• Aaron Britt
    @aaronbritt
    Aaron writes the men’s style column “The Pocket Square” for the San Francisco Chronicle and has written for the New York Times, the Times Magazine, Newsweek, National Geographic and others.
  • Zahid Sardar
    @zahid_sardar
    Zahid Sardar is an author specializing in architecture, interiors, and design. He currently writes the Material World column for the San Francisco Chronicle.
  • Bryan Gardiner
    @bryan_gardiner
    Bryan has covered the ins and outs Silicon Valley and the tech industry for close to five years, writing about everything from supercomputers to greentech. He is a frequent contributor to Wired.com and has also written for the LA Weekly, PC Magazine and McSweeney’s. He also pens a regular gadget column for NorthWest Airlines.
  • Caroline Tiger
    @carolinetiger
    Caroline Tiger is a Philadelphia-based writer who covers design and culture. Her columns, Making It and Consumed, appear each month in the Philadelphia Inquirer. She blogs at design phan and The Objectorialist, and tweets at @carolinetiger.
  • Addie Broyles
    @addie_broyles
    Addie Broyles is a writer based in Austin, Texas. As the food writer for the Austin American-Statesman, she writes a weekly column and blog called Relish Austin and her stories usually appear in the Wednesday print section of the newspaper. When she’s not wrangling backyard chickens or her two young sons, the Ozarks native and University of Missouri graduate writes about women and food at TheFeministKitchen.com and is the advisory council chair of the Austin Food Blogger Alliance. In 2011, Addie was named by Tribeza magazine as one of the top 10 Austinites to watch and was voted the top food writer in the city by the Austin Chronicle. She recently won the National Headliner Award for special or feature column on one subject by an individual.
  • Danny Seo
    @dannyseo
    Environmental lifestyle expert Danny Seo calls his eco-friendly way of living “Simply Green.” Through his best-selling books, television programs, products, magazine columns and his how-to lifestyle lectures, Danny Seo continues to share the creative ideas that have made him one of America’s leading lifestyle authorities on modern, eco-friendly living.
  • Pittet Architecturals
    @pittetarch
    With over 35 years in the antiques market, Pittet Architecturals owner and founder Raymond Pittet has built his entire career searching for the uncommon and the beautiful. Pittet Architecturals is one of the leading importers of antique architectural elements in the United States. Our 30,000-sq. ft. indoor/outdoor showroom in Dallas’ vibrant Design District allows us to fully display our comprehensive and ever-refreshing inventory of antique stone and wood architectural décor. Pittet Architecturals has long been Dallas’ go-to destination for hand-carved: Antique marble mantels and limestone fireplace surrounds Indoor and outdoor antique fountains Garden décor, including furniture, statuary, planters, and antique urns Antique doors, entry gates, stone and wood antique columns and archways Exclusive reclaimed stone, terracotta and French Oak flooring Pittet Architecturals is proud to have exclusive access to some of France’s best recognized stone carvers and artisans, many accredited by the elite French Ministry of Arts and Culture. Working with these master carvers, only we have the ability to bring to a custom design option to our discriminating clientele. Our staff fully understands the history, beauty and functionality of our unique inventory. With over fifteen years of experience working with Dallas’ best design professionals, builders and landscape architects, we look forward into helping you bring authenticity and singularity to your next design project. Our 318 Cole Street showroom is open M-F 9 to 5. With advance notice, special appointments can be made for before and after hours any day of the week.
  • Simon Farrell-Green
    @simon_farrell_green
    Simon is a former food editor and senior writer for Metro. After an eating tour that stretched from Ho Chi Minh City to Sansepolcro, Tuscany, he settled in London where he worked for Esquire and lived in a council flat two minutes’ walk from the Borough Market. He now freelances from Auckland for the likes of KiaOra (the Air New Zealand magazine), Monocle, Cuisine, Home New Zealand and Metro, where you’ll find columns on eating and drinking, as well as the occasional feature on topics as varied as bread and the politics of waste. His first book, Food Heroes, was published by Penguin in October 2012.
  • Derek Bluford
    @derekbluford
    Derek Bluford is President & CEO of Quicklegal. He founded his Quicklegal in Sacramento, and put out a beta test version in October 2014. For more details about Derek Bluford feel free to visit - http://www.sacbee.com/news/business/biz-columns-blogs/cathie-anderson/article58774993.html
  • Lina Bo Bardi
    @linabobardi
    Architect Lina Bo Bardi, born Achillina Bo in Rome in 1914, made an indelible mark on midcentury Brazilian architecture and design after emigrating there following the destruction of her office in Milan during World War II. Before starting her own firm in Milan, she had worked with Gio Ponti, who later remarked that she was “earning a place in modern architecture.” Bo Bardi and her husband, Italian art dealer and curator Pietro Maria Bardi, were members of the Communist party and found a safe haven in Brazil, which Bo Bardi called “an unimaginable country, where everything was possible.” The couple was integral in the establishment of the São Paolo Museum of Art (1968), which Bo Bardi designed with four bright-red exterior columns supporting the concrete-and-glass building suspended aboveground. Bo Bardi, who died in 1992, also designed the couple’s residence, a modern villa above São Paulo called the Glass House, now part of the Lina Bo and P.M. Bardi Institute. Though still somewhat overlooked by the modern design cognoscenti, Bo Bardi is revered by many modernists for both her architecture and bold furniture designs.
