• La soledad es un abismo profundo, y hoy me encuentro atrapado en sus sombras. Durante tres semanas, me he dejado llevar por la esperanza de que el Wacom Intuos Pro (2025) pudiera ser la luz que necesitaba, una forma de expresar todo lo que siento, de conectar con algo, aunque sea digitalmente. Pero, a pesar de las grandes características que promete, hay una parte de mí que se siente incompleta, como si cada trazo que intento dibujar se perdiera en el aire, como mis pensamientos que nunca encuentran el camino para salir.

    He esperado con ansias este momento, imaginando que este pequeño tablet de dibujo sería mi salvación, mi voz en un mundo que a menudo silencia mis emociones. Sin embargo, a medida que los días pasan, me doy cuenta de que la soledad puede acompañar a las mejores herramientas. Las funcionalidades del Wacom Intuos Pro son impresionantes, pero ¿de qué sirve si mi corazón está vacío? Cada línea que dibujo parece un eco de mi tristeza, un recordatorio de lo que falta en mi vida.

    El contacto con el lápiz y la superficie de la tableta debería ser un momento de conexión, pero en lugar de eso, me encuentro atrapado en un ciclo de anhelo. Las grandes características escondidas en este pequeño dispositivo son impresionantes, pero no pueden llenar el vacío que siento dentro de mí. Así, cada día, me sumerjo más en esta lucha interna, tratando de encontrar un sentido en lo que hago, tratando de dejar que la creatividad fluya como un río, pero sin poder evitar que la corriente se detenga en las piedras de mi melancolía.

    Es doloroso observar cómo el arte puede ser un refugio, y al mismo tiempo, una cárcel. La belleza que puedo crear no mitiga el dolor de la soledad. Cada trazo se convierte en un lamento, cada color en un suspiro ahogado. Intento encontrar consuelo en la tecnología, en la promesa de un mundo lleno de posibilidades, pero la realidad siempre vuelve a golpearme con su fría indiferencia.

    Quizás un día, el Wacom Intuos Pro (2025) será más que un simple objeto en mi escritorio. Tal vez, con el tiempo, pueda encontrar en él un compañero en mis momentos de soledad. Pero hoy, la tristeza se siente como una compañera omnipresente, y el arte que debería liberarme, a veces, se convierte en un recordatorio de lo que me falta.

    #Soledad #Arte #WacomIntuosPro #Tristeza #Creatividad
    La soledad es un abismo profundo, y hoy me encuentro atrapado en sus sombras. Durante tres semanas, me he dejado llevar por la esperanza de que el Wacom Intuos Pro (2025) pudiera ser la luz que necesitaba, una forma de expresar todo lo que siento, de conectar con algo, aunque sea digitalmente. Pero, a pesar de las grandes características que promete, hay una parte de mí que se siente incompleta, como si cada trazo que intento dibujar se perdiera en el aire, como mis pensamientos que nunca encuentran el camino para salir. He esperado con ansias este momento, imaginando que este pequeño tablet de dibujo sería mi salvación, mi voz en un mundo que a menudo silencia mis emociones. Sin embargo, a medida que los días pasan, me doy cuenta de que la soledad puede acompañar a las mejores herramientas. Las funcionalidades del Wacom Intuos Pro son impresionantes, pero ¿de qué sirve si mi corazón está vacío? Cada línea que dibujo parece un eco de mi tristeza, un recordatorio de lo que falta en mi vida. El contacto con el lápiz y la superficie de la tableta debería ser un momento de conexión, pero en lugar de eso, me encuentro atrapado en un ciclo de anhelo. Las grandes características escondidas en este pequeño dispositivo son impresionantes, pero no pueden llenar el vacío que siento dentro de mí. Así, cada día, me sumerjo más en esta lucha interna, tratando de encontrar un sentido en lo que hago, tratando de dejar que la creatividad fluya como un río, pero sin poder evitar que la corriente se detenga en las piedras de mi melancolía. Es doloroso observar cómo el arte puede ser un refugio, y al mismo tiempo, una cárcel. La belleza que puedo crear no mitiga el dolor de la soledad. Cada trazo se convierte en un lamento, cada color en un suspiro ahogado. Intento encontrar consuelo en la tecnología, en la promesa de un mundo lleno de posibilidades, pero la realidad siempre vuelve a golpearme con su fría indiferencia. Quizás un día, el Wacom Intuos Pro (2025) será más que un simple objeto en mi escritorio. Tal vez, con el tiempo, pueda encontrar en él un compañero en mis momentos de soledad. Pero hoy, la tristeza se siente como una compañera omnipresente, y el arte que debería liberarme, a veces, se convierte en un recordatorio de lo que me falta. #Soledad #Arte #WacomIntuosPro #Tristeza #Creatividad
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  • The Latest Research on Climate Finance

    SSRN

    The Latest Research on Climate Finance

    This list includes a selection of the latest research on climate finance posted to SSRN in 2025.

