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If you've been by the home store lately, you've probably seen the totally rockin' Punk Princess Room Display. The inspiration behind the room is our very own Store Manager at Aldea Baby, Cantwell Muckenfuss III!

The Punk Princess Room

A Punk Princess loves black just as much as she loves pink. A punk rock princess knows how to spice up any room—she's not just frills and lace, pink and poesy. A splash of black behind a skull and crossbones, this sugar and spice princess isn't always nice. This is a girl who knows how to rescue herself, and she makes sure to do it in style! A black tutu and a pink bow, a tiara and combat boots, now we are talking!

Products available at Aldea Baby and Aldea Home.



Creative Feature: Punk Princess Room Display

October 17, 2013 by Aldea Home

Love hearing yourself talk? The innovative and entertaining Voice Recorder by Richard Upchurch is a device that is sure to bring out your silliest side. We got the chance to chat with Upchurch recently (sadly, not through Voice Recorders), and we're excited to bring you his witty and oftentimes novel insights.

Where are you from originally and how did the local culture shape you as a designer/maker?
I grew up in Tupelo, MS (birthplace of Elvis). My backyard was the Natchez Trace and as a kid I was free to roam and explore until my mom’s voice came through the pine trees to let me know it was too dark to keep playing ('adult dark') and time for me to come inside. So there was that freedom.

But my dad, an attorney by trade, is a first rate artisan. He loves leather work and I can’t recall the last time I wore a belt that wasn’t made by him. He cuts, tools, and dyes each piece by hand. Custom leather boxes, bracelets, watch bands, belts, and what I would say is his 'prize winner'—a leather checkerboard with dyed cedar pieces for the checkers (built for my mom).
He taught me the joy of figuring it out. Sure you could buy it in the store, but why not see if you can figure out the process, and then create something. Process is where you end up living your life, so why not enjoy getting to understand that system rather than just let someone tell you how it will be.

What initially inspired to make your product?
I wanted my nephew to have the experience of a tape record where you could record your voice, play it back and get all those little happy accidents you get with tape; the sounds of fast forward/ rewind, tape drag, etc. So I decided I’d just build him a gadget that could record his voice with a pitch control knob. He took the recorder to show and tell and his teachers asked if they could buy a few. So I kept making these little gadgets in my apartment.

What is your favorite step in the creation of your product?
Discovery: I love that moment when you’ve figured it out your way, someone else comes along and suggests you try it another way. Then you modify your whole system only to find some other slight variation in process. In the process you find something in which you never intended.

Then you put an object out in the world and it gets used in ways you never imagined. When you have that 'you can do that with it' moment and then you see it get passed on to the next person that finds a new way of seeing it…I mean, that’s beautiful.

What hobbies inspire your designs/products?
1) Since I was a child I loved the record player. Changing the speed control, dragging the record, and while I never will claim to be 'Cut Chemist', I am a sucker for listening to guys who can scratch. I guess that’s a roundabout way of saying I love listening to records.
2) I ride my bike everywhere and in a city like New York, I find inspiration in every crack of the sidewalk.
3) Travel. Other cultures are wildly inspiring.
4) Eating with friends. I love sitting with friends, talking and laughing. Is that hobby?

What is your favorite color?
I’ve been really into blues toward the violets. I mean there is magic in this spectrum depending on light, angle, and sometimes you see what you want to see. Otherwise, I’ll sit in front of a Rothko all day long.

What is your favorite shape and why?
I am in love with the shape of Brancusi’s Bird in Space. That elongated figure is something I think about every day.

What is your favorite texture this season?
Well, fall is just about to break here so I’ll have to get back to you on this. In general, I love the feel of a piece of maple or cherry or any really beautiful wood grain that has been sanded smooth.

What did you see of interest today?
To be honest my day isn’t over, so I hate to say. But I guess for sake of being a good sport, I went out to get a coffee and this neon blue car pulls up at the stop sign with Bob Dylan's 'Like A Rolling Stone' blasting. Just a strange moment knowing that Dylan was writing these tunes a few blocks away on Leroy Street. So I take in the tune, the vibe the driver is feeling, all the people filling the streets, the buildings. It's just a moment.

Also I built these frogs for Wayne Coyne of the Flaming Lips and sent them to him a few days ago...here is what he came up with...now this is of interest....amazing!

What is your motto?
Recently: Surround yourself with creative, positive, loving people and you’ll find nothing but possibilities.

Thanks and have a great week!

Creative Profile: Richard Upchurch

October 08, 2013 by Aldea Home

Earthlust water bottles

We started carrying EarthLust bottles at Aldea more than eight years ago because we identified so much with their mission: to provide consumers with planet-friendly, durable, and chic products so they will naturally gravitate towards the eco-conscious options. Earlier this week we met up with Allison Tryk, the green-spirational San Francisco-based owner of EarthLust, and had a quick chat with her about EarthLust's origins and her recent inspirations.

