neat stuff

First funflector Blogiversary!

Time is going fast when life is fun! I can’t believe an entire year has passed since we launched the funflector Blog, but it has. Let’s celebrate our first blogiversary with some thoughts on our posts!

The purpose of the blog was – and still is – three fold:
– to make it easy for the funflector team to get out news about our safety reflectors and traffic safety
– personal reflections on the world around us
– tell the world about neat stuff that is out there on the market. As a small and new business owner, it takes a huge effort to cut through the noise and let the world know about your products. When we find stuff we like from other small businesses, we are happy to help spread the word!

We know how hard it is to find reflectors for personal use in North America – after all, that’s why we launched the funflector® safety reflectors. However,

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Good Design Here and There

The modern movement has little to do with fashion. Last week, the Chicago chapter of the Swedish American Chamber of Commerce (SACC-Chicago) gathered at HAUTE LIVING, a furniture showroom in downtown Chicago. Åke Jansson, president of Lammhults Möbel AB, Sweden and Jeffery Smith, founder and owner of HAUTE LIVING talked about modern furniture and Scandinavian design.



The spacious, contemporary showroom displayed carefully selected European classic pieces along with new design from both Europe and the US. The abundance of thoughtful design, solid wood and absence of ornamentation, made many of us native Swedes feel right at home.

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Easter Egg Stuffers & Other European Easter Goodies

Easter is approaching rapidly and it’s time to get this year’s Easter egg stuffers. As all my kids have their birthdays in the fall, I use Easter to surprise them with some gifts from the Easter Bunny. The big cardboard eggs, common in Northern Europe, are perfect for jump ropes, juggling balls, sunglasses and even flip flops or baseball gloves. I went on a quest for some more of those eggs at the  Swedish American Museum in Chicago and at the World Market. Needless to say, that I found a lot more  neat stuff than planned.
A teeny-tiny cardboard egg with contemporary Swedish egg and chick design from the museum store is ideal for hiding a few funflector tags. The baseball and soccer ball reflectors as well as the shamrock are perfect spring replacement of my family’s basketballs and footballs. Love  & Peace is popular all year around and a few more are needed when one winter jacket is replaced by a couple of fleece sweaters.

Easter Egg Stuffers form the Swedish American Museum in Chicago and from the World Market and funflector
Easter Egg Stuffers form the Swedish American Museum in Chicago, the World Market and funflector


The large egg, found at the World Market,  can hold quite a few Easter egg stuffers. It has a old fashion design with bunnies in a vintage car and chicks in the grass. Its white trim has the traditional wavy edge that I remember from my childhood. I was surprised by its sturdiness until I realized it was actually made in Germany. Lindt chocolate was a staple while I lived in Switzerland, so the two golden bunnies had to follow me home along with some hazelnut-chocolate carrots.  Can’t wait for Easter…
Cute Easter pasta from the World MarketColorful Italian Easter Pasta will be perfect with our Swedish meatballs. By the way, did you see the Trib article about meatballs? I firmly believe that IKEA wouldn’t sell nearly as many meatballs without my kids and their friends around 😉 It seems harder to find a good lamb roast for Easter than Swedish meatballs and herring…
Along with the new cardboard eggs, we reuse the ones from previous years. We fill the smaller ones with candy and the larger ones with “stuff.” The Easter bunny hides them during the night before Easter Eve (!) and the kids get to search for them behind curtains, under couch pillows and in other more unexpected places. The older they get, the trickier it is to find good hiding spots. A couple of years back, one of the eggs seemed to be completely lost. A year and a half later we found it when we cleared out the wood basket by the fireplace. The pair of new socks were already outgrown, so the bunny now leaves us forgetful parents with a list…
When the gifts are too big to fit in an egg, no matter how big, the Easter bunny needs to be creative. One year, the eggs contained clues on where to find the next egg. Eventually the kids ended up in the garage next to a brand new basketball hoop!

