CAMBRIDGE, MA, May 18, 2011 (Press-News.org) This spring, Didriks - www.didriks.com - will expand its tableware collection to include Sabre flatware from Paris France.
Started 17 years ago by Francis Gelb, Sabre flatware has a style meant to cut ties with conformism, blending the chic with the offbeat. Sabre flatware features high quality melamine handles and 18/10 stainless steel. Didriks will spotlight the elegant Natura, Bamboo, Basic, Nature, and Djembe Sabre flatware designs when introducing the line.
Jonathan Henke of Didriks said, "Sabre flatware makes a summery and also quite elegant addition to Didriks current flatware lines by David Mellor, and iittala. Sabre flatware has a nice balanced feel and our customers will enjoy the great variety of colors."
About Didriks
Didriks helps customers create inspired home environments with their collection of home furnishings, accents and outdoor furniture. Didriks provides attentive, personalized service, including free shipping. Didriks carries the highest quality teak and stainless steel outdoor furniture, designed and manufactured by Barlow Tyrie. Didriks also carries Belgian linens from Libeco Home, vinyl floor mats by Chilewich , dinnerware, fine pottery and cookware from Simon Pearce, iittala, Heath Ceramics, Match Pewter, Mauviel and other fine brands. Didriks has been featured nationally in home furnishings publications such as Elle Decor, Martha Stewart Magazine, Bon Appetit, and Good Housekeeping.
For more information, call 617-354-5700, see the showroom at 190 Concord Ave in Cambridge, MA (M-F 10-7, Sat 10-6, Sun 11-5) or visit the websites at www.didriks.com and www.belgian-linen.com.
Home Furnishings Retailer Didriks Introduces Sabre Flatware from France
Didriks - www.didriks.com - will expand its tableware collection to include Sabre flatware from Paris France.
2011-05-18
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
NYU researchers use innovative data collection method -- A video by Dutch band C-Mon & Kypski
2011-05-18
Researchers at New York University's Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences have adopted an innovative data collection method for their latest work in the area of computer vision—a music video created by the Dutch progressive-electro band C-Mon & Kypski. Individual frames from the band's recent video for its song "More is Less" served as a unique visual database for the Courant researchers' work to develop computer vision technology.
Computer vision, a developing technology, aims to give eyesight to machines and is currently used in a range of applications. These ...
Research questions reality of 'supersolid' in helium-4
2011-05-18
LOS ALAMOS, New Mexico, May 17, 2011—The long-held, but unproven idea that helium-4 enters into an exotic phase of matter dubbed a "supersolid" when cooled to extremely low temperatures has been challenged in a new paper published recently in Science.
Los Alamos National Laboratory researchers Alexander Balatsky and Matthias Graf joined Cornell University physicist J.C. Séamus Davis and others in describing an alternative explanation for behavior of helium-4 that led scientist to believe for nearly 40 years that the substance could hold properties of a liquid and solid ...
UCSB scientists track environmental influences on giant kelp with help from satellite data
2011-05-18
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) –– Scientists at UC Santa Barbara have developed new methods for studying how environmental factors and climate affect giant kelp forest ecosystems at unprecedented spatial and temporal scales.
The scientists merged data collected underwater by UCSB divers with satellite images of giant kelp canopies taken by the Landsat 5 Thematic Mapper. The findings are published in the feature article of the May 16 issue of Marine Ecology Progress Series.
In this marriage of marine ecology and satellite mapping, the team of UCSB scientists tracked the dynamics ...
Study shows pharmacies' software systems miss potentially dangerous interactions
2011-05-18
TUCSON, Ariz. – A study conducted at the University of Arizona College of Pharmacy found that only 28 percent of pharmacies' clinical decision support software systems – the computer programs that are in place to alert pharmacists to possible medication problems – correctly identified potentially dangerous drug-drug interactions.
The study was conducted at 64 pharmacies across Arizona. Members of the research team tested the pharmacy software using a set of prescription orders for a standardized fictitious patient. The prescriptions consisted of 18 different medications ...
Rigorous study confirms video game playing increases food intake in teens
2011-05-18
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that almost 18% of US teens are obese. Although most experts agree that our growing obesity "epidemic" is driven by both inadequate physical activity and excessive caloric intake, implementing solutions is extraordinarily difficult. One area that has caught the attention of health researchers is the observation that trends in video game playing parallel obesity rates on a population basis. Furthermore, several studies have documented a positive association between how much time a child plays video games and his ...