Where are you from originally and how did the local culture shape you as a designer/maker?
I was born in Albuquerque, and grew up in Cleveland. My parents were hippies, so we didn't fit in very well in suburban Cleveland Heights. Their commitment to sustainable living probably influenced my decision to start a reusable bottle company. Not really fitting in probably helped me to not care what people think and design for myself.

What initially inspired you to make your product?
I wanted a stainless steel bottle, but couldn't find one that was an accessory. They were all functional and utilitarian at the time. I designed images that I liked and Aldea was one of the first stores to stock them 6 years ago.

What is your favorite step in the creation of your product?
The design process, the implementation is usually challenging.

What hobbies inspire your designs/products?
I have chickens, so they're on a bottle. We also love to travel and find inspiration there.

What is your favorite color?
Yellow

What is your favorite shape and why?
Oval, it's a very organic shape and not quite as perfect as the circle.

What is your favorite texture this season?
Leather, if that's a texture. Even though I'm a vegetarian…

What did you see of interest today?
A large pop up dinner in San Francisco where everyone was wearing white. It was visually interesting.

What is your motto?
There's a solution to every problem, but it may require a glass of wine.

Creative Profile: Allison Tryk of EarthLust

September 29, 2013 by Aldea Home

In a word, Jane Van Cleef's organically-certified friends are magical. Charming and exquisite, each woodland creature is made with the most impeccable detail from the cotton embroidery floss for their noses and eyes, to the lace trim on their adorable outfits. We sat down with Van Cleef to talk about her inspirations and creative process, and found that she is every bit as lovely and delightful as her forest friends.

Where are you from originally and how did the local culture shape you as a designer/maker?

I'm from New Jersey, but my mom is from Bucks County, Pennsylvania. When I imagine the animals' woodland world, the landscape and buildings are a lot like the old houses, woods, and fields of that part of the country.

Also, when I was growing up there was a historical reenactment farm called Waterloo Village, up in the hills of northwestern New Jersey. It's closed now, but I took a lot of field trips and summer day trips there as a child. I loved watching people do arts and crafts like weaving and blacksmithing.

What initially inspired to make your product?
I really just set out to make the exact thing I would want for myself, or that I would make for my little sister or another special baby—the animals are soft, cute, a fun size to play with, and all their clothes 'work,' i.e., nothing permanently stuck on, no fake bows that don't really tie.

What is your favorite step in the creation of your product?
When I've been concentrating really hard on getting a design right, and I suddenly realize, 'Awwww...that's a mouse, and its belly is really chubby and its hat is pointy!' Basically I crack myself up, and then I know I've gotten it right.

What hobbies inspire your designs/products?
I love doing elaborate embroidery. If I had a couple clones of myself, the first two or three clones would help me with business tasks. And then the other clone could do embroidered fine art projects.

What is your favorite color?
Vermilion red that often gets confused with orange. It's the color of Catalina Mouse's bonnet.

What is your favorite shape and why?
The hexagon because they tesselate together in such a satisfying way. Similarly, my favorite number is 36 because you can divide it up neatly so many ways, and if you have 36 things you can arrange them in either a square or a triangle. That's why there are 36 Rockettes.

What is your favorite texture this season?
Moss.

What did you see of interest today?
Today is my birthday and I went to the Cloisters, which is a museum of medieval art where I saw some things of interest. There was one tapestry with guys in armor around the edges, and their portraits had different patterned backgrounds which is the same way I do the animal portraits on the website. And I saw the unicorn tapestries, which have a lot of cute animals like dogs and bunnies.

What is your motto?
Soft power.

Creative Profile: Hazel Village - Jane Van Cleef

September 24, 2013 by Aldea Home

If you've never had the chance to see one of Robert Minervini's gorgeous murals, you're in for a treat. Based out of San Francisco, Minervini's work is both sublime and inventive, mesmerizing in his use of colors and landscapes. We're lucky enough to have him create an original mural for Aldea, and got a chance to sit down and chat with Minervini about his work and inspirations—check out our interview with him below.

Where are you from originally and how did the local culture shape you as a designer/maker?
I grew up in North Jersey and the Philadelphia suburbs until college, then in Philadelphia for 8 years before moving to SF. I'm a first generation Italian American, so living in different places and crossing cultures has definitely shaped my taste in art.
What initially inspired to make your product?
I've been making murals for almost 10 years now. I was approached to make this mural for Aldea from a friend who is a designer for the company. It was a nice way to try and translate my painting style into a kid-friendly mural.
What is your favorite step in the creation of your product?
I love starting projects, when the possibilities seem endless. It's fun to see where projects end up creatively and how people interact with them.

What hobbies inspire your designs/products?
Photography and reading mostly.
What is your favorite color?
Normally I'd say blue-green, but recently I've been using a lot of semi-neon yellow orange and it's really growing on me.