Vintage European Easter Eggs
Vintage European Easter Eggs


We use a few vintage eggs for decoration only.  Especially the silver one with distinctive 60’s design is far too cool to let the kids handle.
When homework is done today, we’ll continue digging through our Easter boxes and pull out our favorites. Collected over time, the ornaments carry so many memories from all over and I’m curious about the memories the kids are creating from year to year.
Elisabeth
p.s. The combination of  a pretty cookie tin and  delicious  Nyåkers Pepparkakor (Swedish ginger snaps) made a purchase completely irresistible. From the World Market. I still have a few minutes left for a coffee before the kids will be home…

Swedish pepparkakor (gingersnaps) are not only for Christmas
Swedish pepparkakor are not only for Christmas

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Pedestrian Friendly School Street

The architect Sarah Susanka, well known for her concept, the “Not So Big House” is involved in the School Street project in Libertyville. Today, she unveiled the plans for her Not So Big Showhouse. It will be built with other new homes right next to the vibrant Libertyville downtown. As a big fan of her ideas I was there with many others to listen to her explanations on how she integrates her ideas in a very livable house on a 29 foot wide lot. The neat thing with this project is that it also integrates the ideas for The Not So Big Community.

Sarah Susanka at an event for School Street and her Not So Big Showhouse, Libertyville IL February 2011
Sara Susanka took some time to sign books after her presentation of the Not So Big Showhouse

There will be many inviting porches along School Street, which is a stone’s throw from Libertyville Main Street.
The not so big showhouse by Sarah Susanka planned for School Street in Libertyville IL
A  street view of the Not So Big Showhouse (from schoolstreetlibertyville.com)

Walking distance to restaurants, small stores, a wonderful public library and a stop on the Chicago commuter train is an important part of the concept. Continuously smiling, Sarah seemed genuinely excited about building her first public showhouse here in Libertyville. She told us that the downtown atmosphere was one of the things that really sold her on this project. 🙂
Elisabeth

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Unique Christmas Gift Ideas for Tots to Teens

We are so excited to see some of our funflector™ tags featured in the Winter issue of Tots To Teens Magazine! Check out page 64 where they are page mates with the funny My Face Icons. Just don’t miss the pages just before on some great teen picks, and the pages before that on and…

tots to teens holiday buyer's guide 2010

Here are some  highlights:

 

One of our favorites is the MITT-ONS™ on page 24. Especially exciting is that they have up to teen sizes! With kids who love being outside to play in the snow, this is a blessing!

These days, it seems to be more common than not to have someone in the family with an allergy. We are not alone reading the fine print in the grocery store to find out if the chocolate contains “traces of tree nuts or peanuts” in hope to find out that it is safe for our kids to eat. The divvies chocolate and treats on page 47  are made without eggs, milk or nuts – yeah!!! So let’s put some of those in the stockings!

You may have a leash for you dog, maybe for your toddler, bud did you know you could get it for your baby’s stuff too? The Kael&Kaed Sophie/Toy/Sippy Leash on page 29 will save you from having to pick up an clean many passifiers!

The magazine features many more neat and unique gift ideas but also has some articles on a variety of topics, so it’s certainly worth taking a peak!

Elisabeth

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I Love You, Imagine Peace

Tomorrow, October 9th, the amazing Imagine Peace Tower will be beaming again to celebrate John Lennon’s birthday. It’s light beam reaches far up in the sky and is powerful enough to penetrate the lowest clouds. The interaction with the clouds make it an ever changing piece of art and reminder that peace is never static.

The memorial to John Lennon from his widow, Yoko Ono, was inaugurated on this day in 2007. It is built on the tiny island of Viðey just outside Reykjavík, the capital of Iceland. It is said that the location was chosen for it’s beauty and access to clean power, produced with geothermal heat. The 15 powerful searchlights are boosted by prisms that act as mirrors, extending the light beam well beyond 10,000 feet on clear nights.

Love & Peace - heart and peace sign safety reflector, turquoise
Turquoise heart and peace sign safety reflector.

Few of us will have the opportunity to go there on Saturday, but we can watch it live at 7/8/9 pm in Western Europe and  1/2/3/4 pm in America and make our wish on twitter: @IPTower I wish…

At funflector.com, we also have our own way of saying “I love You, Imagine Peace” and a different way of beaming light – with  a funflector® safety reflector of course! We are so excited that our first batch of “Love & Peace” reflectors has arrived. The first order go to an alert California customer, who ordered via our web shop. The second order goes to Whatsit & Dohickey Co. It is a fun toy and game store in Libertyville, IL, full of brain teasers, board games and other neat stuff.

Love & Peace, as Beth would say.

Elisabeth

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