Techniques d'ennoblissement des matières NTC.1Q


Ce programme permet de valoriser les techniques particulières d’ennoblissement des matières et de distinguer les modes de fabrication qui sont les mieux appropriés.
Il permet aux personnes possédant une formation
en design de mode ou exerçant une fonction similaire
dans l’industrie de la mode et du vêtement, de parfaire
dans un premier temps, leurs connaissances en
matière de techniques artisanales. Dans un deuxième
temps, il permet d’appliquer leurs connaissances
à la fabrication industrielle.

La formation vise à permettre à des personnes
de travailler les matières
industrielles en y ajoutant
une valeur importante; à favoriser l’évolution et
l’approfondissement des savoirs professionnels
chez les designers et autres travailleurs connexes;
à favoriser la mobilité professionnelle de la
personne en lui offrant des moyens pour gérer
sa carrière, notamment par la possibilité de
créer sa propre entreprise; à acquérir des
méthodes manuelles et à les adapter aux
outils informatiques et industriels.

Planification d'événements NTC.1N


Le programme Planification d’événements forme des
planificateurs responsables de l’organisation de réunions
corporatives, de présentations de mode, d’événements
promotionnels, de soirées événementielles…

Il offre aux étudiants tous les outils nécessaires à
l’atteinte de leurs objectifs dans ce domaine de
créativité en constante évolution. Les cours, assurés
par des professionnels issus de l’industrie,
permettront aux étudiants d’acquérir toutes les
connaissances nécessaires leur donnant la
possibilité d’exercer leurs talents et de connaître
une carrière riche et prometteuse dans ce milieu.

Les diplômés de ce programme, ayant développé
un sens de l’entreprenariat et le désir de se démarquer
dans l’organisation d’événements, pourront aisément
démarrer leur propre entreprise de planification
d’événements, et ce, dans le domaine de la mode
comme dans le domaine artistique.

Design de mode 571.A0

JASMIN ONS TOPMODEL

Zitvlak wassing (douche)

Een sproeier komt vanuit het achterste gedeel van de zitting naar voren en sproeit een straal warm water (temp.instelbaar) vanuit haar sproeikop.
Het warme water komt uit de drie sproei-gaatjes van de sproeikop en vormt zo als ware een douche, voor de spoeling van het zitvlak. Het biedt als extra tevens een (instelbare) massage effekt, een stimulering c.q. bevordering van de bloedcirculatie en bij hemorroïden.

ntiem wassing (bidet funktie)

Een bidet sproeier, qua vorm duidelijk afwijkend van de douche sproeier, komt naar voren en spoelt de vrouwelijke intieme delen.
Deze sproeikop heeft 10 sproei-gaatjes, zodat deze duidelijk huidzachter aanvoelt dan de douche sproeier. Voor gebruik bij/na urineren, transpiratie, gedurende menstruatie, zwangerschap of na geboorte van een kind, enz. Deze sproeikop geeft bescherming en hygiëne. Niet geschikt als anticonceptie.

Droger

Deze funktie droogt de bevochtigde delen d.m.v. warme lucht. De droging geschiedt door een warme luchtstroom (föhn) na een douche en/of bidetwassing. Dit geeft u een aangenaam, verfrissend gevoel. Indien de gebruiker voordien eerst met toiletpapier dept, dan zal de droging sneller en intensiever zijn. Er ontstaat geen irritatie zodat deze funktie uitermate geschikt is voor mensen met hemorroïden


Verwarmde toiletzitting

De toiletzitting (bril) blijft constant verwarmd (temp.instelbaar), zodat het adem inhoudende zitten gaan op een koude toiletzitting in de winter tot het verleden behoort.

Zelfreinigende sproeiers

Voor de reiniging van de sproeiers zijn 2 methodes van zelfreiniging ingebouwd.

  1. Automatische reiniging van zowel douche-sproeier als bidet-sproeier na elk gebruik.
  2. De sproeier kan zeer eenvoudig door uzelf gereinigd worden d.m.v. het drukken op een knop van de afstandbediening.

Toiletzitting (bril) en deksel 'zachtjes sluiten'

Wanneer u zowel zitting of deksel naar beneden doet, kunt u deze gerust los laten. Deze zal langzaam naar beneden gaan zonder op de pot te 'knallen'. Bij het 'naar boven doen' is deze funktie uitgeschakeld, zodat u deze snel kunt openen.