What is your favorite shape and why?
The shape that comes out of making something unintentionally.
What is your favorite texture this season?
Flannel.
What did you see of interest today?
Some great cloud formations over the bay.
What is your motto?
Find beauty in the everyday.

Creative Profile: Robert Minervini

September 22, 2013 by Aldea Home

We got the chance to sit down and have a chat with the wonderful and brilliant Emily Fischer of Haptic Lab recently. Fischer makes beautifully tactile quilts that take the shape of city maps—these quilts are both breathtaking and stunning when you see them in person. Read on to learn about her inspirations and more.

Where are you from originally and how did the local culture shape you as a designer/maker?
I’m from River Falls, Wisconsin. It’s a smallish farming community with strong Scandinavian and German heritage, so I was surrounded by handmade craft items from a very early age and quilting was a big part of that experience.

What initially inspired to make your product?
The City Quilts projects began in 2002 as an academic experiment in tactile way-finding. My mom had recently begun losing her eyesight from complications of glaucoma, and the quilts were meant to explore new ways of seeing though touch. “Haptic” is derived from the Greek work for touch, and everything I make is inspired by that sense.

What is your favorite step in the creation of your product?
Drawing each map by hand. All the quilt templates are scaled precisely to the map of a given locale and I spend hours hand-tracing GIS information for each map before the quilters start sewing. I love discovering the idiosyncratic patterns of each city. Like the Kevin Lynch book The Image of the City.

What hobbies inspire your designs/products?
I used to work as an architect professionally, but now architecture has become my hobby. So architectural thinking inspires a lot of what I do: plans, sections, elevations, three-dimensional models—but also the structural logic, spatial logic, and materiality of things. The kite project I’m currently working on was derived almost completely from my architectural training.

What is your favorite shape and why?
Right now, the shape of a bear’s butt. My team and I watch the live bearcams at Katmai National Park via explore.org. We’ve watched nothing else for months, and I’m still delighted every time I see a bear enter the frame.

There’s a specific word that describes this feeling, “nervio”. To experience nervio is to find something so adorable that you have to restrain yourself from wanting to hurt it. I have to restrain myself from flying to Alaska to become a Timothy Treadwell type and live with the bears...because of course, bears are vicious, dangerous animals that don’t understand webcams and/or human empathy.

What is your favorite texture this season?
Cobblestones.

What did you see of interest today?
This tile pattern:

What is your motto?
These bootstraps aren’t going to pull themselves.

Creative Profile: Emily Fischer

September 22, 2013 by Aldea Home

Aldea Sutro Onsies and Tees

Today we bring you an interview with a designer and artist who works out of both Brooklyn and San Francisco, Deric Carner. Carner is the creator of unique and timeless onesies based on iconic San Francisco landmarks, perfect for your infants and toddlers.

Where are you from originally and how did the local culture shape you as a designer/maker?
I lived in many places as a youth including Switzerland, Holland, Spain and California. These places have strong modernist histories which I absorbed alongside the counterculture styles of punk, graffiti, agitprop and board culture. I was drawn to design as a universal language that is both rational and expressive. In my work I strive for clarity, but also a certain texture and whimsy to move beyond formula.

What initially inspired to make your product?
Visitors and locals are always asking for product sthat show Bay Area pride. The normal tourist fodder is hard to relate to other than ironically. We wanted to make our own fun designs. Justin Godar's Sutro Coat Rack was the initial inspiration. Mission locals know the Sutro Tower as an icon of their neighborhood experience. West Oakland's freight cranes are equally recognizable to anyone who has commuted to the East Bay or gone to art and music shows there.

What is your favorite step in the creation of your product?
I always get excited when I finally get to see something physical come back from a printer—AND there are no print errors.

What hobbies inspire your designs/products?
I have an active studio art practice which informs and complements my design practice. Also I collect vintage advertisements and printed matter—especially Deco era perfume ads.

What is your favorite color?
Indigo

What is your favorite shape and why?
The donut, because it is all surface, with no edges and yet has an inside.

What is your favorite texture this season?
Muddied halftone. For spring I am working with crinkled mylar.

What did you see of interest today?
A antique New York City pull-lever voting machine. I voted for Ed Koch.

What is your motto?
Nothing is True. Everything is Permitted.

View Aldea exclusive onesies and toddler tees.Oakland Crane design

Creative Profile: Deric Carner

September 16, 2013 by Aldea Home

You've probably seen the striking Sutro Tower Coatrack displayed in our store recently—today we bring you an interview with the brilliant designer behind them, Justin Godar. Building wood furniture and cabinets out of San Francisco, Godar creates innovative seating from old world materials and time-tested construction.

