Lifestyle

When it comes to fashion, dressing entirely in denim is not alright

Munich - Dressing in denim from head to toe can be too much of a good thing. A pair When it comes to fashion, dressing entirely in denim is not alrightof jeans topped with a denim shirt is already overdoing it, according to Munich style consultant Georg Stiels. Add a jeans jacket and you have double trouble.

"No more than one denim article should be worn at a time," pronounced Stiels. "Or at least the cloth should be confined to one part of the body" - wear either a denim top or a denim bottom, in other words.

Home delivery in New York's MoMA

New York - Shoes, furniture and cars have been mass produced on assembly lines for years. Why doesn't the same apply for houses?

This question has intrigued several architects, including Walter Gropius, Frank Lloyd Wright and Marcel Breuer, all of whom experimented with the idea of building homes using modular design principles. Their part practical, part utopian ideas are part of an exhibit in New York's Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) entitled Home Delivery: Fabricating the Modern Dwelling.

MoMA describes the exhibit as a survey of the past, present and future of the prefabricated home and a building project on the museum's vacant west lot. It aims to display the process of architectural design and production in equal measure with the actual end result.

Meditation helps people find inner serenity

Meditation helps people find inner serenityDusseldorf, Germany - Who doesn't know the daily aggravations brought on by work, relationships and the pursuit of one's own needs, and who hasn't sometimes wished for more peace and quiet?

Meditation is one possible means of achieving them. Lutz Hertel, a psychologist at a German wellness association in Dusseldorf, is convinced of one of its effects: "We see a lot more value in meditation than in massages or wellness packs. When meditating, you're active, which is the opposite of most other wellness applications." And the effects are longer lasting.

Aussie baristas take sweet revenge

Sydney - Connoisseurs, business rivals, xenophobes and marketing gurus lined up to stick the boot in Starbucks when the Seattle-based coffee chain declared in July that it was closing 61 of its 85 Australian outlets with the loss of almost 700 jobs.

The coffee snobs said that the locals didn't take to the sweet and watery offerings from Starbucks. They stayed with the European-style espressos brought to Australia generations ago by Italian migrants.

"Their coffee is more like a milkshake," scoffed coffee luminary Ron Basset. "We probably have three times the coffee in ours that they do."

Children need to develop a sense for when they are full

Bonn - "Clean your plate" might be a well-intentioned command, but it is harmful to many children.

It's much more important that children learn flexible control of their eating habits and maintain a healthy sense of when they are hungry and when they are full, according to Germany's consumer information service in Bonn.

For these reasons parents should tell their children, "Take only as much as you would like to eat." This rule is especially important when food is plentiful and the prevailing lifestyle is short on activity.

Bad hair days 'may soon be over'

We all know that hair play an extremely important part in shaping our personality and physical appearance.

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