Massage instelling (Massage wassing)

Deze geeft een masserende effect welke een stimulerende werking heeft ter bevordering van de bloedcirculatie bij bv hemorroïden. Deze ritmische funktie kan naar persoonlijk voorkeur ingesteld worden.

Functies en werking van de afstandbediening

(geleverde uitvoering kan verschillen van afbeelding)
De werking vraagt niet meer als een eenvoudige druk op een knop van de afstandsbediening. Zijn de batterijen hiervan onverwacht hiervan leeg dan kan de gebruiker de basisfuncties gebruiken d.m.v. toetsen aan de zijkant van het bidet.

Sleek & Spare Large Kitchen - Award of Distinction


By JULIE SANDERS | Photography by Olson Photographic

MAY/JUNE 2010

Joe M. Currie, Jack Rosen Custom Kitchens, Inc.
When Joe M. Currie of Jack Rosen Custom Kitchens was called on to update a kitchen in a traditional Rockville, Maryland, home the goal was to maximize storage and counter space while creating a visually arresting contrast between cabinets, countertops and flooring. The homeowner wanted a spare, uncluttered look, so two appliance garages were installed and plentiful behind-the-scenes storage was put in place. The black-and-white color scheme of flat-cut oak cabinetry and granite countertops promotes a minimalist vibe, while the style of the cabinets, with their frosted glass fronts, is clean-lined and modern. Walnut floors connect the kitchen with the rest of the house.

KITCHEN DESIGN: Joe M. Currie, Jack Rosen Custom Kitchens, Inc., Rockville, MD. CONTRACTOR: Paul Johnson, Nice Contracting Inc., Silver Spring, MD. INTERIOR DESIGN: Susan Apatoff, SGA By Design, Rockville, MD.

Where To Find It
Appliances: Thermador, Wolf and KitchenAid through Appliance Distributors Unlimited. Cabinetry: Elmwood Cabinetry through Jack Rosen Custom Kitchens. Countertops: White Fantasy granite and Smoky Black
granite through Counter Intelligence, Rockville, MD.
Backsplash: Carrera marble, Mosaic Tile, Rockville, MD.

read more

**Out of the array of interior design magazines, Home and Design magazine stands out as a primary idea source for luxury home designs. Wonderful visuals of inspired décor and lush landscapes are combined with expert advice to provide a fundamental reference point for bringing amazing home interior design ideas to life.

Cream of the Crop

Baltimore-Washington 2010 NKBA Kitchen & Bath Awards
By Julie Sanders

MAY/JUNE 2010

Now in its second year, the 2010 design competition organized by the Baltimore-Washington Chapter of the National Kitchen and Bath Association (NKBA) saw more than 100 distinctive entries from area designers. Sponsored by HOME & DESIGN, the contest taps experienced area professionals to judge each submission. This year’s jury included Jonas Carnemark, CR, CKD, of Carnemark systems + design, inc.; Ann Kenkel of Ann Kenkel Interiors; Donald Lococo, AIA, of Donald Lococo Architects; and HOME & DESIGN editor in chief Sharon Jaffe Dan. Members of the NKBA adhere to high standards of design, safety and functionality. The winners meet these standards—and more.


read more

**Out of the array of interior design magazines, Home and Design magazine stands out as a primary idea source for luxury home designs. Wonderful visuals of inspired décor and lush landscapes are combined with expert advice to provide a fundamental reference point for bringing amazing home interior design ideas to life.

City Cool Behind its historic facade, an urban row house opens to contemporary spaces filled with light


About 10 years ago, two attorneys bought a home in downtown Washington to be close to work and their favorite theaters and museums. Soon after moving into their century-old brick row house near Mount Vernon Square, David Tarler and Leah Lorber felt like they were living in a no-man’s land. “There were empty lots filled with trash, empty buildings that had caved in and lots of boarded-up windows,” says Lorber, a public policy director of a healthcare company. “Sometimes we asked ourselves, ‘Do we want to stay here?’”


Fast forward a decade and the urban neighborhood is now home to new condominiums, businesses and institutions such as the Walter Washington Convention Center just a few blocks away. “It’s completely changed for the better,” says Tarler, who works for the National Park Service.


So, too, has the couple’s house. After deciding to stay put, the two tapped DC-based architect Robert M. Gurney to transform their dark and dreary residence into a cool, contemporary pad filled with planes of color and texture. Open spaces lined in wood and glass take the place of the compartmentalized rooms typical of the city’s row houses, providing plenty of daylight and dynamic views through three levels. “Light is so important in these types of houses because they are inherently dark,” says Gurney. “I judiciously removed pieces of walls and floors to gain more light and allow you to sense the volume of the house.”