    Climate Risk and Collateral Misreporting by Dongxiao Niu, Nils Kok, Juan Palacios, & Siqi ZhengNature and Climate Risk in Asset Prices by Chiara Colesanti Senni, Skand Goel, & Markus LeippoldAn Empirical Examination of Business Climate Alliances: Effective and/or Harmful? by Matteo Gasparini& Peter TufanoReal-Time Climate Controversy Detection by David Jaggi, Nicolas Jamet, Markus Leippold, & Tingyu YuFirm-Level Nature Dependence by Alexandre Garel, Arthur Romec, Zacharias Sautner, & Alexander F. WagnerCreditworthy: Do Climate Change Risks Matter for Sovereign Credit Ratings? by Lorenzo Cappiello, Gianluigi Ferrucci, Angela Maddaloni, & Veronica VeggenteCorporate Nature Risk Perceptions by Snorre Gjerde, Zacharias Sautner, Alexander F. Wagner, & Alexis WegerichHow to Deliver Mega-Scale Investment in Climate Infrastructure by Carter Casady& Ashby MonkClimate Boards: Do Natural Disaster Experiences Make Directors More Prosocial? by Sehoon Kim, Bernadette A. Minton, & Rohan WilliamsonA Critique of the Apocalyptic Climate Narrative by Harry DeAngelo& Judith CurryIntermediaries and Emissions Disclosures by Rongchen LiThe Natural Language of Finance by Gerard Hoberg& Asaf ManelaThe Influence of the “Environmentally-friendly” Character Through Asymmetries on Market Crash Price of Risk in Major Stock Sectors by Konstantinos A. Dimitriadis, Demetris Koursaros, & Christos S. SavvaDirty Business: Transition Risk of Factor Portfolios by Ravi Jagannathan, Iwan Meier, & Valeri SokolovskiOut of the Light, Into the Dark: How ‘Shadow Carbon Financing’ Hampers the Green Transition and Increases Climate-related Systemic Risk by Simon Schairer, Jan Fichtner, Riccardo Baioni, David Pereira de Castro, Nicolás Aguila, Janina Urban, Paula Haufe, & Joscha WullweberTo read more research on Climate Finance, subscribe to SSRN’s Climate Finance eJournal or view other papers here.
    #latest #research #climate #finance
    The Latest Research on Climate Finance
    SSRN The Latest Research on Climate Finance This list includes a selection of the latest research on climate finance posted to SSRN in 2025. Climate Risk and Collateral Misreporting by Dongxiao Niu, Nils Kok, Juan Palacios, & Siqi ZhengNature and Climate Risk in Asset Prices by Chiara Colesanti Senni, Skand Goel, & Markus LeippoldAn Empirical Examination of Business Climate Alliances: Effective and/or Harmful? by Matteo Gasparini& Peter TufanoReal-Time Climate Controversy Detection by David Jaggi, Nicolas Jamet, Markus Leippold, & Tingyu YuFirm-Level Nature Dependence by Alexandre Garel, Arthur Romec, Zacharias Sautner, & Alexander F. WagnerCreditworthy: Do Climate Change Risks Matter for Sovereign Credit Ratings? by Lorenzo Cappiello, Gianluigi Ferrucci, Angela Maddaloni, & Veronica VeggenteCorporate Nature Risk Perceptions by Snorre Gjerde, Zacharias Sautner, Alexander F. Wagner, & Alexis WegerichHow to Deliver Mega-Scale Investment in Climate Infrastructure by Carter Casady& Ashby MonkClimate Boards: Do Natural Disaster Experiences Make Directors More Prosocial? by Sehoon Kim, Bernadette A. Minton, & Rohan WilliamsonA Critique of the Apocalyptic Climate Narrative by Harry DeAngelo& Judith CurryIntermediaries and Emissions Disclosures by Rongchen LiThe Natural Language of Finance by Gerard Hoberg& Asaf ManelaThe Influence of the “Environmentally-friendly” Character Through Asymmetries on Market Crash Price of Risk in Major Stock Sectors by Konstantinos A. Dimitriadis, Demetris Koursaros, & Christos S. SavvaDirty Business: Transition Risk of Factor Portfolios by Ravi Jagannathan, Iwan Meier, & Valeri SokolovskiOut of the Light, Into the Dark: How ‘Shadow Carbon Financing’ Hampers the Green Transition and Increases Climate-related Systemic Risk by Simon Schairer, Jan Fichtner, Riccardo Baioni, David Pereira de Castro, Nicolás Aguila, Janina Urban, Paula Haufe, & Joscha WullweberTo read more research on Climate Finance, subscribe to SSRN’s Climate Finance eJournal or view other papers here. #latest #research #climate #finance
    BLOG.SSRN.COM
    The Latest Research on Climate Finance
    SSRN The Latest Research on Climate Finance This list includes a selection of the latest research on climate finance posted to SSRN in 2025. Climate Risk and Collateral Misreporting by Dongxiao Niu (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), Nils Kok (Maastricht University), Juan Palacios (Maastricht University), & Siqi Zheng (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) Nature and Climate Risk in Asset Prices by Chiara Colesanti Senni (University of Zurich), Skand Goel, & Markus Leippold (University of Zurich) An Empirical Examination of Business Climate Alliances: Effective and/or Harmful? by Matteo Gasparini (Harvard Business School) & Peter Tufano (Harvard Business School) Real-Time Climate Controversy Detection by David Jaggi (Zurich University of Applied Sciences), Nicolas Jamet (RAM Active Investment), Markus Leippold (University of Zurich), & Tingyu Yu (University of Zurich) Firm-Level Nature Dependence by Alexandre Garel (Audencia Business School), Arthur Romec (Toulouse Business School), Zacharias Sautner (European Corporate Governance Institute), & Alexander F. Wagner (University of Zurich) Creditworthy: Do Climate Change Risks Matter for Sovereign Credit Ratings? by Lorenzo Cappiello (European Central Bank), Gianluigi Ferrucci (European Central Bank), Angela Maddaloni (European Central Bank), & Veronica Veggente (Imperial College Business School) Corporate Nature Risk Perceptions by Snorre Gjerde (Norges Bank Investment Management), Zacharias Sautner (European Corporate Governance Institute), Alexander F. Wagner (European Corporate Governance Institute), & Alexis Wegerich (Norges Bank Investment Management) How to Deliver Mega-Scale Investment in Climate Infrastructure by Carter Casady (Stanford University) & Ashby Monk (Stanford University) Climate Boards: Do Natural Disaster Experiences Make Directors More Prosocial? by Sehoon Kim (University of Florida), Bernadette A. Minton (Ohio State University), & Rohan Williamson (Georgetown University) A Critique of the Apocalyptic Climate Narrative by Harry DeAngelo (University of Southern California) & Judith Curry (Georgia Institute of Technology) Intermediaries and Emissions Disclosures by Rongchen Li (Columbia Business School) The Natural Language of Finance by Gerard Hoberg (University of Southern California) & Asaf Manela (Washington University in St. Louis) The Influence of the “Environmentally-friendly” Character Through Asymmetries on Market Crash Price of Risk in Major Stock Sectors by Konstantinos A. Dimitriadis (Mesoyios College), Demetris Koursaros (Cyprus University of Technology), & Christos S. Savva (Cyprus University of Technology) Dirty Business: Transition Risk of Factor Portfolios by Ravi Jagannathan (Northwestern University), Iwan Meier (HEC Montreal), & Valeri Sokolovski (University of Alberta) Out of the Light, Into the Dark: How ‘Shadow Carbon Financing’ Hampers the Green Transition and Increases Climate-related Systemic Risk by Simon Schairer (University of Witten/Herdecke), Jan Fichtner (University of Witten/Herdecke), Riccardo Baioni (University of Witten/Herdecke), David Pereira de Castro (Copenhagen Business School), Nicolás Aguila (University of Witten/Herdecke), Janina Urban (University of Witten/Herdecke), Paula Haufe (University of Witten/Herdecke), & Joscha Wullweber (University of Witten/Herdecke) To read more research on Climate Finance, subscribe to SSRN’s Climate Finance eJournal or view other papers here.
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  • Neutral, Natural, and Cozy: Discovering the Curves of the Woven Apartment

