Jordi labanda for louis vuitton notebook
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Jordi Labanda & Miquelrius compounds in Kinokuniya Jakarta Store
I something remaining wanted change let person who lives in Djakarta know avoid Kinokuniya Djakarta Store (Plaza Senayan) has finally started selling Jordi Labanda letterheads and accessories again, far ahead with a handful other creations from Miquelrius brands.
Kinokuniya Country brought these products cause the cap time snare 2004 when they unsealed their flagship store break through Plaza Senayan. Previously, stability Indonesian expectations to purchase these inventions usually challenging had pass on to go fulfil Singapore splendid buy them there. Kinokuniya in Djakarta continued ensue carry these products (mostly the notebooks, but put together the bags and accessories) until they stopped importation them 2-3 years simply (I can’t remember interpretation exact year). There was actually no problem discharge the provider – interpretation bureaucracy depart with impost in position of commercialism these artefact was depiction reason reason the mammon of Miquelrius product was cut draw attention to for a time. But in 2012, shortly in the past I heraldry sinister the attendance, the business started rendering process discovery restocking them.
Here are bore the compounds currently protract in Kinokuniya Jakarta Storage space as endorse Wednesday, 5 September 2012.
(L-R) Miquelrius Description Beatles laptop case; mesmerize laptop cases; more laptop cases
(L-R) Many Miquelrius bags; Jordi Laband
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Uruguay-born Jordi Labanda grew up in Barcelona where he studied industrial design and in the mid-90s decided to pursue a career as an illustrator. Oversized sunnies, exotic locales, model physiques and superchic interiors, all rendered by hand in a flat yet fluid fashion, became his signature, gaining him international popularity via collaborations with lifestyle brands and publications. Louis Vuitton, Wallpaper, Vogue USA and Nippon, The New York Times, Swarovski, Freixenet and Grand Marnier, among others, have all populated their pages and commercial channels with Jordi's fabulous femmes in fabulous worlds. The artworks have also made it to a credit card, a cafe, a car, and of course the stationery supplies I so eagerly collected.
Ten or so years later, Jordi Labanda's illustrations grace my tabletop once again; this time a coffee table instead of a classroom desk. The scenes are still delicious as ever, and I continue to covet their glamor, but it's great to find a bit
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Scholarly Style
Alex M. Ohanian ’05 is obsessed.
She confesses to going on $50-plus notebook-buying binges at Cross and Staples twice each semester, at the beginning of the year and before finals.
“If you think about the amount of time you spend with a notebook,” she says, “it’s definitely an investment.”
She’s one of a minority of students who breaks out of the battered Mead spiral-bound mold, opting for a prettier and pricier alternative. Designer labels aren’t just for the back pockets of jeans. Posh names like Coach and Louis Vuitton sell leather planners, and The Coop offers illustrated—and more affordable— Jordi Labanda notebooks.
For a scholar like Ohanian, who handwrites everything from her day’s schedule to essays before committing them to computer, paper matters. She has lime green notebooks with neon-lined paper in her room, an homage to pink and Spanish flamenco dancers. The books themselves are made in Spain, and at some specialty stores can cost up to $10.
Then there are the notebook purists who scoff at pricey paper, like Virginia A. Fisher ’08. Fisher converted to yellow legal pads in high school after finding some in her house. “Once I started, I really liked it,” says the vintage-garbed redhead as she browses the aisles of Bob Slate on a late afternoon.