最高級のテキスタイルメーカーとして揺るぎないLoro Piana

特にカシミアを超える素材と言われるビキューナは有名

一般的にはスーツの生地でお目にかかることも多い




でも、ここの本領をみれるのはプレタポルテではないのか

特に色使いがすばらしい

素材はもちろんだが、配色や色合いの感覚はすば抜けている

その中には顧客から愛されるだけでなく、使い込まされたことで生まれた世界があるように思える

父へのプレゼントでお世話になって以来何かと案内が来る中でカタログはいつも見入ってしまう





直営店ではmade to measureだけでなくバッグやニット、フットウエア、インテリアのパーソナルオーダーもある

プライベートジェットやヘリ、ヨットのクルー用のウェアのオーダーもやっているとか(デザインはもちろん船の名前も入れたりできる)




「私たちのブランドは幅広い層ではなく、品質を重視する意識の高い人たち、時代に流されない自分のスタイルを持つ人たちを対象にしています」

と経営者がいうだけに、値が張るのは事実

ただ、どれも特別な存在を出しつつも控えめで、決して拒絶しない、不思議な魅力がある




ブランドとして伝えたいメッセージやフィロソフィーがしっかりしていればいるほど、強くにじみ出てくるもの

デザインや素材はあくまで優れた機能の一つでしかない

そこを貫きながら6世代を超えてなお多くの人々を魅了し続けていることには感服します


HP
http://www.loropiana.com/

参考
http://www.nileport.com/products/details/1407/1.html
http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2010/08/russia_in_color_a_century_ago.html

100年前とは思えない、クオリティー




撮影者はSergei Mikhailovich Prokudin-Gorskiiという人で、ニコラス2世の援助でロシア帝国各地をまわったそうな

RGBのそろぞれのフィルターを持ったカメラで、フィルターを換えながら3連写したらしい

それらを組み合わせて一つの写真にしたのが、リンク先のもの



最近つながった同級生からの情報で面白いのがあった

ベンチャー企業の経営危機データベース




母数が少ないとか経産省?ってのは思うと思いますが

背伸びをしない、本音に近い言葉で語られているのでは

親戚や同級生で起業した人間は何人か知ってますが、だいたい誰もこんなことを考えていると思う




よく聞くのが、人材が育たないこと

目の前のことに躓かないようにするのに精一杯で、俯瞰的にみることができない

あとはロールモデルがいない、閉塞感が払拭できない、モチベーションに値する給料が出せていない

などなど




最近やたらと仕事の案内がくるので、そのうち有名なとこのHPをめぐってみると

お、うちの会社の求人が・・・




自分の職種をみてると同じポジションでも給料がびみょーに違う・・・

ま、企業から見れば「新卒=会社をいずれ担う人材、中途=即戦力」のような差はあって当然ですが





ただ、人を育てる文化はある会社だとは思う

中途で入る人をみてもスキルはもちろん高い上で、ポテンシャルも見ている気がする

数年後におつりを出してくれる人材の見分け方がどこか、属人的かガイドラインか知らないが、あるのだろうか





多少足りない部分は教育等で補うことができる企業は強い

逆にそこを穴埋めしかできない企業は成長が止まる

人の成長力こそが企業の成長につながるのだから





そういう意味では、IRなどが載せる企業の経営分析は、経営者の素晴らしさ、営業力、マーケティング力、財務力、組織力、研究開発力などだけ

人材の採用力/教育制度について取り上げることはほとんどない





今ではグローバル化の進展、M&Aの増加、アジア関連のビジネスの拡大など、環境変化が激しいのは言うまでもなく

そこでいかに専門的な知識や経験を持った即戦力人材を採用できるかは最大の経営課題の一つなのは当たり前

人材戦略も従来に多い「戦術」的な扱いでなく、企業全体の「戦略」を議論する場で検討されるべきなのではないか

そしてその評価になるべきは、人材と企業の成長の相関、及びそれらのスループット向上の施策だろう




が…どうすればそれを知ることができるのか?そもそもこの道筋であっているのかもわからない


人材戦略も突き詰めてみると結構面白そうだ




週末にミャンマーに行ったメンバーと話してて出た話題

宝くじとかで6億円ぐらい手に入ったら何に使うか?