    The Woven Apartment, designed by Khang Concept, is where the curves do the talking. The architectural forms create a statement of their own, letting understated design have its moment! The color palette is dominated by calming neutrals. Simultaneously, organic textures come together to add coziness. Whether it’s the arched details, woven finishes, or the muted palette, this home proves that minimalism doesn’t have to feel cold… it can feel like a hug.

    In the living room, a sculptural cream-toned sofa curves gently along the wall. This is grounded by a layered rug and organic coffee table. Floor-to-ceiling sheer curtains filter in natural light. The built-in bench seating and abstract wall art add character without clutter.

    The kitchen in the Woven Apartment is clean-lined and calming. It is a blend of matte cabinetry, wood textures, and soft under-cabinet lighting. The palette sticks to soothing tones, while the oversized hood and sleek open shelving bring drama.

    Tucked into a cozy nook, the dining area is all about organic flow. A custom-built banquette curves around a round black pedestal table, paired with a mix of rattan and sculptural chairs. A pendant lamp with natural textures floats above. This corner invites long, lingering meals and easy conversations.

    This bedroom is simple yet sophisticated. A soft upholstered bed adds functionality, while the wooden cabinetry provides storage space. A nightstand holds a globe lamp and a plant, adding to the decor of the otherwise minimalist room.

    The bedroom is a tranquil retreat. Custom wardrobes with woven panels frame a niche styled with ambient lighting. To the side, a sculptural desk with a chunky black leg and floating vanity shelves makes the space multifunctional. Natural light filters through full-length curtains, brushing softly against neutral bedding and organic textures.

    Playful yet polished, this bedroom features a soft, rainbow-arched headboard that adds charm. The mint green desk and sculptural shelves introduce a fun pop of color. With built-in wardrobes and a cozy workspace, it’s perfect for comfort as well as creativity.

    This bathroom continues the use of curves, as seen in the mirror. A terracotta-hued shower cubicle is segregated with a glass partition, keeping the space airy.

    The second bathroom uses the same terracotta color, but this time for the area around the vanity. This time, a curved partition separates the shower area. Matte black fixtures add visual interest.
    #neutral #natural #cozy #discovering #curves
    Neutral, Natural, and Cozy: Discovering the Curves of the Woven Apartment
    The Woven Apartment, designed by Khang Concept, is where the curves do the talking. The architectural forms create a statement of their own, letting understated design have its moment! The color palette is dominated by calming neutrals. Simultaneously, organic textures come together to add coziness. Whether it’s the arched details, woven finishes, or the muted palette, this home proves that minimalism doesn’t have to feel cold… it can feel like a hug. In the living room, a sculptural cream-toned sofa curves gently along the wall. This is grounded by a layered rug and organic coffee table. Floor-to-ceiling sheer curtains filter in natural light. The built-in bench seating and abstract wall art add character without clutter. The kitchen in the Woven Apartment is clean-lined and calming. It is a blend of matte cabinetry, wood textures, and soft under-cabinet lighting. The palette sticks to soothing tones, while the oversized hood and sleek open shelving bring drama. Tucked into a cozy nook, the dining area is all about organic flow. A custom-built banquette curves around a round black pedestal table, paired with a mix of rattan and sculptural chairs. A pendant lamp with natural textures floats above. This corner invites long, lingering meals and easy conversations. This bedroom is simple yet sophisticated. A soft upholstered bed adds functionality, while the wooden cabinetry provides storage space. A nightstand holds a globe lamp and a plant, adding to the decor of the otherwise minimalist room. The bedroom is a tranquil retreat. Custom wardrobes with woven panels frame a niche styled with ambient lighting. To the side, a sculptural desk with a chunky black leg and floating vanity shelves makes the space multifunctional. Natural light filters through full-length curtains, brushing softly against neutral bedding and organic textures. Playful yet polished, this bedroom features a soft, rainbow-arched headboard that adds charm. The mint green desk and sculptural shelves introduce a fun pop of color. With built-in wardrobes and a cozy workspace, it’s perfect for comfort as well as creativity. This bathroom continues the use of curves, as seen in the mirror. A terracotta-hued shower cubicle is segregated with a glass partition, keeping the space airy. The second bathroom uses the same terracotta color, but this time for the area around the vanity. This time, a curved partition separates the shower area. Matte black fixtures add visual interest. #neutral #natural #cozy #discovering #curves
    WWW.HOME-DESIGNING.COM
    Neutral, Natural, and Cozy: Discovering the Curves of the Woven Apartment
    The Woven Apartment, designed by Khang Concept, is where the curves do the talking. The architectural forms create a statement of their own, letting understated design have its moment! The color palette is dominated by calming neutrals. Simultaneously, organic textures come together to add coziness. Whether it’s the arched details, woven finishes, or the muted palette, this home proves that minimalism doesn’t have to feel cold… it can feel like a hug. In the living room, a sculptural cream-toned sofa curves gently along the wall. This is grounded by a layered rug and organic coffee table. Floor-to-ceiling sheer curtains filter in natural light. The built-in bench seating and abstract wall art add character without clutter. The kitchen in the Woven Apartment is clean-lined and calming. It is a blend of matte cabinetry, wood textures, and soft under-cabinet lighting. The palette sticks to soothing tones, while the oversized hood and sleek open shelving bring drama. Tucked into a cozy nook, the dining area is all about organic flow. A custom-built banquette curves around a round black pedestal table, paired with a mix of rattan and sculptural chairs. A pendant lamp with natural textures floats above. This corner invites long, lingering meals and easy conversations. This bedroom is simple yet sophisticated. A soft upholstered bed adds functionality, while the wooden cabinetry provides storage space. A nightstand holds a globe lamp and a plant, adding to the decor of the otherwise minimalist room. The bedroom is a tranquil retreat. Custom wardrobes with woven panels frame a niche styled with ambient lighting. To the side, a sculptural desk with a chunky black leg and floating vanity shelves makes the space multifunctional. Natural light filters through full-length curtains, brushing softly against neutral bedding and organic textures. Playful yet polished, this bedroom features a soft, rainbow-arched headboard that adds charm. The mint green desk and sculptural shelves introduce a fun pop of color. With built-in wardrobes and a cozy workspace, it’s perfect for comfort as well as creativity. This bathroom continues the use of curves, as seen in the mirror. A terracotta-hued shower cubicle is segregated with a glass partition, keeping the space airy. The second bathroom uses the same terracotta color, but this time for the area around the vanity. This time, a curved partition separates the shower area. Matte black fixtures add visual interest.
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  • How This Small Los Angeles Space Uses Color To "Keep It Tight"

