by Sarah Hutchins | Aug 7, 2017 | Archived Reviews (pre-April 2020), Art, Design & Photography, Home & Garden
“I’m too tall. I’m too short. I’m too fat. I’m too thin. I’m left-handed.” All too often we utter these and similar phrases to excuse ourselves when our heads bump against light fixtures, our inability to reach tall shelves, our struggle to find...
by Guest Author | Jul 27, 2017 | Art, Design & Photography, Interviews, Sponsored
Q. Graffiti artwork is something that many people dismiss or ignore. Do you believe more people should pay attention to the medium? Why is it worth their time? A. I believe that everybody should pay attention. Attention is the key in our lives. Graffiti or street art...
by Seniye Groff | Jun 15, 2017 | Archived Reviews (pre-April 2020), Art, Design & Photography, Cooking, Food & Drinks, Crafts & Hobbies
Looking for some food inspiration? Relaxation by coloring? Something to spur your creativity? Something to make you hungry? Behold Cinnamon Bun Dreams by Squishable, a designer of plush toys. Adult coloring books are all the rage and this book will not disappoint. The...
by Seniye Groff | Jan 19, 2017 | Archived Reviews (pre-April 2020), Art, Design & Photography, History, NW Author, NW Setting, Travel
History lovers, as well as architecture aficionados, will appreciate the research and stories presented in Timberline Lodge (Images of America). William Turner, the architect, was hired to design Timberline and he had integral influence in the building’s final...
by Sarah Hutchins | Jan 11, 2017 | Archived Reviews (pre-April 2020), Art, Design & Photography, Biographies & Memoirs, Books About Books
Rainer Maria Rilke’s inspirational prose and poetry is read aloud in Western yoga classes as teachers urge their students to find better ways of being not only on the mat but also in their day-to-day life. Who is the man behind the verse? What made him someone worthy...
by Whitney Smyth | Dec 16, 2016 | Archived Reviews (pre-April 2020), Art, Design & Photography, History
For a long time the Krampus was an unknown to most Americans who typically popularize the Christmas holiday with the safe and familiar jolly, fat, white-bearded man dressed in red who sneaks down chimneys in the middle of the night bearing gifts for good girls and...