PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Boden UK - Dress Smart, Think Smart

There comes a time in every man's life when he needs to retire his classic jeans and tee combo, and really start to make his mark on the world.

2011-03-06
LONDON, ENGLAND, March 06, 2011 (Press-News.org) There comes a time in every man's life when he needs to retire his classic jeans and tee combo, and really start to make his mark on the world. Your first step on the road to success can be easily taken with a wardrobe that looks professional, and Boden's Think Smart range will help you achieve your look, while letting you infuse your outfit with enough individuality that you won't be lost in the ever growing sea of grey men's suits.

A simple pair of Slim Fit Chinos can be instantly transformed into an outfit suitable for work, or that all-important client meeting at the local nightspot, with the simple addition of a Herringbone Blazer, Knitted Tie and a Plain Architect Shirt. And you don't have to stop there.

Boden have such a fantastic selection, that you'll find yourself spoilt for choice when it comes to building your look. If you're not afraid to splash the cash(mere), something as simple as the Cashmere V-neck with Original Chinos to the Wool/Mohair Suit Jacket draped over the Italian Stallion Shirt, y can let you walk the line between smart and casual while maintaining your professional demeanour.

With a great selection of accessories to complete your outfit, including Leather Belts, Moccasins and Knitted Ties, finished with one of our coats, Boden can cover all your work and casual needs.

About Boden

With 20 years dedicated to ensuring customers feel butterflies in their tummies when they receive their order, British clothing retailer Boden is like an old friend rather than a company. Everything is designed in house to ensure it meets the company's high standards, creating clothing and accessories that appeal to the intelligent, optimistic and stylish with a passion for life, love and laughter.

Website: http://www.boden.co.uk


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Illinois Swingers Awarded Stimulus Package

Illinois Swingers Awarded Stimulus Package
2011-03-06
Swinglifestyle.com, the largest swingers website is giving away a free 1-year membership worth $69. Swinglifestyle has given to natural disaster charities for many years and has been online for over a decade. Swinglifestyle understands the troubled times in the economy and is encouraging Illinois swingers to take advantage of the free limited time offer and spend the extra money in the economy. Swinglifestyle hopes more businesses give back in the economy and hire more people. In order to claim the free 1-year membership, simply register a new account or log in with ...

Enzyme enhances, erases long-term memories in rats

Enzyme enhances, erases long-term memories in rats
2011-03-05
Even long after it is formed, a memory in rats can be enhanced or erased by increasing or decreasing the activity of a brain enzyme, say researchers supported, in part, by the National Institutes of Health. "Our study is the first to demonstrate that, in the context of a functioning brain in a behaving animal, a single molecule, PKMzeta, is both necessary and sufficient for maintaining long-term memory," explained Todd Sacktor, of the SUNY Downstate Medical Center, New York City, a grantee of the NIH's National Institute of Mental Health. Sacktor, Yadin Dudai, Ph.D., ...

Researchers discover new shapes of microcompartments

2011-03-05
In nature and engineering, microcompartments — molecular shells made of proteins that can encapsulate cellular components — provide a tiny home for important reactions. In bacterial organelles, for example, microcompartments known as carboxysomes trap carbon dioxide and convert it into sugar as an energy source. These shells naturally buckle into a specialized 20-sided shape called an icosahedron. But now researchers at Northwestern University's McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science have discovered and explored new shapes of microcompartment shells. Understanding ...

Probing atomic chicken wire

Probing atomic chicken wire
2011-03-05
Graphene – a sheet of carbon atoms linked in a hexagonal, chicken wire structure – holds great promise for microelectronics. Only one atom thick and highly conductive, graphene may one day replace conventional silicon microchips, making devices smaller, faster and more energy-efficient. In addition to potential applications in integrated circuits, solar cells, miniaturized bio devices and gas molecule sensors, the material has attracted the attention of physicists for its unique properties in conducting electricity on an atomic level. Otherwise known as pencil "lead," ...

University of Nevada, Reno, teams with IMMY to make new life-saving blood test

University of Nevada, Reno, teams with IMMY to make new life-saving blood test
2011-03-05
RENO, Nev. – A new, rapid blood test that could lead to early diagnosis and potentially save the lives of hundreds of thousands of people stricken with fungal meningitis, a leading cause of AIDS-related deaths in developing countries, is getting closer to market with a recent collaboration between the University of Nevada, Reno and Immuno-Mycologics (IMMY) in Oklahoma. "The ability to quickly identify yeast infection in patients is expected to help in significantly reducing cryptococcal meningitis deaths in resource-limited countries such as those in sub-Saharan Africa," ...