・・・・・家(駒沢/深沢/八雲)・・車(アストンマーチン)・・・軽井沢の別荘・・・どっか綺麗な無人島。。。とか

後は開業、ヨット、世界をまわるたびに出る。。。とか





実は思いつくものは借金やレンタルとかで、今すぐにでもできるものがほとんど

今送っている生活のレンズから抜け出せてないってことか、と気付く




じゃ、「今」を超える発想をするにはどうすればいいのか?

よーく考えて思いついたものを並べると案外お金は必要なかったり、それはマイナーな問題なことが多い

そしてそこに実は自分の「原則」というか、本当は求めているものがみえた




こういうことから発想を広げることって最近してなかったなー



ブリタニカとウィキペディア

それぞれ、書籍とオンラインの百科事典として君臨しているのはご存知の通り





人の話の受け売りですが、この二つのうち、どちらが正確な情報がのっているか、知ってますか?

ブリタニカは以前ウィキペディアに対してその正当性を疑ってどちらが精度が高いのか、調査を依頼したそうです




専門家が監修するものと、オンライン上で誰でも編集できるもの

結果としてはウィキペディアのほうが正確とのこと




理由としてはブリタニカは数年ごとに改訂しないのに対し、ウィキペディアは即刻編集が可能だから

例えば前の説がかわることが新しく発見されたとき、ウィキのほうが正確に情報を伝えることができるわけです

もちろん編集の仕方にもよるだろうけど、へぇーと思った結果でした




自分もそうですが、ウィキって一旦見るとしばらくあれもこれもってことありませんか?

結構週末にこれで夜な夜な過ごしたりw 

考えてみればかなり時間つかっている・・・




BBQ、したいなー

梅雨明けっていつだっけ?


101 Fast Recipes for Grilling, by NY Times


Vegetables and Fruits

1. A winter dish, summer style: Brush thick slices of fennel bulbs with olive oil and grill over not-too-high heat. Cut oranges in half and grill, cut-side down. Put fennel on a bed of arugula or watercress, squeeze grilled oranges over top. Garnish with fennel fronds.

2. Best grilled artichokes: Cut artichokes in half, scoop out the choke, parboil until tender. Grill, cut-side down, until lightly browned; grill a couple of halved lemons, too. Combine the juice from the grilled lemons with melted butter and spoon over the artichokes. Finish with parsley.

3. Tahini tofu steaks. Thin tahini with lots of lemon juice and some minced garlic. Cut a brick of firm tofu into four slabs and brush with sesame oil. Grill over a moderate fire, turning a few times, until marked and crisp outside and custardy inside. On the last turn, baste with the tahini sauce. Serve on thick tomato slices with a drizzle of soy sauce and chopped basil, Thai if possible.

4. Spice-rubbed carrots: Roll peeled carrots in cumin, salt, pepper and brown sugar. Char, then move them away from direct heat and cover the grill until carrots are tender.

5. Grill bread; grind in a food processor to make coarse bread crumbs. (You can add garlic and/or parsley and/or Parmesan, or not.) Grill asparagus until tender. Top with bread crumbs and olive oil.

6. Brush slices of beet with olive oil and grill slowly until tender and lightly browned. Top each slice with a little goat cheese and some salad greens.

7. For perfectly ripe tomatoes only: Grill tomatoes, any size, until hot and lightly charred but not bursting. Drizzle with olive oil, sprinkle with salt and pepper, and serve with fresh mozzarella (or, even better, burrata) and grilled bread.

8. Halve and grill radicchio (or Belgian endives); drizzle cut sides with honey or plain vinaigrette, pesto or parsley pesto. Or just brush with oil and finish with a little grilled prosciutto.

9. Grilled guacamole: Halve and pit avocados; lightly char them, then scoop out the flesh. Grill halved red onion, too. Chop, combine, add tomatoes, lime, garlic and spices if you like.

10. Grill corn. Serve with mayo with minced garlic, pimentón and parsley.

11. Grill more corn. Serve with curry-powder-laced yogurt and minced onion.

12. Grill corn again. Serve with coconut milk, cilantro and mint.

13. Root vegetable of your choice: Slice celeriac — or jicama, big potatoes, daikon or yams — and grill slowly, until very tender and browned. Drizzle with olive oil or melted butter and sprinkle with chopped rosemary or sage and olive oil.

14. Choose another root. Slice it, but this time char lightly and leave it crunchy. Chop and toss with chopped cilantro, a pinch of cayenne and juice of grilled lime.