  • Valerie Easton
    @valerie_easton
    Valerie Easton hasn’t missed a week of writing her “Plant Life” column for Pacific Northwest Magazine of The Seattle Times in the last fourteen years. She writes feature articles for the Times on the region’s most creative gardens and homes. Easton is the author of four gardening books, including “The New Low Maintenance Garden” which was chosen by Amazon.com as one of the Ten Best Home and Garden Books for 2009. She also blogs on the Huffington Post as well as at Plant Talk in Seattle. Her own new, simplified little garden, in the town of Langley on Whidbey Island, has been published in the New York Times, Horticulture and This Old House. She writes regularly about gardens and the people who make them for numerous publications, including “Garden Design” and “Organic Gardening” magazines.
  • Massimiliano Fuksas
    @massimilianofuksas
    Architect Massimiliano Fuksas (1944-) graduated from La Sapienza University in 1969. From 1998 to 2000, he served as the director of the VII Biennial of Architecture in Venice. He writes an architectural column founded by Bruno Zevi in the weekly magazine "L'Espresso".He works and lives between Rome and Paris.
  • Charlotte Safavi
    @charlotte_safavi
    Charlotte Safavi is a national magazine and newspaper writer and editor. She has written for many publications, including The Washington Post Magazine, The Sunday Times Travel Magazine, House Beautiful, Better Homes and Gardens, Renovation Style, Country Home and Victorian Homes. She is a contributing editor for Cottage Style, Small Room Decorating, Romantic Country, Cottages and Cabins, Flea Market Finds and more. In addition to writing about decor, travel, food, art and architecture, Charlotte writes personal essays, as well as a quarterly column on tea for Inns magazine.
  • New chrom
    @newchrom
    New Chrom provides Gas Chromatography in India and also provide gas analyzer. Gas chromatography is a separation technique that's used to separate mixtures of different chemicals. In GC, a chemical mixture passes through a column where it is separated based on different physical properties such as boiling point, size and polarity. The process can be done at different temperatures to achieve better results. https://newchrom.com/
  • Bridget Gleeson
    @bridget_gleeson
    Bridget Gleeson is a freelance journalist. She’s written about travel and culture for Lonely Planet, BBC Travel, BBC Culture, The Guardian, Budget Travel, Afar, Wine Enthusiast, Mr & Mrs Smith, Jetsetter, Tablet Hotels, The Independent, Delta Sky, Continental, LAN Airlines, Korean Air, Luxury Latin America, Artsy and Time Out. She curates the Buenos Aires page for AFAR.com, writes a column each week for LAN Airlines’ Only in South America blog, and has appeared on film for Bon Appétit and Condé Nast Traveler in conjunction with Conde Nast Entertainment. She’s lived in Italy, the Czech Republic, Nicaragua and Argentina.
  • Katy Kelleher
    @katykelleher
    Katy Kelleher is an art, design, nature, and science writer living in the woods of Maine. Her work has appeared in the pages of the New York Times, The Guardian, American Scholar, and Town & Country. She’s written online for Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, Jezebel, and others. She’s a frequent contributor to The Paris Review and spent several years writing a popular column on color, Hue’s Hue. Her essays have been anthologized in both Best American Food Writing and Best American Science and Nature Writing.
  • Alice Rawsthorn
    @alicerawsthorn
    Alice Rawsthorn is the design critic of the International Herald Tribune. In her weekly Design column, published every Monday, Alice explores new directions in every area of design and its impact on our lives. Her column is syndicated to other newspapers and magazines worldwide. A prominent broadcaster and public speaker, Alice also writes the Object Lesson column for the New York Times Magazine. She speaks at important international events including the annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos. Alice is a trustee of the Whitechapel Gallery in London, and a member of the board of Arts Council England and of the World Economic Forum's Global Agenda Council for Design. Born in Manchester, Alice graduated in art and architectural history from Cambridge University. She then became an award-winning journalist for the Financial Times, working as a foreign correspondent in Paris and pioneering the FT's coverage of the creative industries. From 2001 to 2006 Alice was director of the Design Museum in London. During her directorship, the number of visits to the museum rose by 40%, participation in the education programme doubled and the Design Museum website became the world's most popular design site. An honorary senior fellow of the Royal College of Art and member of the master jury of the 2010 Aga Khan Award for Architecture, Alice has served on numerous arts juries including the Turner Prize for contemporary art, the Stirling Prize for architecture, the British Council's selection panel for the Venice Architecture Biennale, the PEN History Book Prize and the BAFTA film and television awards. She was chair of the British Council's Design Advisory Group, and a member of the Design Council's board as well as of the government's advisory panel on the BBC Charter Review. Before joining the board of Arts Council England in 2006, Alice was lead advisor on the visual arts to ACE and chaired the Turning Point Review of the Contemporary Visual Arts. Alice has contributed essays to a number of books. She has also published an acclaimed biography of the fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent, and a monograph of the work of the designer Marc Newson.