    Nichols Canyon cuts through the south side of the Hollywood Hills, stretching from Hollywood Boulevard in the south up to Mulholland Drive in the north. Made famous by David Hockney, whose 1980 painting of the canyon sold for just over M in 2020, the area remains a thriving artist's community. What better place for Elle Decor A-List designer Oliver Furth to build a "creative cottage" for his partner, The Culture Creative founder Sean Yashar?Furth and Yashar, who've been together 14 years, met in the industry and purchased their home 7 years ago. When the lot next door—a pines-filled acre with a tiny house on it—came up for sale, the couple jumped at the chance to buy. "Anyone else would've torn it down and built something bigger," says Furth. "We replaced the windows and redid the kitchen and bathrooms, but we leaned into its size." Now drenched in Yashar's signature "eau de nil" pastel tones, the cottage embraces the character of its original 1940s structure while serving as a cutting-edge space for creativity.Kort HavensIn the sitting room, a Philippe Starck chrome side table from the original Royalton Hotel, from 1988, holds a place of pride with a group of Peter Shire and Ron Arad vintage chairs and a Rachel Shillander pyramidal lamp. Art includes greats of LA’s past and present: a Laddie John Dill mixed media, a Sam Falls tapestry, a Tom Holland metal relief, and a Strauss Bourque-LaFrance painting."All of my work is really portraiture." —Oliver Furth"My clients are all muses to me," says Yashar, who provides consulting services for designers. "I have to be a good listener and understand who the client is and how they connect to decorative arts history, so I spend a lot of time researching. How else can I be an authority?"To that end, the space is designed to provide a moment to reflect and the fodder to rev into high gear in equal measures; to facilitate rest as much as the chance to recharge. Following in the footsteps of Albert Hadley and Tony Duquette, Furth color-drenched the space in a mint green. "That color is the envelope—that's what I call it," says Furth. "We kept it very tight by lacquering the floors, the walls, and the ceiling in that color. Even the cabinetry and the appliances are in that mint. It allows us to have this object-driven interior space by unifying everything with color."Kort HavensA vintage Joe D’Urso for Knoll desk, Sam Maloof desk chair, Christopher Prinz stool and felt-clad speaker by Studio AHEAD create a sleek composition under an Ingo Mauer chandelier in the office. Art includes a triptych of photographs by David Benjamin Sherry, and framed magazine ads from Yashar’s parents’ furniture store, Moda Italia, from 1990.The seafoam hue unites not only the interior, but also decades of decorative history: Yashar found that the architect Paul Williams, who worked in LA in the 1940's and 50's, used a similar shade in many projects. "There's a lot of history and narrative within this color that maybe not everyone will be able to know, but hopefully everyone can feel," says Yashar. Clocking in at roughly 1,000-square-feet, the interior is now a mixture of millennial aesthetics, showcasing Yashar's love for design culture icons like Mario Buatta and Saul Bass. The entry sets the tone with its metal-and-glass Dutch door. A mixed-use meeting room offers a blend of contrasts, from Buatta-inspired shades in a Dickies-esque khaki twill to antique Chippendale chairs juxtaposed with 1990s Marc Newson tables. "All of my work is really portraiture," says Furth, "so this was an opportunity to help create this sort of portrait of Sean and his business." "Sometimes things just resonate...you just know when it's right." —Sean YasharThe sitting room features iconic design pieces, including a worn black leather sofa from the 1980s and a Philippe Starck table from the Royalton Hotel. Peter Shire and Ron Arad chairs are paired with conceptual furniture inspired by Dan Friedman. The kitchen celebrates postwar and ’80s influences with Smeg appliances and works by Soft Baroque and Patrick Nagel, grounded by a custom table from Studio MUKA. "A lot of people know me for my interest in eighties and nineties design culture," says Yashar. "But when I think eighties or nineties, I don't think of one thing. I don't want to choose. So I want to have Joe D'Urso high-tech track lighting, and I want it against these Mario Buatta-style balloon shades. I like that duality."Outside, a Persian-inspired courtyard nods to Yashar's heritage while offering dining and lounging areas that showcase rare 1980s furniture, including a Peter Lane ceramic table and one-off mint-colored Richard Schultz seating. The courtyard’s natural and faux vine murals create a satirical trompe-l’oeil effect, celebrating real-versus-virtual artistry. "I think we're both big believers in feeling," says Yashar. "Sometimes things just resonate. You can't really put your finger on it, but you just know that it's right."Sean SantiagoDeputy EditorSean Santiago is ELLE Decor's Deputy Editor, covering news, trends and talents in interior design, hospitality and travel, culture, and luxury shopping. Since starting his career at an interior design firm in 2011, he has gone on to cover the industry for Vogue, Architectural Digest, Sight Unseen, PIN-UP and Domino. He is the author of The Lonny Home, has produced scripted social content for brands including West Elm and Streeteasy, and is sometimes recognized on the street for his Instagram Reels series, #DanceToDecor
    #how #this #small #los #angeles
    How This Small Los Angeles Space Uses Color To "Keep It Tight"
    Nichols Canyon cuts through the south side of the Hollywood Hills, stretching from Hollywood Boulevard in the south up to Mulholland Drive in the north. Made famous by David Hockney, whose 1980 painting of the canyon sold for just over M in 2020, the area remains a thriving artist's community. What better place for Elle Decor A-List designer Oliver Furth to build a "creative cottage" for his partner, The Culture Creative founder Sean Yashar?Furth and Yashar, who've been together 14 years, met in the industry and purchased their home 7 years ago. When the lot next door—a pines-filled acre with a tiny house on it—came up for sale, the couple jumped at the chance to buy. "Anyone else would've torn it down and built something bigger," says Furth. "We replaced the windows and redid the kitchen and bathrooms, but we leaned into its size." Now drenched in Yashar's signature "eau de nil" pastel tones, the cottage embraces the character of its original 1940s structure while serving as a cutting-edge space for creativity.Kort HavensIn the sitting room, a Philippe Starck chrome side table from the original Royalton Hotel, from 1988, holds a place of pride with a group of Peter Shire and Ron Arad vintage chairs and a Rachel Shillander pyramidal lamp. Art includes greats of LA’s past and present: a Laddie John Dill mixed media, a Sam Falls tapestry, a Tom Holland metal relief, and a Strauss Bourque-LaFrance painting."All of my work is really portraiture." —Oliver Furth"My clients are all muses to me," says Yashar, who provides consulting services for designers. "I have to be a good listener and understand who the client is and how they connect to decorative arts history, so I spend a lot of time researching. How else can I be an authority?"To that end, the space is designed to provide a moment to reflect and the fodder to rev into high gear in equal measures; to facilitate rest as much as the chance to recharge. Following in the footsteps of Albert Hadley and Tony Duquette, Furth color-drenched the space in a mint green. "That color is the envelope—that's what I call it," says Furth. "We kept it very tight by lacquering the floors, the walls, and the ceiling in that color. Even the cabinetry and the appliances are in that mint. It allows us to have this object-driven interior space by unifying everything with color."Kort HavensA vintage Joe D’Urso for Knoll desk, Sam Maloof desk chair, Christopher Prinz stool and felt-clad speaker by Studio AHEAD create a sleek composition under an Ingo Mauer chandelier in the office. Art includes a triptych of photographs by David Benjamin Sherry, and framed magazine ads from Yashar’s parents’ furniture store, Moda Italia, from 1990.The seafoam hue unites not only the interior, but also decades of decorative history: Yashar found that the architect Paul Williams, who worked in LA in the 1940's and 