New microscope produces dazzling 3-D movies of live cells

2011-03-05
A new microscope invented by scientists at Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Janelia Farm Research Campus will let researchers use an exquisitely thin sheet of light -- similar to that used in supermarket bar-code scanners -- to peer inside single living cells, revealing the three-dimensional shapes of cellular landmarks in unprecedented detail. The microscopy technique images at high speed, so researchers can create dazzling movies that make biological processes, such as cell division, come alive. The technique, called Bessel beam plane illumination microscopy, is described ...

Boosting protein garbage disposal in brain cells protects mice from Alzheimer's disease

2011-03-05
Washington, D.C. – Gene therapy that boosts the ability of brain cells to gobble up toxic proteins prevents development of Alzheimer's disease in mice that are predestined to develop it, report researchers at Georgetown University Medical Center. They say the treatment – which is given just once - could potentially do the same in people at the beginning stages of the disease. The study, published online in Human Molecular Genetics, demonstrates that giving brain cells extra parkin genes promotes efficient and effective removal of amyloid particles believed to be destroying ...

Supercritical carbon dioxide Brayton Cycle turbines promise giant leap

2011-03-05
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Sandia National Laboratories researchers are moving into the demonstration phase of a novel gas turbine system for power generation, with the promise that thermal-to-electric conversion efficiency will be increased to as much as 50 percent — an improvement of 50 percent for nuclear power stations equipped with steam turbines, or a 40 percent improvement for simple gas turbines. The system is also very compact, meaning that capital costs would be relatively low. Research focuses on supercritical carbon dioxide (S-CO2) Brayton-cycle turbines, which typically ...

Sink or source? A new model to measure organic carbon in surface waters

2011-03-05
A new carbon model allows scientists to estimate sources and losses of organic carbon in surface waters in the United States. Study results indicate that streams act as both sources and sinks for organic carbon. "Model estimates help managers and researchers track carbon transport in streams, which is information that is ultimately needed to improve our understanding of the fate of rising carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere," said Dr. Richard Smith, a USGS hydrologist and coauthor of the study. "The study contributes new information on the role of rivers as sources ...

Vaccinated children not at higher risk of infections or allergic diseases

2011-03-05
May vaccinations put too much strain on or weaken children's immune systems and are therefore harmful? Roma Schmitz and her colleagues from the Robert Koch Institute investigate exactly this research question in the current issue of Deutsches Ärzteblatt International (Dtsch Arztebl Int 2011; 108(7): 105-11). Their data are based on the results of the German Health Interview and Examination Survey for Children and Adolescents (KiGGS). In their study, the authors compare the occurrence of infections and allergies in vaccinated and unvaccinated children and adolescents. These ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Economic evaluation of wastewater surveillance for COVID-19 testing in long-term care settings

Announcing Deep Origin as a sponsor of ARDD 2025

Cancer cells ‘power up’ when literally pressed to the limit

Huge hidden flood bursts through the Greenland ice sheet surface

The brain shapes what we feel in real time

New study confirms post-pandemic surge in gut-brain disorders

Through the shot glass, and what can be found in liverworts

Stepping for digital rewards

Developing next-generation analytical technique for gene and cell doping and ensuring ethics and fairness in sports

Debunking a life-threatening myth: "Tongue swallowing prevention" maneuvers delay CPR and might contribute to brain injury or death for collapsed athletes

Female pilots perform better under pressure, study finds

Hydroquinone-buffered covalent organic frameworks for long-term photocatalytic hydrogen peroxide production

From coal to chemicals: Breakthrough syngas catalysis powers green industrial future

AI detects the stiffness of cancer cell exosomes: DGIST develops deep learning-based lung cancer diagnostic technology

Positive ethnic identity fosters STEM career aspirations

Wildlife show wide range of responses to human presence in U.S. national parks

Great Tits show early signs of splitting up: Oxford researchers uncover social clues to bird 'divorce'

From the lab to the hand: nanodevice brings personalized genomics closer to reality

Women politicians receive more identity-based attacks on social media than men, study finds

Idaho National Laboratory accelerates nuclear energy projects with Amazon Web Services cloud and AI technologies

Kavraki elected to European Academy of Sciences

UK teens who currently vape as likely to start smoking as their peers in the 1970s

Higher ultra processed food intake linked to increased lung cancer risk

Exercise rehab lessens severity, frequency + recurrence of irregular heart rhythm (AF)

Deep heat beneath the United States traced to ancient rift with Greenland

Animals in national parks remained wary of human footprint during 2020 COVID shutdown

Stevens INI receives prestigious contract to advance women’s brain health

Fulbright funds OU professor’s biodiversity research

Antiviral treatment fails to slow early-stage Alzheimer’s

Can African countries meet 2030 childhood immunization goals?

[Press-News.org] Boden UK - Dress Smart, Think Smart
There comes a time in every man's life when he needs to retire his classic jeans and tee combo, and really start to make his mark on the world.