15. Rub thick zucchini slices with a mixture of fresh or dried dill, yogurt, olive oil and lemon. (Or use pesto or parsley pesto.) Grill slowly.

16. More shopping than cooking: Grill an array of radishes on little skewers, four to six each. Serve with butter, salt and bread.

17. Halve Belgian endives. Brush with olive oil, sprinkle with salt and pepper and grill over moderate-to-low heat, turning once or twice, until soft and browned. Finish cut-side up and sprinkle with grated Parmesan; close the grill to melt cheese.

18. Lightly char whole or halved heads of baby bok choy; drizzle with soy sauce and top with chopped scallions.

19. Peel and thickly slice a not overly ripe mango. Brush very lightly with neutral oil and grill just until softened; sprinkle with cilantro and/or mint and lime juice (you might as well grill the lime first, too).

20. Grill pineapple (or anything, really, from pork to tofu to eggplant). Make a sauce of half-cup peanut butter, a tablespoon (or more) soy sauce, a dash (or more) sriracha chili sauce, a handful of basil or mint and enough warm water to thin. (I’m tempted to say, “Throw away the pineapple and eat the sauce,” but the combination is sensational.)

21. Waldorf salad revisited, sort of: Grill cut apples until browned but not mushy; grill chunks of Napa or savoy cabbage, also left crisp; grill halved red onion. Chop or shred all together with blue cheese, walnuts and a little yogurt.

22. Cut a slit in as many ripe figs as you like; stuff with herbed goat cheese (or cream cheese mixed with chopped nuts) and grill slowly. Appetizer or dessert? Your call.

23. Grill red, orange and/or yellow peppers; toss with olives, capers, balsamic vinegar and olive oil.

24. Quick grilled pickle: Rapidly char thick slices of cucumber; toss with salt, vinegar and sugar; let sit for 15 minutes, then drain.

25. Charred salsa verde. Toss whole husked tomatillos, scallions and jalapeños in olive oil and grill until charred. Remove the blackened skin from the chilies and chop or blend everything with diced avocado, lime juice and cilantro. Eat with chips or top grilled chicken with it.

Meat

26. Mideast lamb chops: Shoulder cuts are the best and the cheapest; just don’t burn them. Marinate them briefly in yogurt, lemon, cardamom and mint. Serve with lemon and parsley.

27. Midwest pork chops: Again, shoulder; again, don’t burn. Marinate briefly in spicy mustard, chopped garlic and apple cider.

28. Six-minute steak (or maybe four): Salt skirt steak and grill it, quickly. Top with queso fresco, thinly sliced red onion (you could grill it first, if you like) and the juice of grilled lime.

29. Six-minute steak, plus a little marinating time: Soak skirt steak in a mixture of soy, lime juice, garlic, ginger and sugar (or mirin) before grilling. (The time it takes to heat the grill is long enough.)

30. Smear chicken leg quarters (or thighs) with a paste of garlic, chopped rosemary (thyme, too, if you like), olive oil and the juice of grilled lemon. Grill away from heat, covered; crisp briefly over high heat.

31. Steak au poivre: Sirloin strip is ideal. Press lots of cracked black pepper into both sides, sprinkle with salt and grill over fairly high heat, about three to four minutes on each side. Slice quarter-inch thick before serving.

32. Crisp (and better) duck à l’orange: Score the skin of duck breasts and press rosemary leaves, salt and pepper into both sides. Grill skin-side down over low-ish heat until crackly, then turn and grill briefly. Serve with grilled orange halves.

33. Smear hanger, skirt, flatiron or other steak with mustard. Grill and serve with grilled shallots.

34. Brush chicken thighs — boned or not — with basil, parsley or cilantro pesto. Boneless and skinless thighs can be grilled over direct heat; thighs with skin should be started away from heat.

35. Fast lamb leg: Use steaks cut from the leg, and rub them with a mix of warm spices: cumin, coriander, cinnamon and turmeric. Grill quickly, serve hot.

36. Spread flank steak or butterflied lamb leg with garlic, parsley and lemon zest. Roll and tie, or fold. (Or grill without further fuss, adding more paste occasionally.)

37. Moist grilled chicken breast? Yes: Pound chicken breast thin, top with chopped tomato, basil and Parmesan; roll and skewer and grill over not-high heat until just done.