50's, used a similar shade in many projects. "There's a lot of history and narrative within this color that maybe not everyone will be able to know, but hopefully everyone can feel," says Yashar. Clocking in at roughly 1,000-square-feet, the interior is now a mixture of millennial aesthetics, showcasing Yashar's love for design culture icons like Mario Buatta and Saul Bass. The entry sets the tone with its metal-and-glass Dutch door. A mixed-use meeting room offers a blend of contrasts, from Buatta-inspired shades in a Dickies-esque khaki twill to antique Chippendale chairs juxtaposed with 1990s Marc Newson tables. "All of my work is really portraiture," says Furth, "so this was an opportunity to help create this sort of portrait of Sean and his business." "Sometimes things just resonate...you just know when it's right." —Sean YasharThe sitting room features iconic design pieces, including a worn black leather sofa from the 1980s and a Philippe Starck table from the Royalton Hotel. Peter Shire and Ron Arad chairs are paired with conceptual furniture inspired by Dan Friedman. The kitchen celebrates postwar and ’80s influences with Smeg appliances and works by Soft Baroque and Patrick Nagel, grounded by a custom table from Studio MUKA. "A lot of people know me for my interest in eighties and nineties design culture," says Yashar. "But when I think eighties or nineties, I don't think of one thing. I don't want to choose. So I want to have Joe D'Urso high-tech track lighting, and I want it against these Mario Buatta-style balloon shades. I like that duality."Outside, a Persian-inspired courtyard nods to Yashar's heritage while offering dining and lounging areas that showcase rare 1980s furniture, including a Peter Lane ceramic table and one-off mint-colored Richard Schultz seating. The courtyard’s natural and faux vine murals create a satirical trompe-l’oeil effect, celebrating real-versus-virtual artistry. "I think we're both big believers in feeling," says Yashar. "Sometimes things just resonate. You can't really put your finger on it, but you just know that it's right."Sean SantiagoDeputy EditorSean Santiago is ELLE Decor's Deputy Editor, covering news, trends and talents in interior design, hospitality and travel, culture, and luxury shopping. Since starting his career at an interior design firm in 2011, he has gone on to cover the industry for Vogue, Architectural Digest, Sight Unseen, PIN-UP and Domino. He is the author of The Lonny Home, has produced scripted social content for brands including West Elm and Streeteasy, and is sometimes recognized on the street for his Instagram Reels series, #DanceToDecor #how #this #small #los #angeles
    WWW.ELLEDECOR.COM
    How This Small Los Angeles Space Uses Color To "Keep It Tight"
    Nichols Canyon cuts through the south side of the Hollywood Hills, stretching from Hollywood Boulevard in the south up to Mulholland Drive in the north. Made famous by David Hockney, whose 1980 painting of the canyon sold for just over $41M in 2020, the area remains a thriving artist's community. What better place for Elle Decor A-List designer Oliver Furth to build a "creative cottage" for his partner, The Culture Creative founder Sean Yashar?Furth and Yashar, who've been together 14 years, met in the industry and purchased their home 7 years ago. When the lot next door—a pines-filled acre with a tiny house on it—came up for sale, the couple jumped at the chance to buy. "Anyone else would've torn it down and built something bigger," says Furth. "We replaced the windows and redid the kitchen and bathrooms, but we leaned into its size." Now drenched in Yashar's signature "eau de nil" pastel tones, the cottage embraces the character of its original 1940s structure while serving as a cutting-edge space for creativity.Kort HavensIn the sitting room, a Philippe Starck chrome side table from the original Royalton Hotel, from 1988, holds a place of pride with a group of Peter Shire and Ron Arad vintage chairs and a Rachel Shillander pyramidal lamp. Art includes greats of LA’s past and present: a Laddie John Dill mixed media, a Sam Falls tapestry, a Tom Holland metal relief, and a Strauss Bourque-LaFrance painting."All of my work is really portraiture." —Oliver Furth"My clients are all muses to me," says Yashar, who provides consulting services for designers. "I have to be a good listener and understand who the client is and how they connect to decorative arts history, so I spend a lot of time researching. How else can I be an authority?"To that end, the space is designed to provide a moment to reflect and the fodder to rev into high gear in equal measures; to facilitate rest as much as the chance to recharge. Following in the footsteps of Albert Hadley and Tony Duquette (who once declared malachite a neutral), Furth color-drenched the space in a mint green. "That color is the envelope—that's what I call it," says Furth. "We kept it very tight by lacquering the floors, the walls, and the ceiling in that color. Even the cabinetry and the appliances are in that mint. It allows us to have this object-driven interior space by unifying everything with color."Kort HavensA vintage Joe D’Urso for Knoll desk, Sam Maloof desk chair, Christopher Prinz stool and felt-clad speaker by Studio AHEAD create a sleek composition under an Ingo Mauer chandelier in the office. Art includes a triptych of photographs by David Benjamin Sherry, and framed magazine ads from Yashar’s parents’ furniture store, Moda Italia, from 1990.The seafoam hue unites not only the interior, but also decades of decorative history: Yashar found that the architect Paul Williams, who worked in LA in the 1940's and 50's, used a similar shade in many projects. "There's a lot of history and narrative within this color that maybe not everyone will be able to know, but hopefully everyone can feel," says Yashar. Clocking in at roughly 1,000-square-feet, the interior is now a mixture of millennial aesthetics, showcasing Yashar's love for design culture icons like Mario Buatta and Saul Bass. The entry sets the tone with its metal-and-glass Dutch door. A mixed-use meeting room offers a blend of contrasts, from Buatta-inspired shades in a Dickies-esque khaki twill to antique Chippendale chairs juxtaposed with 1990s Marc Newson tables. "All of my work is really portraiture," says Furth, "so this was an opportunity to help create this sort of portrait of Sean and his business." "Sometimes things just resonate...you just know when it's right." —Sean YasharThe sitting room features iconic design pieces, including a worn black leather sofa from the 1980s and a Philippe Starck table from the Royalton Hotel. Peter Shire and Ron Arad chairs are paired with conceptual furniture inspired by Dan Friedman. The kitchen celebrates postwar and ’80s influences with Smeg appliances and works by Soft Baroque and Patrick Nagel, grounded by a custom table from Studio MUKA. "A lot of people know me for my interest in eighties and nineties design culture," says Yashar. "But when I think eighties or nineties, I don't think of one thing. I don't want to choose. So I want to have Joe D'Urso high-tech track lighting, and I want it against these Mario Buatta-style balloon shades. I like that duality."Outside, a Persian-inspired courtyard nods to Yashar's heritage while offering dining and lounging areas that showcase rare 1980s furniture, including a Peter Lane ceramic table and one-off mint-colored Richard Schultz seating. The courtyard’s natural and faux vine murals create a satirical trompe-l’oeil effect, celebrating real-versus-virtual artistry. "I think we're both big believers in feeling," says Yashar. "Sometimes things just resonate. You can't really put your finger on it, but you just know that it's right."Sean SantiagoDeputy EditorSean Santiago is ELLE Decor's Deputy Editor, covering news, trends and talents in interior design, hospitality and travel, culture, and luxury shopping. Since starting his career at an interior design firm in 2011, he has gone on to cover the industry for Vogue, Architectural Digest, Sight Unseen, PIN-UP and Domino. He is the author of The Lonny Home (Weldon Owens, 2018), has produced scripted social content for brands including West Elm and Streeteasy, and is sometimes recognized on the street for his Instagram Reels series, #DanceToDecor
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  • My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: The Samsung Galaxy S25