The architect not only gutted the interior down to the floor joists, but he also replaced the exterior brick wall at the rear with huge sheets of glass to increase the amount of light inside. Glass panels set into the wooden floors allow daylight to penetrate through the middle of each floor, from a large rooftop skylight clear to the lowest level.


Steel staircases positioned next to the glass bridges are fitted with aluminum treads and slatted risers to let in more light from the skylight overhead. Walls finished in blue Venetian plaster and quarter-sawn oak rise to either side of the open stairwell to connect and unify the spaces on each floor. “Bob uses materials that are contemporary but he is able to bring in warmth through the plaster and wood,” Tarler notes. “The spaces don’t feel sterile.”


Functionally, the house is almost as unconventional as its form. Gurney moved the kitchen and dining area from the basement to the main floor off the entrance, while sequestering the living area and a guest suite on the lower level. The living area is small, even cozy, and well lit from the window wall at the rear. Seating is arranged around a gas fireplace with a shiny metal flue and a built-in cabinet housing a television. An adjacent garden patio serves as a warm-weather retreat and outdoor living room. Enclosed by walls covered in wood slats and fiber-cement panels, and a tall, steel planter filled with bamboo, the space feels completely private and far removed from city traffic.


On the top floor, the couple’s bedroom and bathroom form another sanctuary. Next to the bed, a built-in desk extends into a nook overlooking the staircase to provide a place for a computer and books.


“It’s a small house and we wanted to make sure we would use all of the space,” says Tarler. Custom-built cabinets lining the sides of the living and dining rooms provide ample storage for the couple’s belongings, including a colorful collection of Fiestaware, so that the interiors remain clutter-free.


“We were into collecting a lot of different things—too many for the space we had—and the house was unfocused and cramped,” says Leah Lorber. “So the less-is-more look of modern design was very appealing.”


Furnishings were selectively chosen with the help of interior designer Therese Baron Gurney, who often collaborates with her husband. “I enjoy working on Bob’s projects because they are so architecturally rich,” she says. “Here, the furniture has its own integrity in being more fluid than the geometry of the architecture.” Softening all the straight lines are curvy chairs set around an oval dining table, a comfy, rounded swivel chair and plenty of cushions on the sectional sofa in the living area.


“We are still getting accustomed to living in the house,” says Tarler, who has left the spaces largely free of personal touches, including artwork. As he notes, “The architecture is the art.”


Washington, DC-based Deborah K. Dietsch is a frequent contributor to HOME & DESIGN. Photographer Paul Warchol is based in New York.

ARCHITECTURE: Robert M. Gurney, FAIA, lead architect; Brian Tuskey, project archiect; Robert M. Gurney Architect, Washington, DC. INTERIOR DESIGN: Therese Baron Gurney, ASID, Baron Gurney Interiors, Washington, DC. CONTRACTOR: Prill Construction, Bethesda, Maryland.

**Out of the array of interior design magazines, Home and Design magazine stands out as a primary idea source for luxury home design and building/remodeling features. Wonderful visuals of custom homes and eco-friendly resources are combined with expert advice to provide a fundamental reference point for bringing amazing home interior design and remodeling projects to life.

Green Living


Architect Amy Gardner updates a cramped split-level into a light-filled example of sustainable design
By Julie Sanders | Photography by Jim Tetro

MAY/JUNE 2010

Tucked into a neighborhood of 1950s split-level homes in Bethesda, Maryland, Adina and Mike Liuzzo’s mid-century house stands out just enough. While it still retains the essential form of a split-level, its front façade has been enhanced with contemporary touches that set it apart from the surrounding houses, yet still allow it to blend. “We wanted it to be clean and modern but still of the neighborhood,” Adina Liuzzo says.

The Liuzzos moved into the house in 2002. Back then, small windows left the rooms dark, an inconvenient layout created unusable spaces, and a cramped kitchen made family gatherings impossible. Once the couple’s son was born, the house was simply too small.

A solution to the problem came from architect Amy Gardner of Gardner Mohr Architects in Chevy Chase, whom the Liuzzos tapped to renovate their home. The project ultimately included a complete reorganization of the ground and main floors, first- and second-floor additions and a deck that would make the backyard more accessible; it enlarged the home from 1,500 to 2,500 square feet. “I didn’t want a big house,” says Adina Liuzzo, “I just wanted everything to be efficient.”

