NORWALK, CT, October 11, 2012 (Press-News.org) The Itsy Bitsy Ritzy Shop has launched an online store featuring furniture and accessories designed for small spaces. The IBRshop is delivering high quality, handmade furniture that makes the world a more beautiful place, one small room at a time.
Living Spaces Are Shrinking. The trend is clear. People are living in smaller spaces with a move to cities, apartments, condos and smaller homes. The era of the McMansion is over, yet most furniture manufacturers continue to make grossly oversized pieces overseas using a model that might be as outdated as the big box furniture store itself.
The Itsy Bitsy Ritzy Shop Adds Panache and Utility to Small Space Living. Occupying a smaller space should not mean sacrificing beauty, elegance or style. Both IBRshop lines, Classic and Modern have a great look, a modest footprint and designs that multi-task just like we all do. IBRshop furniture fits any room, can be used for multiple purposes and usually has storage built-in.
IBRshop hardwood and upholstered furniture is hand made in America using the finest materials and craftsmanship. This means all the quality of made-to-order furniture without having to pay exorbitant made-to-order prices.
The Itsy Bitsy Ritzy Shop offers a great way to buy turn-key design assembled by a professional interior designer. "People hire me for my design expertise to produce beautifully coordinated spaces. In developing the IBRshop I created four unique Collections Manhattan, Nantucket, Bel Air and Aspen. Each Collection has a unique personality and includes floor plans, Look Books and Designer Notes, with coordinating fabrics, accessories and paint colors. This makes it easier for people to create spaces they love," said Marcia Harris Co-Founder and an Interior Designer. She added: "Surrounding yourself with luxury in a small space is important. It's the quality of the environment, not the size of the room that counts."
The Itsy Bitsy Ritzy Shop is delivering big ideas for small spaces. Visit the website today at www.ibrshop.com.
The Itsy Bitsy Ritzy Shop is an online store with furniture designed for small spaces. We want to make the world a more beautiful place, one small room at a time. For more information visit our website at www.ibrshop.com or call us at 203-303-ITSY.
The Itsy Bitsy Ritzy Shop Has Big Plans for Small Space Living: New Online Store Launches a Stylish Furniture Line Made in America That Fits Any Little Place
The Itsy Bitsy Ritzy Shop has launched an online store featuring furniture and accessories designed for small spaces. The IBRshop is delivering high quality, handmade furniture that makes the world a more beautiful place, one small room at a time.
2012-10-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Baystate Medical Center Selects Sound Physicians to Manage One of the Nation's Largest Hospitalist Programs
2012-10-11
Sound Physicians, a leading hospitalist organization focused on driving improvements in quality, satisfaction and financial performance of inpatient healthcare delivery, announced today an agreement to provide hospitalist management services to Baystate Medical Center.
Sound Physicians will assume management of the hospitalist program from Baystate Medical Practices on Nov. 1. The program will include more than 45 hospitalists and Sound Physicians' entire leadership and infrastructure to drive one of the largest, most well-respected programs in the country to new levels ...
What are the biggest challenges to global democracy?
2012-10-10
Los Angeles, CA (October 9, 2012) - In the new fall issue of the World Policy Journal, the editors liken today's period of politics to an "electoral tsunami." With more of the world's population heading to the polls than ever before, this new issue of WPJ includes a collection of articles that take an in-depth look at democracy: the opportunities it presents, and the dangers that put it at risk.
The issue begins with reflections from international experts on the "The Big Question" – What is the biggest threat to democracy? Some of the world's most distinguished commentators ...
Extending Einstein's theory beyond light speed
2012-10-10
University of Adelaide applied mathematicians have extended Einstein's theory of special relativity to work beyond the speed of light.
Einstein's theory holds that nothing could move faster than the speed of light, but Professor Jim Hill and Dr Barry Cox in the University's School of Mathematical Sciences have developed new formulas that allow for travel beyond this limit.
Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity was published in 1905 and explains how motion and speed is always relative to the observer's frame of reference. The theory connects measurements of the same ...
Looks like turtle weed, but it's not
2012-10-10
University of Guam Marine Lab scientist, Tom Shils and coauthor Heroen Verbruggen of the University of Melbourne have recently published an article describing a new species of algae found in the waters of Guam. Rhipilia coppejansii is the fifth green alga described from the Mariana Islands and the first one since 1978. "The molecular tools that aided its identification also reveal that previously undetected biodiversity abounds in the marine algal flora of Guam, which is an integral part of the island's natural heritage in which its people and their culture are deeply rooted," ...
You are feeling sleepy...
2012-10-10
The speed and degree to which the pupil of the eye responds is a standard test for alertness. It has also been used to assess how sleepy or exhausted a person is. Now, research to be published in the International Journal of Bioinformatics Research and Applications suggests that measuring pupil response alone is not enough and that a person's rate of blinking should also be incorporated to obtain a more precise measure of alertness. The work could be important in the care of people with multiple sclerosis and other conditions. It might also be automated and ultimately used ...