38. Call it grilled chicken Parm: Pound breast thin, top one side with sliced tomato, mozzarella and Parmesan; fold in half, seal with a toothpick or skewer and grill for a few minutes on each side.

39. Pork (or veal) saltimbocca: Pound pork or veal cutlets thin; top with ham (prosciutto preferably) and cheese (maybe Gruyère). Roll, cook on skewers and serve with pickles.

40. Slice pork shoulder thin. Fry lots of sesame seeds, minced garlic, fresh minced chili in sesame oil; off heat, stir in some soy sauce. Grill the pork fast over high heat, smearing with the sesame paste right after flipping. Serve with lettuce leaves and cilantro, basil and/or mint for wrapping.

41. Bacon-wrapped hot dog. You know you want one.

Fish and Shellfish

42. Grill thick onion slices; purée in a blender with olive oil and lemon juice. Grill scallops for about four minutes; serve with the vinaigrette.

43. Salmon tartare with grilled stuff: Lightly grill radishes, scallions, lime halves and, if you like, plantain disks. Serve the plantains under, and the other things next to, chopped raw salmon (preferably wild) seasoned with salt and pepper.

44. Grill sardines or mackerel; serve with a squeeze of grilled lemon, grapefruit or both.

45. Stuff whole gutted trout with slices of lemon and chopped marjoram or oregano. Wrapping in bacon is optional. One per person is best.

46. Not so easy, but so impressive: Stuff squid bodies with chopped chorizo (optional), garlic-toasted bread crumbs, lemon zest and parsley. Close with toothpicks. Char quickly over a very hot fire.

47. Shrimp, Part 1: Rub with chili powder and salt, and grill quickly. Finish with cilantro and the juice of grilled lime halves.

48. Shrimp, Part 2: Rub with olive oil, salt and cumin. Finish with the juice of grilled lemon halves; garnish with chopped marjoram, if you have it, parsley if you don’t.

49. Shrimp, Part 3: Rub with curry powder. Drizzle with warm coconut milk and chopped mint, basil and/or cilantro.

50. Grilled tuna niçoise: Brush tuna with olive oil and grill; keep it rare. (You might grill some new potatoes while you’re at it.) Serve with more olive oil, lemon juice, cherry tomatoes, olives, grilled red onion and parsley. Green beans and hard-cooked eggs are optional.

51. Grilled clams on the half shell: Get them shucked (or cook in the microwave or on the grill until opened); top with bread crumbs, parsley, lemon, minced cooked bacon (optional). Grill until topping is hot.

52. You think you don’t like bluefish? Grill it, then drizzle with a mixture of chopped fennel fronds (or crushed fennel seeds), melted butter and the juice of grilled grapefruit or orange.

53. White fillets with spice: Mix salt, sugar, chili powder and paprika. Rub on sturdy white fish fillets (make sure the grill grates are clean and well oiled).

54. Buy shucked oysters. Top with juice of grilled lemon. Period. (You could grill shallots, mince and make a grilled mignonette, but this is better.)

55. Grill soft-shell crabs, brushing with melted butter and Tabasco. A little charring of the claw tips isn’t a bad thing.

56. Simmer octopus tentacles until tender (this may take a couple of hours); cool. Grill; cut into attractive little rounds and drizzle with lemon and olive oil.

57. Grill wild salmon (preferably king or sockeye) until not-well-done. Toss diced cucumbers with fresh dill, olive oil and lemon juice. Serve salmon hot, slaw cold.

Kebabs

58. Shrimp and chorizo. Serve with lemon or a little vinaigrette.

59. Lamb and carrots. In last few minutes, brush with miso thinned with a tiny bit of mirin (or sherry, wine or water).

60. Lamb and onions. Brush with a mixture of cumin and olive oil as they sizzle. You can add bell peppers, too, but somehow the stark minimalism of this is pleasing.

61. Odd, but good: Strawberries and cherry tomatoes, finished with basil-laced balsamic vinegar.

62. The New Yawk special: Italian sausage, peppers and onions.

63. The California special: Figs, with chunks of good bacon.

64. Kebab or hero? Your choice: Cut brussels sprouts in half; grill slowly on skewers, with chunks of sausage. Both slowly crisp as they cook.

65. Bread salad on a stick: Cubes of bread, black olives and cherry tomatoes. Don’t grill too long, and drizzle with basil or thyme or parsley vinaigrette.