    We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.Samsung announced the new Galaxy S25 Series back in January, a three-phone lineup with a fourth variation that was teased a month later, which you can preorder right now with a Amazon gift card before its May 30 release. Out of those four, the Galaxy S25 is the most basic model with the lowest price, and currently, it's hitting a new record low price of, according to price-tracking tools.

    SAMSUNG Galaxy S25

    128GB AI Smartphone, Unlocked Android, AI Camera, Fast Processor, ProScaler Display, Long Battery Li

    The S25 has some upgrades from the S24 lineup: The best features in the OS are shared by all four phones, so you can still enjoy the best features from One UI 7, including exclusive media and notifications features from the cheapest option. Two of the best are Now Bar and Now Brief, which show you brief alerts or notifications personalized to your feed and activities.The Galaxy S25 runs on the Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy, has three rear lenses, including a 50MP wide-angle lens, and a 6.2-inch and 120Hz OLED display. The RAM is a generous 12GB, with the storage options starting at 128 GB. Currently, the mint color is the cheapest available. PCMag gave the Galaxy S25 an "excellent" review for its useful AI features, a bright screen, good battery life, and excellent build quality. You can expect about 14 hours of juice from this phone. Keep in mind it does not support the S Pen stylus. Given its small size of 5.78 by 2.78 by 0.28 inches, it's a great option for those who prefer smaller phones.
    #favorite #amazon #deal #day #samsung
    My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: The Samsung Galaxy S25
    We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.Samsung announced the new Galaxy S25 Series back in January, a three-phone lineup with a fourth variation that was teased a month later, which you can preorder right now with a Amazon gift card before its May 30 release. Out of those four, the Galaxy S25 is the most basic model with the lowest price, and currently, it's hitting a new record low price of, according to price-tracking tools. SAMSUNG Galaxy S25 128GB AI Smartphone, Unlocked Android, AI Camera, Fast Processor, ProScaler Display, Long Battery Li The S25 has some upgrades from the S24 lineup: The best features in the OS are shared by all four phones, so you can still enjoy the best features from One UI 7, including exclusive media and notifications features from the cheapest option. Two of the best are Now Bar and Now Brief, which show you brief alerts or notifications personalized to your feed and activities.The Galaxy S25 runs on the Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy, has three rear lenses, including a 50MP wide-angle lens, and a 6.2-inch and 120Hz OLED display. The RAM is a generous 12GB, with the storage options starting at 128 GB. Currently, the mint color is the cheapest available. PCMag gave the Galaxy S25 an "excellent" review for its useful AI features, a bright screen, good battery life, and excellent build quality. You can expect about 14 hours of juice from this phone. Keep in mind it does not support the S Pen stylus. Given its small size of 5.78 by 2.78 by 0.28 inches, it's a great option for those who prefer smaller phones. #favorite #amazon #deal #day #samsung
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    My Favorite Amazon Deal of the Day: The Samsung Galaxy S25
    We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.Samsung announced the new Galaxy S25 Series back in January, a three-phone lineup with a fourth variation that was teased a month later, which you can preorder right now with a $50 Amazon gift card before its May 30 release. Out of those four, the Galaxy S25 is the most basic model with the lowest price, and currently, it's hitting a new record low price of $624.99 (originally $799.99), according to price-tracking tools. SAMSUNG Galaxy S25 128GB AI Smartphone, Unlocked Android, AI Camera, Fast Processor, ProScaler Display, Long Battery Li $624.99 at Amazon $799.99 Save $175.00 Get Deal Get Deal $624.99 at Amazon $799.99 Save $175.00 The S25 has some upgrades from the S24 lineup: The best features in the OS are shared by all four phones, so you can still enjoy the best features from One UI 7, including exclusive media and notifications features from the cheapest option. Two of the best are Now Bar and Now Brief, which show you brief alerts or notifications personalized to your feed and activities.The Galaxy S25 runs on the Snapdragon 8 Elite for Galaxy, has three rear lenses, including a 50MP wide-angle lens, and a 6.2-inch and 120Hz OLED display. The RAM is a generous 12GB, with the storage options starting at 128 GB. Currently, the mint color is the cheapest available. PCMag gave the Galaxy S25 an "excellent" review for its useful AI features, a bright screen, good battery life, and excellent build quality. You can expect about 14 hours of juice from this phone. Keep in mind it does not support the S Pen stylus. Given its small size of 5.78 by 2.78 by 0.28 inches, it's a great option for those who prefer smaller phones.
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  • Suddenly Freed From Prison, Silk Road Founder Stunned by Advancements in World Since 2013