The couple also wanted to update the look of the property, imparting a sensibility Adina describes as “clean and contemporary, but warm.” As Gardner explains it, the challenge was “to give them their voice yet still make sure the house fit in. We had to figure out a palette of materials and elements that would accomplish that.”

Though building green was not the couple’s first priority, the Liuzzos ended up creating a showcase for sustainable design. “Their goals were to do the right things,” Gardner says. “They just happened to be in line with a sustainable approach.” The result is a highly efficient home that beats every energy code by 30 percent. Energy-saving elements include radiant floor heat, a super-efficient cooling system and new foam insulation. The design takes advantage of passive solar gain through an abundance of natural light from both picture and clerestory windows.

Eco-friendly materials abound. The floors throughout the renovated first level are engineered Hevea, made from the scrap lumber of rubber trees. All the wood trim is sustainable Plyboo bamboo, while the dark-stained walnut staircases come from already-fallen wood gathered by a local sawyer and milled in a solar-powered facility. Lighting is all low-voltage. A long bamboo shelf below the clerestory windows in the new living room reflects natural light up to the ceiling, where it bounces down to better illuminate the space.

The redesign of the kitchen by Jennifer Gilmer of Jennifer Gilmer Kitchen & Bath provides a focal point, separating the living room addition from the original house. “It was an interesting space to work in,” she says. “I had fun playing with the angles to get it right.” With its sleek, sculptural countertops, warm woods and saturated color, the new kitchen perfectly mirrors Gardner’s modern design. According to Gilmer, “Amy made it easy. She had already thought out the space.”

The kitchen leads directly to the loggia, which Gardner designed to connect the old and new sections of the house. Poured concrete flooring, a ceiling of engineered Hevea wood and translucent Kalwall insulating panels reminiscent of Japanese shoji screens lend interest to the room; it also functions as Adina’s home office and conveniently adjoins her four-year-old son’s playroom.

Above the loggia lies the master bath, a calm and spacious retreat with sandstone floors and Kalwall panels to admit light. Eco-friendly PaperStone surfaces offer shelving and countertop space.

Outside, a cypress deck provides an exterior room. Like the house, the small backyard has been transformed—as have the lives of its owners, who are thrilled. “With sustainable design it’s not just design and materials,” Gardner says. “It’s the way it gives the homeowner the opportunity to live differently.”

RENOVATION ARCHITECTURE: Amy E. Gardner, AIA, LEED AP, Gardner Mohr Architects, LLC, Chevy Chase, Maryland. CONTRACTOR: Smith Design/Construction, Bethesda, Maryland. STRUCTURAL ENGINEER: Robert Silman Associates, Washington, DC. KITCHEN DESIGN: Jennifer Gilmer Kitchen & Bath, Chevy Chase, Maryland. LANDSCAPE: Stock Brothers, Inc., Nurserymen, Beallsville, Maryland.

Photographer Jim Tetro is based in Vienna, Virginia.

**Out of the array of interior design magazines, Home and Design magazine stands out as a primary idea source for luxury home design and building/remodeling features. Wonderful visuals of custom homes and eco-friendly resources are combined with expert advice to provide a fundamental ref

The set design model for Talley’s Folly, designed by John Lee Beatty.


John has re-created his original design on the Matthews stage at McCarter, and I must say that it’s absolutely gorgeous. In order to get a sense of how beautiful it is, I’ve attached some photos to this post, which show the design in model form, immediately after installation (with master electrician Paul Kilsdonk on the stage, and in its full glory (with Richard Schiff and Margot White). If you don’t have tickets to Talley’s Folly yet, you simply must get them immediately, if only to see one of the most sumptious sets that we’ve had at McCarter in over 20 years.

Three Photos: John Lee Beatty’s Set Posted by Adam Immerwahr on October 14th, 2008


For this production of Talley’s Folly, McCarter has assembled most of the original design team who created Marshall W. Mason’s Tony Award-winning 1980 Broadway production of this gorgeous Lanford Wilson play. Those designers include Jennifer von Mayrhauser (her 20th play at McCarter under Emily Mann’s tenure), Chuck London, and John Lee Beatty, who won the Tony Award and the Drama Desk award for his outstanding set design.

