Product Review: The Diego Leather Sofa Collection

DiegoContempo Sofa’s primary objectives are simple: luxury and elegance.  Relaxation is a key tenet of life.  Whether you live in an Upper East Side townhouse, a SOHO loft, or a cozy house in the suburbs, when you come home at the end of the day, you want to relax.

Bearing this in mind, we’ve crafted the Diego Leather Sofa Collection, a fine collection of leather upholstery seating products designed to deliver the best in comfort and luxury.  The collection features three items: the chair, the love seat, and the sofa.  While each is a different width, they’re all available with the same basic features: 100% Italian leather upholstery, solid hardwood frame and legs, corner-blocked and double-doweled for strength, loose, Velcro-fastening back pillows, a high density foam core wrapped in Dacron, and a no-sag continuous coil spring for added support.

Each piece is crafted with supreme luxury in relaxation in mind.  Sure they look great, available in either Crème or Brown leather, but that’s not our goal here.  We want to make a sofa that you can really relax on, something to sink into at the end of a long day or doze off on a lazy weekend afternoon.

At Contempo Sofa, your comfort is our objective.  Let us know if we hit your mark.

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The Longest Sofa on Earth

Sykkylven BridgeDo you ever feel like you have a hard time finding a sofa big enough for your home?  Well maybe you should have a look at Sykkylven’s record-setting longest sofa on Earth.  On June 14, 2009, 300 volunteers from ten different furniture companies of the Norwegian town Sykkylven gathered to assemble their sofa across the Sykkylven Bridge.  The sofa measured 2,920 ft. and 9 in, ten times longer than the previous record of 212 ft. set in Greece.

Guinness World Records adjudicator Kaoru Ishikawa was on sight to officiate the record.  The event was a part of the 100 year jubilee of the Norwegian furniture industry.

Photo Credit: Arild Solberg

Volunteers helping to assemble the sofa

 

 

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Here Comes the Sun: Daylight Savings

George Vernon Hudson was the first to propose the modern version of daylight savingsDaylight Savings Time comes every year (Sunday, March 11 this year), but I’m willing to bet good money most of you have no idea how it started.  If you think it was Benjamin Franklin’s idea, you’re only partially right.  Franklin mentioned the idea once on a trip to Paris, his rational being that Parisians could save candles by simply getting up earlier.  He didn’t actually propose a change in time.  The Ancient Romans also understood the concept of daylight savings; however they simply added extra time to each daylight hour to account for the extra sunshine.

The modern version of Daylight Savings Time was first proposed by a New Zealand entomologist by the name of George Vernon Hudson.  Hudson collected insects in his spare time, and, of course, he highly valued the extra after-hours daylight of the summer.  He presented his idea for Daylight Savings Time to the Wellington Philosophical Society in 1895 and published another paper on the subject in 1898.

Daylight Savings Time is oftentimes incorrectly attributed to William Willet.  Willet was an avid golfer and hated having to shorten his afternoon round of golf due to sundown.  In 1905, he proposed his version of Daylight Savings Time and a bill was introduced in 1908, however the bill failed to become law.

During World War I, Germany and its allies began using Daylight Savings Time to conserve coal during the wartime.  Britain and the rest of Europe soon followed, although the US did not adopt Daylight Savings Time until 1918.

Today about 70 countries observe Daylight Savings Time.  Isn’t learning fun?

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Hamburg Artist Designs Public Street Furniture

Oliver Show's sculptures act as public seating for Hamburg residentsOliver Show, a young German artist, took on what he saw as “the commercialization of public space” with a daring, inventive project in the German city of Hamburg, according to Architizer.   Using flexible, yellow drainage pipes, Show turned bike racks, safety rails and more into cushy seats.  His ingenious guerilla art project has won the former architecture student a design award from the HFBK Leinemann Foundation for Education and the Arts.

The artist, Oliver Show, says that “the interventionist and experimental approach to me is more important than the quest for ‘a perfect product.”  His work is underscored primarily by its use as an empowerment tool.  Using cheap, durable material, Show’s work aims to “reclaim public space for the public.”

Photo via Der Spiegel

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Getting a Full Night’s Sleep When You Couldn’t Actually Get a Good Night’s Sleep

Even if you didn't get a full night's sleep, you can always fake it.Life’s busy and sometimes we can’t always get the recommended eight hours of sleep we need.  So how can you stay alert in the morning when you’re running on less than your best?