  • Tim Goodman
    @timgoodman
    Tim Goodman is the third television critic in the San Francisco Chronicle’s 141-year history. His columns appear two or three times a week and he also maintains a blog, The Bastard Machine, on the Chronicle’s website. To review chairs, Goodman not only contemplated how long he could sit (in episodic lengths), but also another very important consideration: “I’m not going to be doing any viewing unless I have something to drink—whether it’s a Diet Coke or red wine—depending on how bad the shows are.”
  • Everite Building Products (Nutec)
    @everitebuildingproductsnutec
    Everite Building Products was founded in South Africa in 1941. They produce a wide range of materials that satisfy the needs of the commercial, industrial and residential market sectors, Everite is known for its comprehensive range of Nutec Roofing and Cladding Solutions and includes fibre-cement roofing, cladding, ceilings and building columns amongst others. Nutec fiber-cement has high performance properties and added benefits, including: the use of safe renewable fibers; considerable tensile strength with enhanced dynamic load bearing properties; excellent thermal properties; water and wind resistance; hail resistance; fire resistance and resistance to fungus, rodents and acid.
  • Orthopedic Surgery
    @orthopedicsurgery
    Endoscopic Discectomy - The Least Invasive Techniques Endoscopic discectomy is an invasive back procedure that utilizes an endoscope to efficiently suppress herniated, distended, removed or degenerative discs which addd up to the variables that trigger back unease. The endoscope offers the doctor the capacity to use a "keyhole" through the major entrance point to reach the herniated plate. When contrasted to being literally disected while obtaining to the disc, muscle and tissue are made bigger. Advantages of Endoscopic Discectomy Surgery Several of one of the most substantial advantages of the treatment consist of the following: - high success price from most procedures worldwide - the blood loss price is dramatically lower - virtually immediate recovery (you can walk again in a matter of hr). - the individual catches less pain. - there is a low amount of body muscle mass and tissues that are eliminated. - for the most parts, the spine movement remains intact. Is Endoscopic Discectomy Right for You? Neck and back pains can be uncomfortable, when it reaches a frustrating point, one of the most appropriate solution looks like SED. Endoscopic discectomy is the least engaging and invasive surgical method for dealing with back plate herniation people. With endoscopic spinal column surgery, specialists do not need to leave muscles as well as bones so about eliminate herniated circles. Professionals could see the spinal column with a video camera, littler than a PDA cam, via a little surgical port (tube). Extensive cuts are maintained away from. The technique does not harm your spinal column like conventional spinal column surgical treatments do. The entire system for a plate herniation takes about 30 minutes. The patient goes house in two-three hrs after the treatment is done appropriately with no issues. The Surgical Procedure. Cervical Endoscopic Discectomy uses back checking out of the annulus through the antero-horizontal technique under X-beam direction to get understanding input hence identify the causal level that needs treatment. Where the objection from even more compared to one level covers then Differential Discography is utilized. The discography needle is supplanted by a guide cord. A dilator as well as sheath are steered down the anesthetized track to the circle divider panel. The Disk divider (annulus) is opened with a fine trephine and also the dilator is installed along with the sheath. Hands-on emptying of intensified product is performed fluoroscopically (under X-beam control). The endoscope is then ingrained and also under aesthetic control, sticking around circle material is gotten rid of with each other with osteophytes. The injury is shut with one stitch. The anti-infection cover is offered all through the approach and postoperatively. The individual is dealt with without a neck line inside hrs of the technique. Final thought. The purpose of this approach is to give help in leg pain relief and also facilitate evading neurologic damages. Achievement prices resemble the dispersed after impacts of standard tiny discectomy, yet with much less healing time and faster recovery as a result of the all the much more in substantially obtrusive nature of SED. Endoscopic discectomy is an invasive spine treatment that utilizes an endoscope to properly suppress herniated, distended, removed or degenerative discs which addd up to the variables that cause back anxiousness. The endoscope provides the medical professional the capability to make use of a "keyhole" via the major entrance factor to obtain to the herniated plate. Cells as well as muscular tissue are made bigger when compared to being physically disected while obtaining to the disc. With endoscopic back surgical procedure, experts do not have to evacuate muscle mass and bones so as to remove herniated circles. The method does not damage your spinal column like conventional back surgical treatments do. https://www.spine-ctsi.com/orthopedic-stem-cell-treatment/