Gilmour Oscillating Sprinkler, Model# 7900MP

Meizu M8 Available for Purchase... Again

It looks like the M8 from Meizu is finally available... again. It was available about a week ago but that was a beta version filled with bugs and problems. Nonetheless that was available for sale for $440. Too much you say? Well it's too expensive even without the bugs. If you didn't buy the M8 before don't go buy it now either. You won't miss a thing. And considering that MWC has revealed at list three worthy phones ready to compete against the iPhone, you might be better of choosing one of those.

via DAP Review

Top Ten List of iPhone Competitors


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Since the introduction of the Apple iPhone on January the 9th, the world has gone touch pad crazy, touch pad technology is the way of the future and many companies have heard the call and made their own touch pad phones in direct competition with the iPhone. This is a top ten list of iPhone Competitors, some of the phones are the real deal, some are just concepts at the moment, all are cool.

Coming in at Number 1 is the recently announced Samsung F700 ultra slim phone, answering the call early Samsung have come up with a splendid touch pad phone. Main features of the phone include a 5 megapixel camera, touch pad technology, impressive downloads speeds of up to 7.2 Mbps and a cool slide out QWERTY Keyboard, which is something the iPhone is lacking. With their first deluge into touch pad phones Samsung seem to have hit a home run straight of the bat.

read more....

Meizu M8: An Apple iPhone Look-alike?


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While everyone is sitting around waiting for the acclaimed Apple iPhone to be released months from now, the Chinese company Meizu has come up with a phone that is strikingly similar in appearance to the iPhone - the Meizu M8 PMP/Phone. From the design of the phone, to the style of the user interface, the M8 just screams iPhone wannabe. I guess we shouldn't be surprised though, this was bound to happen sooner or later. Chinese companies are known for ripping of US designs, and often times there is very little that the US company can do to prevent them from profiting off their designs.

Meizu M8 Phone Pics

If Apple is taking its sweet time to supply Asia with their iPhones, then what is Asia going to do? Well, why not make their own? That would show them. If these pictures of the Meizu M8 is accurate, then Asia could have their own counterpart for Apple's iPhone. The Meizu M8 looks just like the iPhone in every way, including the fairly unique set of icons for navigation. In fact, the M8 is more Apple than Apple as they've opted for a glossy white finish instead of a black one.

These hasn't been confirmed as of the moment though, but if it is true, this is one sweet device!

In terms of raw specs, the M8 is said to sport standard GSM, TD-SCDMA for 3G data, a 3.3-inch widescreen (720x480) display, Bluetooth, and an ARM11 CPU. What's more, they've upped the ante in the camera department, beating Apple's picture-taker by one whole megapixel. The 3MP cam on board is also capable of recording video at 30fps (at the device's full 720 x 480 resolution).

Continue reading Meizu M8 Phone Pics

Meizu Responds to iPhone Knock-off Accusations


Chinese mobile manufacturer Meizu is responding to the claims that their new M8 phone is a cheap knock-off of the Apple iPhone. Apparently, they are claiming that the original M8 design debuted four days before MacWorld when Steve Jobs unveiled the iPhone. They do aknowledge, however, that the design was tweaked after the iPhone was revealed, slimming it down, adding some metallics, and some other minor changes. Now, whether this is true or not, I guess we'll be kept wondering.

http://www.obvio.ind.br/obviona/DSC04314.JPG


The Curriculum includes courses in Introduction to Model Making and Design,
www.atep.us/dmp/default.asp
Informasi gambar
Ukuran:677 × 534
Jenis:139KB GIF
The Curriculum includes courses in Introduction to Model Making and Design,
www.atep.us/dmp/default.asp
Informasi gambar
Ukuran:677 × 534
Jenis:139KB GIF

The Obvio !´s car design steps


•Briefing over product design/niche market
•Sculptural design and development procedures in 1:4 scale
•Knowledge-based Engineering and Consulting Services packaging
•Sculptural process of design and construction to prototypes 1:1 scale
•Design and construction of prototypes and forms
•Digital mockup and virtual prototyping
•Final model construction for crash-tests
•Construction of pre-production car and Tools
•Planning, supervision and quality control of “by demand” serial production

Sketch rendering:


The initial phase of our creation. Anisio and Staff makes free sketches or "roughs", taking account of the initial schedule of specifications.
This design is a sketch rendering so that the original idea is given lasting form. It requires a certain execution time.
The initial phase of our creation. Anisio and Staff makes free sketches or "roughs", taking account of the initial schedule of specifications.
This design is a sketch rendering so that the original idea is given lasting form. It requires a certain execution time.
The initial phase of our creation. Anisio and Staff makes free sketches or "roughs", taking account of the initial schedule of specifications.
This design is a sketch rendering so that the original idea is given lasting form. It requires a certain execution time.

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