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Style Over Substance

September 18, 2008 urngarden.com

I’ve been wanting to do a tribute to Brooks Stevens for sometime. I ran across an article from 1991 and saved it, started doing research and was in awe of his achievements. Many of today’s modern conveniences that we all take for granted? You can thank Brooks Stevens.

Brooks Stevens
June 11-1911 to Jan. 4 1995

1936- The Birth of the Clothes Dryer:

A Wisconsin manufacturer was puzzling over an easier and quicker way to dry clothes. The idea was a crude, heated box with a rotary drum that could spin clothes dry. Brooks Stevens, a rising industrial designer before the world knew it needed one, told the manufacturer there was just one glaring problem.

“You can’t sell this thing,” Mr. Stevens said. “This is a sheet metal box. People won’t even know what it is. Who’s going to pay $375 for what looks like a storage cabinet? Put a glass window on the door, get some boxer shorts flying around in there, put it in the stores and it’ll take off.”

What a dream!
What a dream!

And the list goes on:

  • The steam iron, no more sprinkling.
    The steam iron, no more sprinkling.
  • The snowmobile
  • The Outboard Motor
  • The mass-marketed Jeep/Woodless Willy
    The mass-marketed Jeep/Woodless Willy
  • The Lawn-Boy power lawn mower
    The Lawn-Boy power lawn mower
  • The 1950 Harley-Davidson motorcycle whose virtual twin is still being sold today
  • The Hiawatha luxury train
  • The Oscar Mayer Weinermobile
  • Cars for automakers from Alfa Romeo to Volkswagen
  • The first wide-mouth peanut butter jar that allowed people to get to the bottom of the container
  • The Miller Brewing Company logo.
  • Imagine Life Without It
    Imagine Life Without It

He was one of the first to use color in appliances, first out of boredom with black and white and later out of disgust with what he calls “that rash of avocado green business in the 50’s.” He popularized the turquoise appliances of that age.

A Good Looking Chainsaw:

“What it meant was that product design had to be something more than pure function,” Mr. Stevens said. “The argument from an engineer would be, ‘If it sawed the wood, that’s good enough.’ But we say that if it was a good-looking chain saw it would be much more palatable. ”

He Thinks My Tractors’ Sexy

“What man worries about how a tractor looks?” an engineer asked him regarding a jazzed-up design for a Milwaukee company’s farm tractors. “If it plows the field, that’s enough. ” In the end, Mr. Stevens’ curvaceous tractors with the teardrop fenders became so popular that farmers even took to driving them to church.

Skeptics remain who consider his work trickery and packaging and style over substance.

For the Bus and his brethren

Filed Under: Advertising, obituaries Tagged With: Brooks Stevens, Industrial Design

Off-Topic: Pop Art

September 17, 2008 urngarden.com

Remember when Mountain Dew was all about ticklin’ yore innards?

vintage mountain dew graphics

mountain dew graphics

You can still embrace your inner hillbilly.

mountain dew graphics

Found at: Advertising is Good for You

Filed Under: Advertising, art Tagged With: Advertising, Mountain Dew, mountain dew graphics

Garden of Agony

September 13, 2008 urngarden.com

In 2002 I made a promise to myself that I would make the break from my employer before the next election rolled around. By April 2004 I was gone.

Recently, I read “The Garden of Agony”, an essay written in 1986 by Hunter S. Thompson, that perfectly describes that defining moment in 2002.

He works now as a political consultant in Washington, for $1000 a day, for either party or any candidate who can afford him. “Things are different now,” he told me last week. “The only thing that matters now is money. It’s so much worse than it was 10 years ago that you don’t even want to hear about it. This town is worse than it’s ever been. These new people have no shame. It’s like living in a whorehouse. I’m getting out.”

Then, one afternoon last last week, I got a call from my old friend Patrick Caddell, one of the ranking pollsters and wizards in the business, who stunned me by saying that he also was “quitting politics.”

“Don’t lie to me, Patrick, ” I said to him. “You were born in this business. It’s your life.”

“No more,” he replied. “The whole political system is a disaster area, and it’s getting worse. There are some very sick people in the business today. It has gone from the Best and Brightest to the Worst and Meanest. I got into politics because I believed in things; now I’m getting out for the same reason. It got so bad that I was feeling dirty all the time. I finally had a shower built into the office, but it didn’t do any good.”

Filed Under: Advertising, Confessions, Cube World, mental health Tagged With: elections, greed, Hunter S. Thompson, politics

Russian Grave Markers

August 26, 2008 urngarden.com

The ultimate vanity plate.

 

Filed Under: Advertising, art, funeral service, Memorial Service Ideas Tagged With: grave markers, head stones, memorial stones, memorials, Russian Tomb Stones

June Bugs and Egyptian Scarab Keepsake Urn

August 19, 2008 urngarden.com

June Bugs Makin Love
A Wild Ride

The June Bugs (or Japanese Beetles?) invaded the garden and got busy breeding, munching, and wrecked the garden and trees.

It’s hard to believe that the Egyptians worshiped the dung beetle. While we consider this bug a nuisance, the Egyptians considered them sacred. The scarab symbol is commonly found in hieroglyphics and jewelry designs and it’s really not clear why the scarab was so popular. Artifacts could be found everywhere with this image, amulets, and carved into tombs and pyramids. Historians think that the spiritual significance might have do with some heavenly cycle tied to rebirth or regeneration.

Egyptian urns for ashes

egyptian scarab

So we have a love hate relationship with the scarab. We love the mystery of Egyptian artifacts so Urn Garden commissioned a keepsake urn with the image of a scarab  that appeals to pet owners (cat owners especially) and families that want a mini urn to store a small amount of ashes. Many of these designs are inspired by actual relics and artifacts found in the tombs of kings and pharaohs complete with hieroglyphics and are found in museums around the world.

Green Scarab Urn

Urn Garden Cremation Urns

Filed Under: Advertising, art, cremation, Featured Products Tagged With: egyptian urns, keepsake urn, pet urns

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Urn Garden Cremation Urns for Ashes

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