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Journal featured post. A corporate culture and workplace favorite.
Furniture Designer, Sculptor, and Artist Paul Evans
Paul R. Evans popularly known as Paul Evans was the main figure in the mid-century American studio and brutalist furniture development. Evans reliably pushed limits with his imaginative ways to deal with metalsmithing and furniture production. Paul Evans furniture has a special attraction. His otherworldly works, which challenged what regular items resembled and how they were made, keep on uncovering the entrancing crosscurrents among figure and plan. Evans started working with metal in the mid-1950s—first at the Rochester Institute of Technology's School for American Craftsmen (SAC) in Rochester, New York, where he concentrated under the persuasive American silversmiths and fashioners John (Jack) Prip and Lawrence Copeland, and later at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. Evans at that point moved to Sturbridge Village, Massachusetts, where he functioned as a full-time skilled worker, showing different silversmithing strategies at Old Sturbridge Village, a living gallery that re-makes life in provincial New England during the eighteenth and nineteenth hundreds of years. In 1955, looking for a difference in landscape, Evans moved to Lambertville, New Jersey, a notable asylum for specialists and experts, and opened a workshop in a previous chicken coop.
Jacob WalkerPublished 3 years ago in JournalIn Search Of Life
Part 1 “How did I get here?” you ask. Well, I am not sure I am fully “here.” I like to see it as a transition. A leap if you will. Stepping over the gap while trying my damndest not to fall in while making it securely to the other side.
Sara Elizabeth WalkerPublished 3 years ago in JournalConsumer Protection
CONSUMER PROTECTION Consumers are said to be the king in a free market economy, The earlier approach of Caveat Emptor which means ‘Let the buyer beware’ has now changed to Caveat Venditor which means ‘Let the seller beware’.
Shivank ShrivastavaPublished 3 years ago in JournalThe Black Female Jeweler Gina White
Historically, jewelry was meant to indicate social status, familial roots, and significance. Today, people wear jewelry to jazz up an outfit, express individuality, or profess their love and passion. Whatever your reason for rocking some fly accessories, there’s a Black-Owned Jeweler you need to know; She goes by Gina White. Gina became a wholesaler for the jewelry industry. Making her mark with mining her own jewelry, she is one of a kind in her industry.
Tammy ReesePublished 3 years ago in JournalThe Rise Of Dataism
The Beginning Long ago, humans were just another animal species on Earth. But from the accidental invention of fire, we started building up our world on Earth. Everyone will say that human greed is very much dangerous. Even though we could simply say so, that is how we have been developed into the most developed species in the world. Our increase in development gave way to the increase in our greed. And thus, in this 21st Century, we are facing a new ideology and as you know by reading the title of this article, that powerful and fastly developing ideology is Dataism.
Top 5 Exercises You Can Perform At Your Desk
For many of us, we work at least an 8-hour shift every day, and some even go beyond that just to make ends meet. As such, we are tied to our desks and are sitting most of the time while we focus on the task at hand. We know that after all the hard work is done, it all pays off once you see that you can provide for yourself and your loved ones.
Travis FosterPublished 3 years ago in JournalHabit Forming - Writing
In an attempt to bring this article to the focus of its readers, who (I hope, are varied, far & wide), I love chocolate! Ok, so I hear you all asking the question - what!? - well you see, writing can very quickly become an enjoyable, engrossing, and much-liked habit. As with a large number of activities that you fill out your life with these days, writing is a very positive tool. It allows you to escape from the reality around you. Reducing stress & anxiety that habitually plagues you throughout your lifetime. I have spent much of my working life working 12-hour night & day shifts as a mental health nurse, which, as I imagine readers coming to this article can very easily relate with - particularly if they have been a nurse in the past or are involved in this field of work now. Everyone that I have known in the past, or still today, understands that there are copious emotions that you go through when you spend such long periods looking after others when they are unwell and vulnerable. You can easily become very susceptible to fear, anxiety, anger, frustration, sorrow, guilt, and complete and utter exhaustion; the list can go on and is certainly not exhaustive.
Jonathan TownendPublished 3 years ago in JournalOut of the Comfort Zone, Into the Fire
So, I'm 25 years old, 4 months out of college and in the midst of a pandemic I have been asking myself for the past several months, "Now what?"
Allye BrownPublished 3 years ago in JournalAnnette Bentley Smith
Annette Bentley Smith is a Georgia-born children’s book author of fictitious, realistic books for children ages 0-12. She’s the wife of a jack of all trades, the mother of two young adults, and the grandmother of a beautiful and bright little girl. Her grand doll Melody Rayne is now her latest and greatest inspiration for her stories.
Tammy ReesePublished 3 years ago in JournalPierce Brooks
With experience managing great loss and great recovery, Pierce J. Brooks is an empowerment speaker, coach and confidant giving practical solutions for people and teams to find meaning and inspiration from trauma. As a former college athlete, Pierce was pressured to excel in basketball, ultimately playing at the Division I level.
Tammy ReesePublished 3 years ago in JournalThe Google dependency of the world
The world always assumes that Google services will be there from Gmail and YouTube to online storage search and smart homes. We take it for granted. Each hour, YouTube has 30,000 hours of videos uploaded.
Zeeshan Mushtaq LonePublished 3 years ago in JournalBucket List
It was going to be another windy day Beatrice sighed as she closed the trunk of her car and turned towards the direction of the beach. After almost three years in the community treasure hunting club, it seemed that she was the only one left to uncover any sort of prize. With her new metal detector sitting patiently inside the large case, Beatrice hoped that today would be the day she discovered at least an old coin or an antique locket. Similar trinkets had been found recently by her good friends Evangeline and Iris. They were always finding new things along the shore but this was a new beach and to Beatrice, that meant new possibilities.
Lisa MejeunPublished 3 years ago in Journal