• Crate and Barrel
    @crateandbarrel
    Crate and Barrel curates inspiration for the home, connecting the creative work of artisans and designers to people and places around the world. Our lifestyle brands offer inspired living through high-quality products, exclusive designs, and timeless style. www.crateandbarrel.com
  • Dog Crates
    @dogcrates
    https://www.dogcrates.co.nz/
  • CB2
    @cb2
    CB2 is a modern destination from Crate and Barrel that first opened in Chicago in the year 2000 and has since grown to 14 urban store locations. CB2 is known for affordable modern design for apartment, loft, and home.
  • Lock, Stock & Barrel Locksmiths
    @lockstockbarrellocksmiths
    Fast & reliable mobile locksmith, servicing Sydney's North Shore for over 25 years. Popular service areas include Turramurra, Hornsby, Pymble, Killara, Gordon, Wahroonga & St Ives. For a reliable locksmith, call us on 0411 700 072. || Address: PO Box 413, Turramurra, NSW 2074, Australia || Phone: +61 411 700 072 || Website: https://lsblocksmiths.com.au
  • Aaron Probyn
    @aaronprobyn
    Aaron Probyn studied product & furniture design at Kingston University. After his graduation he became Design Manager of Table Top department for Habitat, where he worked for more than 6 years. Today Aaron Probyn works from his own design studio where he designs for many different companies such as Crate & Barrel, West Elm, Plumen, Tom Dixon, Conran Studio and Normann Copenhagen.
  • Lemnos
    @lemnos
    Lemnos was founded in 1947 as a brass-casting manufacturer in Japan. By 1966, Lemnos launched out into a full-scale business trade with Seiko Clock Co., Ltd. In the late 1980s, the Lemnos brand emerged. Today, Lemnos clocks are created by a collaboration of Japanese designers and each is manufactured in Japan.
  • The Land of Nod
    @thelandofnod6196
    Our story begins with two friends who expect more from their children’s furniture and feel that high-quality and good design don’t have to be mutually exclusive. So childhood friends Scott Eirinberg and Jamie Cohen took matters into their own hands and founded The Land of Nod in 1996. They started the company in the Chicago suburbs right out of Scott’s own basement, figuring there was nowhere to go but up (literally). Then in 2001, an unexpected hand reached out to Scott and Jamie in the form of Crate and Barrel. The two companies teamed up to expand their catalog and website, while also making Nod’s products more widely available throughout the US. As of 2010, The Land of Nod has been fully owned by Crate and Barrel and provides safe, high-quality home furnishings all over the world.
  • Nina Cambron
    @ninacambron3344
    Nina Cambron Art Glass designs modern day mid century modern glass sculptures, wall pieces and clocks. Award winning designs to compliment and add that finishing touch to any mid mod interior. My 'Barkcloth' inspired wall pieces and complete product line can be viewed at ninacambron.com. Original signed contemporary glass inspired by greats like Lucienne Day! Why decorate your pride and joy with anything but original artwork designed specifically for the period?
  • Materious
    @materious
    Established in 2005, Materious is the Chicago-based husband-and-wife studio of Stephanie and Bruce Tharp. The firm's name signals their interest in the phystical substances they use as well as the substantiveness of the pices they design. Their work ranges from the speculative to the ocmmercial, and in addition to their self-produced pieces, they do commissions for companies like Lighe Roset, Moet-Hennessy, The Art Institute of Chicago, Crate&Barrel, and Kikkerland.
  • Monique Valeris
    @moniquevaleris
    Monique Valeris is a lifestyle tastemaker who’s clocked in time doing edit and market work at a number of leading lifestyle magazines. Her writing and market work has appeared in Better Homes and Gardens, Real Simple, and more. She uses her design blog, Decor Musings, as an outlet for her passions of shelter, lifestyle, and beauty.
  • Andrew Bass
    @awbass
    Interests in minimalist architecture that interfaces effectively with the outdoors. Accessories to accompany this style of design. Interested in large scale wooden clocks.
  • Mondaine
    @mondaine
    Mondaine is a Swiss company that is best known for the iconic Swiss Railway Wall Clock and Watch series. For over 100 years, the Swiss Federal Railways have been celebrated for their precision and punctuality. Mondaine captures this precision with its clocks and watches, which are modeled after the very clocks used on Swiss Railway platforms. Mondaine also produces modern watches and clocks that call to its iconic heritage, while updating features to communicate with a contemporary audience.
  • Chomko LA
    @chomkoLA
    Our present-day product line and skill set is built on a foundation of more than 25 years of experience in communications. The products and services have greatly enhanced and simplified the way schools, hospitals and businesses operate and manage their organizations. We offer a wide range of products from street clocks, golf course clocks, post clocks, public address systems and synchronized clock systems. Visit about us: https://www.chomkola.com
  • Mano de Santo
    @manodsanto
    Architecture team based in Valencia and directed by the architects Ana Gil, Francesc de Paula Garcia y Francisco Miravete, we work developing projects, creating spaces, and product design. Each project is the result of a continuous process of research, compromises, in search of the right meaning. This process balances different factors including crativity, knowledge, technology, tradition, reason and emotion.
  • Leff
    @leff
    Amsterdam–based Leff is a designer and maker of modern clocks, founded in 2011. Their philosophy is predicated on the bold statement "Nobody really needs a clock. That's why our clocks tell interesting stories, not just the time." The brand aspires to achieve functional beauty in their designs, as well as maintaining the highest possible standards.
  • George Nelson
    @georgenelson
    George Nelson (1908-1986) was an extremely influential industrial designer, writer, and thinker whose designs are as popular today as perhaps they’ve ever been. Educated in architecture at Yale University in the 1920s, Nelson was a prolific writer on design. He wrote for Architectural Forum and Interiors and published the top-drawer books Tomorrow’s House, How to See: A Guide to Reading Our Man-Made Environment, and Building a New Europe: Portraits of Modern Architects. More important than his writing, however, was his work as an industrial designer. He had a close relationship with the Herman Miller furniture company, for which he served as creative director, which produced his famous works such as the bubble lamp, marshmallow sofa, swag leg desk and dozens of clocks. In 1959 he worked on the exhibition design of the American National Exhibition in Moscow, home of the famous “Kitchen Debate” between then US Vice President Nixon and Soviet Premier Nikita Kruschev. Nelson’s legacy lives on now and he has come to define mid-century American design like few others.

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