Designers rethink the candleholder for ceramics brand 1882 Ltd
Designers rethink the candleholder for ceramics brand 1882 Ltd
Snarkitecture, Max Lamb, Bethan Gray and Bruce McLean create expressive ceramic candleholders for the Stoke on Trent brand’s home fragrance debut
‘Lustre’ candle by 1882 Ltd in collaboration with Bethan Gray, left, and ‘Crockery’ candle, with Max Lamb, right, both in fine bone china. The ceramic designs, among a series of four, each contain a candle featuring a signature scent – a mix of sandalwood, amber and earthy florals. Once the candles are burnt, the object remains to be enjoyed
British ceramics brand 1882 Ltd has launched a new collection of candles, with a bespoke scent, in ceramic holders designed by some of its most celebrated collaborators.
By Terry and Kim Kovel
King Features Syndicate
The New Year is celebrated in many ways, but in the United States, there are always midnight celebrations with pictures of an old man representing the past and a baby, the new year. The other popular symbol is a clock of almost any style with the hands at midnight.
The early Greek idea of Baby New Year was a baby paraded around in a basket to welcome the new year. Then it became pictures of the Baby Jesus or a Baby New Year. But pictures were created for publications, and each year from 1907 to 1943, Joseph Leyendecker drew a different, humorous illustration of a Baby New Year for the Saturday Evening Post that have influenced all that followed. Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer was searching for the missing Baby New Year in a cartoon in the 1970s. Modern celebrations give gifts to the first newborn baby of the year at hospitals. We think the 19th-century baby buggy would be a nice gift for this year s first born.
Babies popular theme around New Year s Eve
Terry Kovel
The New Year is celebrated in many ways, but in the United States, there are always midnight celebrations with pictures of an old man representing the past and a baby, the new year. The other popular symbol is a clock of almost any style with the hands at midnight.
The early Greek idea of Baby New Year was a baby paraded around in a basket to welcome the new year. Then it became pictures of the Baby Jesus or a Baby New Year. But pictures were created for publications, and each year from 1907 to 1943, Joseph Leyendecker drew a different, humorous illustration of a Baby New Year for the Saturday Evening Post that have influenced all that followed.