Health.com recommends a few special tips:

First off, open your shades.  A quick burst of natural sunlight will reset your body clock.  Then, make sure to eat right.  Don’t go for sugary foods, since those only offer a short spike followed by a crash.  Prepare with protein and whole grain carbs.  Health.com recommends “a whole wheat English muffin with peanut butter and a sliced banana.”

If you’ve got the time, take a walk.  “Movement boosts core temperature and stimulates the heart, brain, and muscles” says Dr. Michael Breus.   And to keep that energy going throughout the day, remember to drink lots of water.  According to Breus, “sleep deprivation can mildly dehydrate you….and dehydration actually compounds fatigue.”  Stay hydrated throughout the day to stay awake.

If you can find a spare minute throughout the day, taking a nap is also a helpful way to regain your energy.  But beware; if you take a nap on a Contempo Sofa you may not want to get up.

Photo Credit: Stuart Miles

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How Stress Harms Your Decision Making Skills

Stress makes you tune out negative critiques and consequences leading to bad decision making.Are you a super busy person?  Always have important business plus a thousand things to do in your personal life?  Well, we have some bad news for you.  You’re probably not doing the best you could, not for lack of effort, but due to the negative effects stress wreaks on a person’s problem solving and decision making skills.

Psychologists Mara Mather and Nicole R. Lighthall found that stress creates bad decision makers due to an imbalance between reception to positive and negative criticism.  But it’s not pessimism driving bad decisions under stress, reports Jezebel.  Stress actually forces us, as humans, to “focus too much on the upside of our decisions.”

Says Mather, “Stress seems to help people learn from positive feedback and impairs their learning from negative feedback.”  As Jezebel notes, it’s sort of a, “any port in the storm effect.”  When we’re stressed, we’re looking for any option to close the process.  Therefore, you’re not properly weighing the positive and negative aspects of a decision.

What have we learned from their findings?  Calm down.  Although they noted that men and women react differently to stress (men take more risks, women take fewer) both strategies are less than ideal compared to calm, clear-headed decision making.

Photo Credit: Graur Razvan Ionut

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Rising Spring Destinations to Help Get You Off the Couch and Out the Door

Get off the couch and out the door to one of these fun spring destinationsSome people like to wait until summer to take a vacation.  We say, why wait?  Traveling in spring time usually means smaller crowds and lower prices.  The former alone makes the vacation worth more for your money, and the latter confirms it.

Hawaii, often a difficult travel destination from the East Coast, is getting, or at least feeling, a little closer thanks to new nonstop options from Hawaiian Airlines and a partnership with Jet Blue “that will seriously boost route and booking options for passengers,”  reports Christine Sarkis of SmarterTravel.

San Juan, Puerto Rico is also becoming increasingly accessible as Delta and Jet Blue begin offering special offers from Newark.  CheapCaribbean.com is offering a wide range of deals on flight and hotel packages for travel from April 9 through June 30.

If you’re looking to get across the Atlantic, Portugal is the place for “Old World charm on a budget.”  Further price drops on hotel rates have dropped the average nightly cost to approximately $100, but Portugals countryside Pousadas – “inns housed in manor houses, monasteries and even palaces” – are perhaps the most immersive and affordable (plenty of discounts, free nights and savings packages) way to experience the quixotic delights of the Portuguese countryside.

Or if you prefer the hub of European hip, Berlin is opening the Berlin Brandenburg Airport this spring, which will welcome a deluge of new flight routes, discount packages, and “new traveler-friendly options”.  Berlin boasts some of the best in European art & culture, and with the seventh Berlin Biennale for contemporary art starting April 27 you’re like to find plenty of it.

But that’s not all! Jamaica, Costa Rica, and several American cities are offering great off-peak deals and discount this spring.  Check them out, get off the couch, and get in the air!

Photo Credit: Winnond

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Show Us Some Strange Seating and Enter to Win a $500 Gift Certificate!

Show us some weird seating and enter to win a $500 gift certificate to Contempo SofaEver seen someone sitting in a position that you couldn’t believe was comfortable?  Or on something that, for lack of a better word, doesn’t belong anywhere near a human behind?