Researchers discover underlying mechanisms of skin hardening syndromes
2011-05-18
(Boston) - Researchers from Boston University School of Medicine (BUSM) have discovered new details about the underlying mechanisms of skin hardening syndromes. The team connected pharmacological properties of the Novartis Pharma AG drug called balicatib to the skin disorder for the first time after investigating adverse reactions suffered by patients participating in a clinical trial for the treatment of osteoporosis. These findings appear online in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.
Balicatib was developed recently as an osteoporosis drug that can inhibit ...
Why more African Americans turn to Twitter
2011-05-18
EVANSTON, Ill. --- It doesn't matter if you're black or white. If you're interested in celebrity and entertainment news, you're more likely to start using Twitter, according to a new Northwestern University study.
But, African Americans in general report more interest in celebrity and entertainment news and were found to be more likely than whites to start using Twitter. The research, which focused on first-year college students attending the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC), found 37 percent of black students were using Twitter in 2010 compared to 21 percent ...
Cockroach allergens in homes associated with prevalence of childhood asthma in some neighborhoods
2011-05-18
May 17, 2011 -- In New York City, the prevalence of asthma among children entering school varies by neighborhood anywhere from 3% to 19%, and children growing up within walking distance of each other can have 2-3 fold differences in risk for having asthma. In the first comprehensive effort to understand what drives these localized differences, researchers at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health compared the household presence of cockroach, mouse, cat, dust mite and other allergens in neighborhoods with a high prevalence of asthma to that in low-prevalence ...
Experimental treatment offers relief from painful prostate condition
2011-05-18
New findings show that treatment with a specific alpha blocker helps reduce symptoms and improve quality of life for men with chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome (CP/CPPS).
The alpha-blocker, known as silodosin, works by selectively relaxing the muscles in the bladder neck and prostate. The treatment is already approved in Canada, the United States, the EU and Japan to treat painful symptoms of another prostate gland condition, benign prostatic hyperplasia, commonly referred to as an enlarged prostate.
Despite being the most common form of prostatitis, ...
Sharpening the nanofocus
2011-05-18
Such highly coveted technical capabilities as the observation of single catalytic processes in nanoreactors, or the optical detection of low concentrations of biochemical agents and gases are an important step closer to fruition. Researchers with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), in collaboration with researchers at the University of Stuttgart in Germany, report the first experimental demonstration of antenna-enhanced gas sensing at the single particle level. By placing a palladium nanoparticle on the focusing tip ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New nanoparticles offer safer, more effective drug delivery
Virtual reality could help stroke survivors regain movement
Placenta and hormone levels in the womb may have been key driver in human evolution, say researchers
BMJ finds inaccuracies in key studies for AstraZeneca’s blockbuster heart drug ticagrelor
Paper outlines more efficient organic photoredox catalysis system inspired by photosynthesis
Plastic bag bans: Study finds up to 47% drop in shoreline bag litter
Plastic bag policies are effective in reducing shoreline litter in the US
Current chemical monitoring data hinders global water risk evaluations
New method enables in vivo generation of CAR T cells to treat cancer and autoimmune disease
Decline in population data collection threatens global public policy
Ocean ‘greening’ at poles could spell changes for fisheries
No data, no risk? How the monitoring of chemicals in the environment shapes the perception of risks
More and more people missing from official data
Two transparent worms shed light on evolution
Environment: Offsetting fossil fuel reserves by planting trees faces ‘unsurmountable challenges’
Not one, but four – revealing the hidden species diversity of bluebottles
Different brain profiles, same symptoms: New study reveals subtyping patients provides key insights into depression's complexities
Researchers demonstrate precise optical clock signal transmission via multicore fiber
National Heart Centre Singapore and Mayo Clinic to advance cardiovascular care and research
2025 Warren Alpert Prize honors scientists whose discoveries culminated in novel HIV treatment
Here’s why migraine symptoms are worse in patients who get little sleep
Impact of co-exposure of bisphenol A and retinoic acid on brain development
Nanobody-based 3D immunohistochemistry allows rapid visualization in thick tissue samples
New study finds self-esteem surges within one year of weight-loss surgery
Study: Iron plays a major role in down syndrome-associated Alzheimer’s disease
Herpes virus plays interior designer with human DNA
Arctic peatlands expanding as climate warms
When Earth iced over, early life may have sheltered in meltwater ponds
Alps could face a doubling in torrential summer rainfall frequency as temperatures rise by 2°C
Fitness trackers for people with obesity miss the mark. This algorithm will fix that.
[Press-News.org] Home Furnishings Retailer Didriks Introduces Sabre Flatware from FranceDidriks - www.didriks.com - will expand its tableware collection to include Sabre flatware from Paris France.