    The 12-year campaign to free Ross Ulbricht — the criminal mastermind behind the Silk Road, the original crypto-enabled dark web mail-order-drug emporium — finally ended in January, when newly-minted second term president Donald Trump officially pardoned the bitcoin criminal.Now, Ulbricht is picking up where he left off, getting his first taste of a world he left behind in 2013 when a federal judge sentenced him to two counts of life in prison, plus 40 years without parole.In sum, Ulbricht's feeling some culture shock. Taking the stage at the Bitcoin 2025 conference in Las Vegas this week, the drug kingpin was agog at the piles of kitschy tech products that had passed him by."When I walked out of prison a few months ago, I’d never seen a drone, used AI, or tried VR. I hadn’t even chatted with AI," Ulbricht marveled. "Now it's all hitting me at once — the freedom, the technology, the fact that I have a future again."He also basked in the glow of the crypto community's love — a parasocial following that lavished his clemency petition with over 600,000 signatures and an astonishing number of right-libertarian micro-celebrity endorsements."You didn't abandon me. You didn't forget me. You wrote me letters. You raised money for my defense. When I was silenced, you spoke up against the slander and the smears," the former dope baron lauded.Keep in mind, this wasn't a political activist jailed for protesting an unjust war, or a whistleblower whose life was destroyed after revealing a massive corporate fraud scheme.This is a guy who made millions selling drugs to teenagers and communities ravaged by the opioid crisis, resulting in at least six overdose deaths that we know of.At its peak in 2013, Ulbricht's Silk Road saw an estimated daily connected user base of 5.5 million. In just two years, it processed some billion in illicit sales, according to the Department of Homeland Security.Through transaction fees, the service generated over million worth of Bitcoin. Authorities in 2014 called it the "most sophisticated and extensive criminal marketplace on the internet."Of course, Ulbricht's saving grace isn't some ethical dilemma Trump has over incarceration or judicial mishandling, but the fact that he built Silk Road off the then-nascent blockchain. That single fact has cemented his status as a crypto superstar.For context, out of the 1.2 million citizens incarcerated in the US, over 360,000 of them face charges of nonviolent drug possession.In 2023, there were roughly 870,000 arrests for drug-related charges, the vast majority, or 87.8 percent of which were for drug possession — in other words, for carrying an impossibly tiny fraction of the volume that passed through Ulbricht's drug empire every minute.With his new lease on life, Ulbricht plans on paying it forward — not as an advocate for carceral reform or prison abolition, but to the crypto community of get-rich-quick schemers and granny scammers."With so much speed and chaos, it’s more important than ever to stay true to our principles," he told the crowd of cryptobros. "If we agree that we deserve freedom and thatdecentralization secures it, we can stand together. Have each other’s backs, as you had mine. Freedom, decentralization, unity — stay true to these, and the future is ours."More on crypto: Visitors At This Bitcoin-Heated Spa Are Complaining About Mold and UTIsShare This Article
    #suddenly #freed #prison #silk #road
    Suddenly Freed From Prison, Silk Road Founder Stunned by Advancements in World Since 2013
    The 12-year campaign to free Ross Ulbricht — the criminal mastermind behind the Silk Road, the original crypto-enabled dark web mail-order-drug emporium — finally ended in January, when newly-minted second term president Donald Trump officially pardoned the bitcoin criminal.Now, Ulbricht is picking up where he left off, getting his first taste of a world he left behind in 2013 when a federal judge sentenced him to two counts of life in prison, plus 40 years without parole.In sum, Ulbricht's feeling some culture shock. Taking the stage at the Bitcoin 2025 conference in Las Vegas this week, the drug kingpin was agog at the piles of kitschy tech products that had passed him by."When I walked out of prison a few months ago, I’d never seen a drone, used AI, or tried VR. I hadn’t even chatted with AI," Ulbricht marveled. "Now it's all hitting me at once — the freedom, the technology, the fact that I have a future again."He also basked in the glow of the crypto community's love — a parasocial following that lavished his clemency petition with over 600,000 signatures and an astonishing number of right-libertarian micro-celebrity endorsements."You didn't abandon me. You didn't forget me. You wrote me letters. You raised money for my defense. When I was silenced, you spoke up against the slander and the smears," the former dope baron lauded.Keep in mind, this wasn't a political activist jailed for protesting an unjust war, or a whistleblower whose life was destroyed after revealing a massive corporate fraud scheme.This is a guy who made millions selling drugs to teenagers and communities ravaged by the opioid crisis, resulting in at least six overdose deaths that we know of.At its peak in 2013, Ulbricht's Silk Road saw an estimated daily connected user base of 5.5 million. In just