  • Todd Selby
    @todd_selby
    Todd Selby is a portrait, interiors, journalist and fashion photographer and illustrator. His project The Selby offers an insider’s view of creative individuals in their personal spaces with an artist’s eye for detail. The Selby began in June 2008 as a website, theselby.com, where Todd posted photo shoots he did of his friends in their homes. Requests quickly began coming in daily from viewers all over the world who wanted their homes to be featured on the site. The Selby’s website became so influential — with up to 100,000 unique visitors daily—that within months, top companies from around the world began asking to collaborate. These joint projects have included ad campaigns and collaborations with Louis Vuitton, FENDI, Nike, Microsoft, Hennessy, Habitat, Slowear, Ikea, Heineken and a solo show at colette. Todd also has a monthly home column in the Observer Magazine, a monthly fashion column in Le Monde’s M Magazine and frequently contributes to publications such as Casa Brutus Japan and the New York Times T Magazine. Todd’s first book, The Selby is In Your Place, was released in May 2010 by Abrams. Todd recently launched Edible Selby, in collaboration with NYTimes T Magazine in which he photographs the most creative and interesting people in food around the world. Before working on this project full time Todd worked as a translator and Tijuana tour guide to the International Brotherhood of Machinists, a researcher into the California strawberry industry, a Costa Rican cartographer, a consultant on political corruption to a Mexican Senator, an art director at a venture capital firm, an exotic flower wholesaler, a Japanese clothing designer, and a vermicomposting entrepreneur. Todd currently lives in New York City. His pastimes include going to the airport, eating four square meals a day, breaking his computers, and working on his tan.
  • Obleeek Objects
    @obleeek_objects
    Obleeek Object’s concrete planters began in an art studio. Created with specific thoughtful consideration in terms of their symmetry, finish, and visual impact. Crafted as a solution for seamlessly integrating nature and architecture. The idea has been simple from the start; to present nature as a fundamental element within architecture. Using simple forms that have become icons of an international design vocabulary designer Leo Estevez found a pedestal that presents nature as a seamless element within a contemporary landscape. Playing off of the language of the concrete column as a location for which nature can be grown. Allowing our planters to no longer just accent architecture but to reinforce the importance that nature has in its development. Our philosophy at Obleeek is evolving. As we reach a broader audience and source out our allies we are excited about the future we are planning to create. Our planters have given us a platform to build on. A key element to how we make choices is based on a broader context. We are proud to offer a product that is 100% produced in California. All of our manufacturing is done in-house with designers and fabricators working together to produce the highest levels of quality and efficiency. Obleeek Objects is on the horizon and we look forward to sharing our vision with you through the years as we present our design innovations for the future.
  • Jennifer Farrell
    @jenniferfarrell
    Celebrity designer and television host Jennifer Farrell is a familiar face to audiences who have enjoyed her television shows and designs for over a decade. Jennifer became nationally known hosting the long-running A&E home improvement series “Find & Design,” has co-starred on Emmy-nominated “Home Made Simple” for OWN, and hosted the hit webisode series, “Cleaning & Organizing From Top to Bottom” and “The Two-Minute Home Makeover” on msn.com. She has also hosted A&E's “Point, Click, Design” and “The Big Fix.” Jennifer has been a regular contributor on Hallmark Channel’s Emmy-nominated “Home & Family,” a real estate correspondent for Fox News Channel’s “Fox & Friends Weekend,” and has written for Realtor.com with her real estate column “Get This Look.” Her most popular venture has been The Jennifer Farrell Collection, featuring hundreds of furniture and décor pieces at nearly 1400 stores nationwide. Jennifer’s extensive television career includes “Merge” on Lifetime Television, Style Network's “My Celebrity Home,” Fox Network’s “Renovate My Family,” as well as Fox Television's “Design Intervention.” She has been featured on such shows as “Before and Afternoon Movies” for USA Network and “Playbook 360” for Spike, as well as “Room Crashers” and “Outer Spaces” for HGTV. Jennifer has made multiple guest appearances “The View” as well as on dozens of talk shows from coast to coast. As a nationally recognized spokesperson, she’s teamed with high-profile brands such as Realtor.com, Coca-Cola, CVS Earth Essentials, Tide, Glad, 3M, Aluminum Council, Big Lots, Belgard, Back To Life, and Oreck, and is a featured speaker at building industry and trade shows across the country. Her award-winning interior design firm, Jennifer Farrell Designs, was named “Best of Houzz,” and her work has been featured on prestigious design tours as well as in publications including "Redbook," "Ebony," "Entertainment Weekly," "House & Garden," and "Sunset."