This little spongy ball is an ice-cream scoop-sized speaker-pompom you dangle from your personhood in a kind of stylish carefree non chalant manner. La di da... It plugs into the head phone jack of any portable media device and lets you enjoy your tunes with surprising volume and clarity. Comes in other delicious colours. Makes an excellent gift to give or to receive!
Video courtesy of Daintree Paper
Even the mundane can be wondrous with just a bit of imaginations. This book shows readers and journal keepers how to use their imaginations to observe the world around them with the creative perception of an artist or scientist. Illustrator Keri Smith’s book How to Be an Explorer of the World encourages readers to be curious about their environment and to see the world with new eyes. With 59 explorations, you'll surely be groomed into a great explorer!
How to Be an Explorer of the World gets our two thumbs up and is our Pick Of The Day.
Notebooks with the same features as the present Moleskine notebooks were a popular standard in 19th and 20th century Europe, handmade by small French bookbinders who supplied the stationery shops of Paris. As documented by many art collections and museums, in the late 19th to early 20th centuries, these notebooks became a prominent creative tool for avant-garde artists who enjoyed drawing and writing outdoors, putting down impressions on paper, painting from life in the streets and cafés, and capturing extemporary scenes, ideas, and emotions.
Among artists who used similar black notebooks were Oscar Wilde, Vincent Van Gogh, Pablo Picasso, Ernest Hemingway and Henri Matisse.
The present Moleskine notebook is specifically fashioned after Bruce Chatwin's descriptions of the notebooks he used in his travels. The name itself of “Moleskine” is a nickname that Chatwin uses in one of his most celebrated writings, The Songlines (1986).
(Source: Wikipedia)
As you can see, any thick old books would do, too.
The above video shows you step-by-step guide to making your own western theme invitation card (courtesy of eHow.com). Enjoy!