the first time he ever found a message in a bottle, and he didn't even know about that song by The Police since the only Sting he knew was from a bee. When he finally found a way to get the scroll of really old-looking paper out of the bottle, like a monkey that finds out that he can reach the ants deep in the hole of a tree trunk by using a twig, he discovered that the scroll was covered with doodles, sketches, and a lot of text that looked like hieroglyphics to him, although he had never dated Cleopatra or even visited Mexico to actually know what hieroglyphics look like. After carefully studying the newfound information with a highly sophisticated microscope that he borrowed from a drunken professor from his elementary school, he knew he had found something big. Yes, this scroll of really old and thin paper, probably lost by some type of ancient alien visitors from outer-space design schools, would make a new life for him. The contents revealed the blueprints of a design object that he intuitively believed could take over the world like any James Bond movie villain. However his dream would not be to rule and dominate the world, he wanted to make it a better place with his design, and bring new hope and peace to mankind. He immediately dumped his girlfriend, married the queen of Finland, and started his own design company under that very same bridge, with rats as his loyal, hard working employees. Some of you might think this is weird, and no wonder. It's not exactly normal, but what the hell (didn't you see Ratatouille?). After testing his cosmic design on all of his bum friends, he launched his design on the Dutch market in 2002 and gave it the name 'Fatboy® the Original.' The world would be never the same again.The rest is history... and still in the making.
  • Raymond Richard Neutra
    @raymond_richard_neutra
    Raymond Richard Neutra is a physician epidemiologist who currently heads the division of the California Department of Public Health that investigates emerging environmental and occupational health threats. His 40-year career in public health was stimulated by the library and visitors of his architect father, Richard Neutra, who was interested in how the built environment affects the health and well-being of its inhabitants. Thus Richard’s library was full of books on physiology and biology and his contacts included people such as Hans Selye, the scientist who started stress research. A few years ago, Raymond started writing snippets of memoir-essays about his adventures in public health and about his family. His piece for the July/August 2007 issue is a half-century-old psychological study on creative architects that was part rumination on his father and part speculation on how societal contexts let remarkable people discover and nurture their unique combination of skills.

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