two years, it processed some billion in illicit sales, according to the Department of Homeland Security.Through transaction fees, the service generated over million worth of Bitcoin. Authorities in 2014 called it the "most sophisticated and extensive criminal marketplace on the internet."Of course, Ulbricht's saving grace isn't some ethical dilemma Trump has over incarceration or judicial mishandling, but the fact that he built Silk Road off the then-nascent blockchain. That single fact has cemented his status as a crypto superstar.For context, out of the 1.2 million citizens incarcerated in the US, over 360,000 of them face charges of nonviolent drug possession.In 2023, there were roughly 870,000 arrests for drug-related charges, the vast majority, or 87.8 percent of which were for drug possession — in other words, for carrying an impossibly tiny fraction of the volume that passed through Ulbricht's drug empire every minute.With his new lease on life, Ulbricht plans on paying it forward — not as an advocate for carceral reform or prison abolition, but to the crypto community of get-rich-quick schemers and granny scammers."With so much speed and chaos, it’s more important than ever to stay true to our principles," he told the crowd of cryptobros. "If we agree that we deserve freedom and thatdecentralization secures it, we can stand together. Have each other’s backs, as you had mine. Freedom, decentralization, unity — stay true to these, and the future is ours."More on crypto: Visitors At This Bitcoin-Heated Spa Are Complaining About Mold and UTIsShare This Article #suddenly #freed #prison #silk #road
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    Suddenly Freed From Prison, Silk Road Founder Stunned by Advancements in World Since 2013
    The 12-year campaign to free Ross Ulbricht — the criminal mastermind behind the Silk Road, the original crypto-enabled dark web mail-order-drug emporium — finally ended in January, when newly-minted second term president Donald Trump officially pardoned the bitcoin criminal.Now, Ulbricht is picking up where he left off, getting his first taste of a world he left behind in 2013 when a federal judge sentenced him to two counts of life in prison, plus 40 years without parole.In sum, Ulbricht's feeling some culture shock. Taking the stage at the Bitcoin 2025 conference in Las Vegas this week, the drug kingpin was agog at the piles of kitschy tech products that had passed him by."When I walked out of prison a few months ago, I’d never seen a drone, used AI, or tried VR. I hadn’t even chatted with AI," Ulbricht marveled. "Now it's all hitting me at once — the freedom, the technology, the fact that I have a future again."He also basked in the glow of the crypto community's love — a parasocial following that lavished his clemency petition with over 600,000 signatures and an astonishing number of right-libertarian micro-celebrity endorsements."You didn't abandon me. You didn't forget me. You wrote me letters. You raised money for my defense. When I was silenced, you spoke up against the slander and the smears," the former dope baron lauded.Keep in mind, this wasn't a political activist jailed for protesting an unjust war, or a whistleblower whose life was destroyed after revealing a massive corporate fraud scheme.This is a guy who made millions selling drugs to teenagers and communities ravaged by the opioid crisis, resulting in at least six overdose deaths that we know of. (Not to mention the hitmen he tried to hire to take out his enemies, though he was unsuccessful.)At its peak in 2013, Ulbricht's Silk Road saw an estimated daily connected user base of 5.5 million. In just two years, it processed some $1.2 billion in illicit sales, according to the Department of Homeland Security.Through transaction fees, the service generated over $80 million worth of Bitcoin. Authorities in 2014 called it the "most sophisticated and extensive criminal marketplace on the internet."Of course, Ulbricht's saving grace isn't some ethical dilemma Trump has over incarceration or judicial mishandling, but the fact that he built Silk Road off the then-nascent blockchain. That single fact has cemented his status as a crypto superstar.For context, out of the 1.2 million citizens incarcerated in the US, over 360,000 of them face charges of nonviolent drug possession.In 2023, there were roughly 870,000 arrests for drug-related charges, the vast majority, or 87.8 percent of which were for drug possession — in other words, for carrying an impossibly tiny fraction of the volume that passed through Ulbricht's drug empire every minute.With his new lease on life, Ulbricht plans on paying it forward — not as an advocate for carceral reform or prison abolition, but to the crypto community of get-rich-quick schemers and granny scammers."With so much speed and chaos, it’s more important than ever to stay true to our principles," he told the crowd of cryptobros. "If we agree that we deserve freedom and that [crypto] decentralization secures it, we can stand together. Have each other’s backs, as you had mine. Freedom, decentralization, unity — stay true to these, and the future is ours."More on crypto: Visitors At This Bitcoin-Heated Spa Are Complaining About Mold and UTIsShare This Article
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