Posts Tagged ‘bag’
Daiwa tips mixed bag from S-REIT earnings
Unseen Rolling Stones pics hidden in duffel bag for 40 yrs found
Swiber and consortium partner bag $865m EPCIC contract
Swiber Holdings, the integrated construction and support services provider to the offshore industry, says the company and its consortium partner have received a Letter of Award for an EPCIC (Engineering, Procurement, Construction, Installation & Commissioning) contract worth US$618 million ($865 million) from a leading oil and gas operator in South Asia.
Conrad Murray Put of Sight Propofol before Calling 119
According to new report, dialing 911 was not the only concern of the physician of Michael Jackson. Before calling for help Dr. Conrad Murray tucked away little bottles of drugs as well as IV bag which was undoubtedly was full of sedative later blamed for Jackson’s death.
The AP report quotes that Murray, 57, was charged [...]
Suri Cruise Debuts $837 Salvatore Ferragamo Handbag
Suri Cruise, the 3-year-old daughter of Hollywood couple Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes, was spotted carrying a metallic designer bag worth $837. The tot’s new Salvatore Ferragamo Sofia handbag was a downsized version of Katie’s $1,735 bronze metallic Sofia bag, London’s Daily Mail revealed this week.
Suri, who previously made headlines by wearing high heels, also [...]
Critical Infrastructure Security a Mixed Bag, Report Finds
A new report commissioned by McAfee reveals IT security at critical infrastructure companies is not always as high as some may suspect.
– A new
report from the Center for Strategic and International Studies highlights the
financial damage of cyber-attacks on critical infrastructure, but also paints a
picture of IT security that is in turns good and bad.
The
report, “In
the Crossfire: Critical Infrastructure in the Age of Cyberwa…
Single-Serving Satchels: 3 Messenger Bags Tested and Rated
Product: 3 Sharp Messenger Bags Tested and Rated Manufacturer: Roundup:Wired Rating: 0
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If you don’t possess a fixie or an ironic moustache, that doesn’t mean you can’t rock an awesome messenger bag. For portin…
Get Ready for Back To School with CANYON
CANYON helps you kick off the school year with practical and trendy IT-related products and accessories for your desktop PC or Notebooks. Make sure you are well-prepared for the new school year ahead, and make your pick among our wide range of clever and affordable solutions for your various needs and budgets. Here are a [...]
YouHaul: Three Sturdy Backpacks Tested and Rated
Product: High Tech, Eco Friendly Backpacks Manufacturer: Roundup:Wired Rating: 0
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Bike messenger bags are ideal for, well, people who actually ride bikes. But if you’re schlepping anything remotely heavy (advanced …
Rachel Strugatz: Anya Hindmarch, Handbag Designer: In Her Office (PHOTOS)
Anya Hindmarch’s timeless carryalls and evening bags have become a staple in the world of luxury accessories, spotted on public figures such as Reese Witherspoon, Angelina Jolie, and Princess Diana since the brand’s inception in the early ’90s.
In the bag
A museum that takes handbags seriously
Amsterdam’s Museum of Handbags and Purses is a rare place. It offers an historical survey of Western bags and related accessories from pill boxes to luggage. On view are some 400 objects from a collection almost ten times that size. Most of the material was acquired by Hendrijke and Heinz Ivo, a married couple who began collecting in earnest 25 years ago, after he retired at 51 (he was president of the food division at Mars).
Sigrid Ivo, an art historian and daughter of the museum’s founders, directs the foundation that now owns the collection and runs the museum. But this is no mere mom and pop affair. Here, in a very glamorous setting, the matter of handbags is taken seriously, stylishly and with a light touch. The museum occupies a double-fronted 17th-century house on the city’s grandest canal, the Herengracht. Exhibits are displayed in chic, modern glass cases and lit as if each handbag or lipstick case was a jewel. A great many are. …
How to pack your suitcase
Jess Cartner-Morley offers 10 tried-and-tested tips to take the pain out of packing
In pictures: Last-minute holiday shopping
It is just possible that I think about clothes too much. I mean, when I heard about swine flu parties, my first thought was: what does one wear? But there is, I believe, one day in the year when it pays to be slightly obsessive about clothes, and that is the day before you go on holiday. A good holiday starts with a well-packed suitcase.