If you have, then we want to hear about it! Send Contempo Sofa a picture of your not-so-comfy seat or tell us the story via Facebook or Twitter, andimmediately enter to win a Contempo Sofa gift certificate for $500.

To enter on Facebook, visit Facebook.com/ContempoSpace and post weirdest seating photo, or leave a comment on our wall describing the uncomfortable seating in detail.  Or if you’re more of a Twitter person, tweet us your pic and/or story via @ContempoSpace.

The contest will be open for submissions until April 1.  The winner will be announced on April 10 and contacted via Twitter or Facebook.

Good luck!  We’re excited to hear from you.

Photo Credit: Sakhorn38

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Leather in Ancient Civilizations

At Contempo Sofa, we make some of our finest products from leather, a material that humans have been using for ages.  It’s a durable, flexible material primarily made from cattle hide and can be produced through a variety of methods, also known as tanning.

Leather Sandals from ancient RomeWhen do you think humans started using leather?  100 years ago?  Nah, guess a little higher.  1,000 years ago? Nope, keep guessing.  5,000 years ago?  Now you’re thinking!

The truth is, no one can really say for sure exactly when humans started making leather, but archaeologists have found leather artifacts dating as far back as the days of Ancient Greece.  Actually, one of the earliest descriptions we have of the ancient leather tanning process comes from Homer, author of The Iliad and The Odyssey.

Humans have been using skins obtained from hunting and livestock breeding for tens of thousands of years, but it was probably only a little more recently (3500 – 4000 BCE) that they realized that these skins reacted to dramatic changes in temperature and could be treated to become dry and taut.

The oldest known piece of leather apparel was a Chalcolithic era shoe, recovered during anChalcolithic era leather shoe found in Armenia archaeological cave dig in Armenia in 2008.  It was 24.5 cm long, and made from a single piece of leather wrapped around the foot.

Several ancient cultures used leather for clothing purposes, at least since the fourth millennium BCE. Shoes found in the Italian and Swiss Alps and sandals from Southern Israel suggest that with the rise of animal husbandry and settler civilizations, humans quickly adapted the use of rawhide, and continued to make considerable progress throughout the millennia.  The Sumerians used leather for long dresses and diadems for women.  The Assyrians expanded its use beyond clothing, crafting leather water flasks and inflatable leather floats.  The ancient Romans clothed entire armies in leather sandals, boots, shoes, armor and even leather shields.  And they conquered most of Europe!

A replica of Otzi the Iceman's clothingLeather is one of the oldest goods that humans developed upon the eve of civilization.  Even Otzi the Iceman, the world’s oldest known mummy, wore a leather coat, belt, leggings and loincloth.  And he presumably lived from 3300 BCE – 3255 BCE!  It’s a material with a rich history, and at Contempo Sofa, we’re proud to say that we’re using the ancient tradition to bring time-tested luxury and durability into your home.

 

Roman Sandals Photo Credit: Linda Spashett

Chalcolithic Shoe Photo Credit: Public Library of Science

Iceman Replica Photo Credit: Sandstein

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Don’t Stuff Cash in the Couch; There Are Better Ways to Save

Don't just stuff cash in the piggy bank; there are better ways to save!As the US economy continues towards recovery, many young people, newly employed and inexperienced in financial matters, are beginning to learn how to save and use their money wisely.  Although growing up, our idea of saving was stuffing coins in a piggy bank, nowadays there are ways not only to save, but also to grow your earnings without spending.

First of all, setting up an online savings account is a great way to make sure you’re saving a certain portion of your paycheck.  You could even setup an automatic transfer to make sure that a designated portion goes to your savings account with every deposit.  Unfortunately though, these won’t do much to help your earnings grow.  Most savings accounts offer low interest rates, but money saved is money earned, right?

Low risk investments are also a safe route; though don’t expect to be raking in six-figure returns any time soon.  Securities bonds are always a good bet, but if you’re feeling a bit risky, buy shares in some time-tested, growing companies.  If you don’t know the stock market that well, educate yourself first and invest conservatively.

There are several other ways to invest your money and grow your savings.  Don’t just stuff your couch with cash.  Make a few wise investments, and let that money grow for a later date.

Photo Credit: Grant Cochrane

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