HPV vaccination does not lead to an increase in sex
2012-10-10
There have been claims recently that the HPV (Human papillomavirus) vaccination increases sexual activity in adolescent girls as it effectively gives them a 'green light' to have sex because of a perceived protection against sexually transmitted infections. This study published in Vaccine, examines whether or not there is any influence on sexual behaviour as a result of being offered or given the vaccination.
The study looked at a cross-section of over 1,052 girls in the UK, with a mean age of 17.1 years. Of these, 433 had been offered the HPV vaccine and 620 had not ...
CSIC researchers find the exact spot where Julius Caesar was stabbed
2012-10-10
A concrete structure of three meters wide and over two meters high, placed by order of Augustus (adoptive son and successor of Julius Caesar) to condemn the assassination of his father, has given the key to the scientists. This finding confirms that the General was stabbed right at the bottom of the Curia of Pompey while he was presiding, sitting on a chair, over a meeting of the Senate. Currently, the remains of this building are located in the archaeological area of Torre Argentina, right in the historic centre of the Roman capital.
Antonio Monterroso, CSIC researcher ...
Halving food losses would feed an additional billion people
2012-10-10
More efficient use of the food production chain and a decrease in the amount of food losses will dramatically help maintaining the planet's natural resources and improve people's lives. Researchers in Aalto University, Finland, have proved a valid estimation, for the first time, for how many people could be fed with reducing food losses. The world's population is an estimated seven billion people. An additional one billion can be fed from our current resources, if the food losses could be halved. This can be achieved if the lowest loss percentage achieved in any region ...
Return to Bremerhaven
2012-10-10
Polarstern is expected back from the Central Arctic expedition "IceArc" in Bremerhaven on 8 October 2012 after a good two months. 54 scientists and technicians from twelve different countries conducted research on the retreat of the sea ice and the consequences for the Arctic Ocean and its ecosystems over a period of two months in the High North. A number of new technologies were used for to film and photograph life in and below the ice down to a depth of 4400 metres. Since its departure from Tromsø (Norway) on 2 August 2012 Polarstern has travelled some 12,000 kilometres ...
Sitting on top of the world
2012-10-10
Do you have it in mind to go to a mountain top and study beetles that nobody else has ever seen? Well, there are two fewer such mountains available now that beetle species discovered on Mont Tohiea and Mont Mauru in the Society Islands have been named. James Liebherr, Curator of the Cornell University Insect Collection, has just described 14 species of predatory carabid beetle, also called ground beetles, as part of a U.S. National Science Foundation team that surveyed the insects and spiders of French Polynesia.
Liebherr described the species in two papers published ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
How AI could speed the development of RNA vaccines and other RNA therapies
Scientists reveal how senses work together in the brain
Antarctica’s changing threat landscape underscores the need for coordinated action
Intergalactic experiment: Researchers hunt for mysterious dark matter particle with clever new trick
Using bacteria to sneak viruses into tumors
Large community heart health checks can identify risk for heart disease
Past Arctic climate secrets to be revealed during i2B “Into The Blue” Arctic Ocean Expedition 2025
Teaching the immune system a new trick could one day level the organ transplant playing field
Can green technologies resolve the “dilemma” in wheat production?
Green high-yield and high-efficiency technology: a new path balancing yield and ecology
How can science and technology solve the problem of increasing grain yield per unit area?
New CRISPR technique could rewrite future of genetic disease treatment
he new tech that could improve care for Parkinson's patients
Sharing is power: do the neighbourly thing when it comes to solar
Sparring saigas win 2025 BMC journals Image Competition
Researchers discover dementia-like behaviour in pre-cancer cells
Medical pros of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) exaggerated while cons downplayed, survey findings suggest
Experts recommend SGLT-2 and GLP-1 diabetes drugs only for adults at moderate to higher risk of heart and kidney problems
Global study finds heart failure drug spironolactone fails to lower cardiovascular risk in dialysis patients
Deprivation and transport density linked to increased suicide risk in England
Flatworms can replace rats for breakthrough brain studies
Plastic from plants: FAMU-FSU College of Engineering professor uses material in plant cell walls to make versatile polymer
Leaders at Huntsman Cancer Institute drive theranostics expansion to transform cancer care
Thin films, big science: FSU chemists expand imaging possibilities with new X-ray material
66th Supplement to the Check-list of North American Birds publishes today in Ornithology
Canadian crops beat global emissions—even after 17 trips across the Atlantic
ORC2 regulation of human gene expression shows unexpected breadth and scale
Researchers track how iron deficiency disrupts photosynthesis in crucial ocean algae
A Mount Sinai-Led team creates model for understanding how the brain’s decision-making is impacted in psychiatric disorders
A new way to study omega fatty acids
[Press-News.org] The Itsy Bitsy Ritzy Shop Has Big Plans for Small Space Living: New Online Store Launches a Stylish Furniture Line Made in America That Fits Any Little PlaceThe Itsy Bitsy Ritzy Shop has launched an online store featuring furniture and accessories designed for small spaces. The IBRshop is delivering high quality, handmade furniture that makes the world a more beautiful place, one small room at a time.