Yet it is almost impossible to get any useful information on the subject of packing, because most people who care about clothes are either much too grand or much too cool to be of any help. When glossy magazine contributors are asked to give their packing tips, they either say something pointlessly snotty (“send eveningwear to your destination in advance, so that the villa staff have time to steam the creases out of your Valentino”) or something unhelpfully cool (“all you need for two weeks is a kaftan, a perfect pair of sawn-off Levis and a slim volume of poetry”). The gritty issues faced in that empty-suitcase-on-the-bed moment are swept under the carpet, and so we struggle on, year after year, panic-buying cheap sarongs at the airport and spending two weeks in the same comfy but slightly sagging cotton jersey dress we wore last year, and the year before that.
But I, my friends, am an anorak – and proud of it. And now, you can be too. Some people’s life’s work is a novel; mine is a packing checklist. Here it is:
1) Work in outfits
Let me tell you a story. When I first started travelling to fashion shows, I used to hear about other fashion editors who packed each outfit on a hanger, with clothes and accessories hung around the neck and shoes in a fabric bag, with each outfit folded into a garment bag. At first, I thought these were urban myths. They are not. And you know what? It is the best way to pack. Not the whole garment-bag, matching-necklace-picked-out nine yards, but thinking in outfits. Instead of flicking through your wardrobe and pulling out “things that are useful when it’s hot” or “things that I can only wear when I’m brown”, think about what you’ll be doing. If it’s a beach holiday, pull out your swimsuits and then work out three or four outfits that you can wear over them during the day. Stick to a few colours – say, navy, white and denim – so that you can mix the pieces up.
2) Take your nicest things
Those “special” things you save for high days and holidays? Take them. OK, maybe leave the diamonds at home if you are going backpacking, but don’t get stuck in a rut of only packing tatty old vests and shorts. Just because you can be casual doesn’t mean you have to look like a scruff.
3) Start a travel drawer
It took me years of running around the house gathering together my passport, spare coin purse, travel adaptors, phrasebooks and maps from different cupboards all over the house before it dawned on me to keep all these things in one place. This saves about half an hour and makes you less likely to forget anything. But possibly I am the only person to whom this wasn’t always obvious.
4) Two pairs of shoes, two cover-ups
Wear Converse or trainers for the plane and pack one nice pair of flat sandals and one pair of wedges. If you’re going somewhere warm, take two light layers that can be worn together: a cashmere cardigan and a blazer, for instance. Then, if you leave or arrive on a chilly day, or if things get really unseasonable abroad, you can layer up.
5) Underpack
If you take something you don’t wear, you will waste time packing it, hanging it at your destination, then repacking it, and probably having to iron it again when you get home. Leave it where it is.
6) Wear favourite jeans on the plane
Jeans are not comfy enough for overnight but great on short flights: the pockets are handy, and they are the right temperature for planes. If you are going somewhere hot you always think you will wear your jeans while you are there, but you never do. One pair will work fine for the journey there and the journey back. Do not pack a second pair; you won’t wear them.
7) Pile first, then pack
Don’t put things straight in the suitcase: this plays havoc with correct packing procedure, and makes editing tricky. When you’ve got your pile on the bed or floor, flick through and remove anything you are not completely set on taking. Then pack in this order: shoes first, and washbags – both packed inside carrier bags, which you can use as laundry bags once you’re away. Books, chargers, an evening bag – I put my jewellery in here so it doesn’t snag on my clothes – and a belt go next. Then swimwear and underwear in fabric bags. Next, anything else that doesn’t need hanging up – fold it or roll it.
8) Keep everything else on hangers
Wrap a rubber band or ponytail band around the top of the hangers to keep them together, then slip a garment bag (the thin kind you get from the drycleaners is fine) over the clothes. Fold over and lay on top of everything else.
The slipperiness of the garment bag will keep everything from creasing – and when you arrive, you can simply hang the clothes straight into the wardrobe, and ignore those irritating non-stealable hangers. Same when you go home.
9) Wear a waterproof watch
Leave your other watch at home. You will only leave it on the beach otherwise and that’s really annoying.
10) A party dress
Never, ever go anywhere without a really nice dress and the right bra to wear with it. You never know who you might meet.
Lesley Stern: How To Live On $0 A Day: An Undervalued Asset In Tough Times
In a volatile economic market I can think of no better cushion (aside from cash and gold bullion) than duct tape. And the good…