Where are you from originally and how did the local culture shape you as a designer/maker?
I'm from Walnut Creek, the son of an interior decorator and an industrial bookbinder. I suppose that had something to do with the fact that I work with machines all day to make mostly walnut furniture.

What initially inspired you to make your product?
Sutro Tower, of course. It's the one landmark here that most locals see on a regular basis, so many of us hold a special affection for it. It's our Eiffel Tower.
Being a furniture designer, I've always thought it looked like a nice coat rack. When I realized nobody was making a Sutro Coat Rack, I felt it was my duty to create it.
What is your favorite step in the creation of your product?
When I've completed the first working prototype. There's a lot of work that happens before that, so that moment makes clear whether or not the effort was worthwhile.

What hobbies inspire your designs/products?
Whenever I go camping, I make elaborate plans for the ultimate camp box. But really, furniture design is my main hobby. If I won the lottery, I'd still be doing what I do.

What is your favorite color?
Red, though I like most primary colors at times. In my work, I like the colors to be true to the material. Therefore, I avoid stains and handpick the wood to get the color I want.
What is your favorite shape and why?
The shape of a tree slab. It's something I've been thinking about for a product in development.

What is your favorite texture this season?
Smooth is always in season for me.
What did you see of interest today?
I saw my cats didn't eat their food. It's early and not much has happened yet.

What is your motto?
I don't have a real motto, but I have a basic goal: Create unique and durable products with no moving parts that get a narrow group of people really excited.

Creative Profile: Justin Godar

September 16, 2013 by Aldea Home

We're starting a new weekly feature on the Aldea Home Blog called the Creative Table Series where we profile some of our designers and artists. This week, we bring you the brilliant designer behind the beautiful Nautical Flags you may have seen at our store, Leslie Bamburg of Labexperiment. Leslie tells us about her inspirations, how her upbringing shaped her as an artist, and some of her current favorite design influences.

Where are you from originally and how did the local culture shape you as a designer/maker?
I'm originally from Colorado and while all of my friends were into outdoor recreation, skiing, mountain biking, I wanted to go shopping and look at art. I think that while Colorado has lots of natural beauty, California drew me because of its culture, style, and openness to new and interesting things.

What initially inspired to make your product?
Very easy - the America's Cup. It's a rare thing to host such a big event in a small city, and so I was really excited to celebrate it.

What is your favorite step in the creation of your product?
My favorite part is putting together the color combinations. I keep them fun and bright, and they make each flag feel very different.

What hobbies inspire your designs/products?
Shopping! I'm influenced a lot by fashion and because fashion changes so quickly, it's a lot easier to see new trends come down the line.

What is your favorite color?
It completely depends on what the color is for. I will say that right now, I'm more interested in navy than I have ever been, which might have something to do with the flags!

What is your favorite texture?
Felt. Seriously, I'm a bit obsessed with felt. You can even check out my felt Pinterest board.

What is your favorite shape and why?
The first thing that jumps to mind is a hexagon. I like the mathematical simplicity of it and I feel that the beehive motif is something I see a lot in current designs - I love the fact that it's been around for ages, but always being interpreted in a new way.

What's the thing you're most excited about your product?
The fact that you can customize them and they're all handmade in San Francisco.

What is your motto?
The golden rule: do unto others as they would do unto you.

Come check out Leslie's gorgeous flags at the Aldea Home Store! Don't forget you can customize it with your own personal message and color, so you can express your own sentiments and mark important events in a beautiful, personalized way.

SF flag labexperiment

Creative Profile: Leslie Bamburg

September 08, 2013 by Aldea Home

Ever wonder what inspires our window displays? Aldea Manager Dave talks about the America's cup, ghost hunting, and more!

The nautical theme inspiration for the current windows started a couple of months ago when we did the Dining by Design nautical theme, and we wanted to design a display to celebrate the America's Cup happening in our city.
I was also really inspired by a recent ghost hunt on the USS Hornet, which is a ship in Alameda. It's supposedly haunted and we went on an overnight ghost hunt there. Our tour guides gave us access to unauthorized areas to different parts of the areas in the dark, and the spaces, like the bunks and the anchor room, were claustrophobic, but really interesting. Being in the anchor room was really inspiring, with interesting elements like massive anchors and chains. And the history of the ship, it's been out of commission since 1970 and is now a historical landmark, so that history and the whole experience was very inspirational.
While working on the window I feared making it either too modern or too Nantucket, but I think there's a nice balance, and I think Aldea offers a wide range of product to support that balance. Adding pieces from the store with a sense of humor helps bring it to life too.

View the Aldea Galvanized Desk

The Galvanized Desk is my favorite piece in the window—it reminds me of an old airstream trailer.

View the Sutro Tower Wood Kit

And I love the Sutro Tower Model, which we even have a DIY wood kit for.

Come stop by Aldea Home to see Dave's display through August!

America's Cup Window Displays

July 25, 2013 by Aldea Home