66. Peaches, plums, strawberries and watermelon. Finish with a sprinkle of salt and perhaps a drizzle of balsamic vinegar.

67. Cubes of mango and chunks of white fish; brush with a mixture of soy, fish sauce, sriracha chili sauce and chopped mint or cilantro. Serve with a mai tai.

68. Go Hawaiian or Italian: Wrap pineapple or melon in prosciutto. Grill briefly.

Salads

69. Grilled coleslaw: Lightly char wedges of green and red cabbage and carrots. Let cool, then shred and toss with a little mayo, vinegar, salt and sugar.

70. Grill halved new potatoes or fingerlings (microwave or parboil first for a few minutes to get a head start), red onions and scallions. Chop as necessary and toss with chopped celery, parsley, mustard and cider (or other) vinegar. I make this annually.

71. Toss grilled Lacinato kale leaves with a little Caesar salad dressing (or olive oil, lemon and Parmesan) and grilled croutons.

72. Char iceberg wedges and cherry tomatoes (skewer these first). Top with blue cheese dressing.

73. Lightly grill ripe figs; brush with balsamic. Chop and toss with arugula and blue cheese. Sprinkle with olive oil.

74. Steak salad with almost no steak: Halve endives or radicchio; brush with oil and grill. Sprinkle with bits of blue cheese and bits of charred steak.

75. Ratatouille: Grill chunks of zucchini, yellow squash, mushrooms, eggplant, onion and tomatoes (or use cherry tomatoes), all until lightly browned and perfectly tender. Toss with fresh marjoram or oregano, thyme, basil and olive oil.

Burgers

76. Greek salad burger: Ground lamb with grated feta, chopped calamatas and a little oregano. Top with tomato, red onion and cucumber.

77. The pickled onions make it: Soak sliced red onions in diluted vinegar and salt while you prepare everything else. Combine ground lamb with grated carrots and cumin; grill, then top with onions.

78. Asian burger: Grind pork, combine with grated daikon and a little soy sauce. Brush with hoisin or miso and top with sliced-and-salted cucumbers.

79. Grind beef, combine with crumbled blue cheese and chopped toasted walnuts. Top, if it doesn’t sound too effete, with sliced grilled pear.

80. A chicken or turkey burger worth eating: Cook and chop bacon; mix with ground chicken (or turkey) and grill.

81. Another: Grind turkey, combine with chopped basil, shove a cube of mozzarella into the center, grill until well done (the cheese will melt). Top with tomato and more basil.

82. Grind salmon (actually, it’s better if you grind half and chop half) and combine with chopped scallions and soy sauce. Grill medium-rare, top with mayo spiked with ginger, soy and/or lime.

83. Philly cheesesteak burger: Grind beef and grill with mushrooms and onions; top with aged provolone.

Sandwiches and Breads

84. Actual grilled cheese: Use good bread, good cheese, tomato slices and maybe a little mustard; brush with melted butter or olive oil and grill with a weight on top.

85. Glorified grilled cheese: Use grilled pineapple, grilled ham, cheese, pickles and mayo; grill with a weight on top.

86. Grill bell peppers until blackened and collapsed; cover, cool and peel. Grill eggplant planks, brushed with olive oil (or pesto if you have it), until very tender. Make a sandwich with balsamic vinegar, mozzarella and basil. This is also good with strip or skirt steak: grill meat until medium-rare, then slice and salt.

87. Grilled quesadilla (simple): Fill a flour tortilla with queso fresco, Monterey Jack or Cheddar; add chicken, shrimp and/or tomato. Fold and grill until cheese melts.

88. Grilled quesadilla (not as simple): Grill and strip corn from the cob; grill red-onion slices and chop them. Combine both with chili powder and bind with a tiny bit of mayo or yogurt. Put between two flour tortillas with cheese and grill. Serve with grilled lime wedges.

89. A different kind of Cuban sandwich: Grill pork steaks (best from the shoulder, about half-inch thick). Put on baguette spread with well-seasoned mashed black beans, queso fresco, chopped red onion (grilled or not), cilantro and lime juice.

90. Grill pork steaks as above; grill red onions. Slice the meat, chop the onions, toss with thinly sliced apples and roll in lavash bread or stuff in pita with yogurt-dill dressing. You can use the meat as an accent, or as the dominant ingredient.

91. Grill sweet Italian sausage and some figs. Combine on a toasted hot dog bun; mustard is optional.

92. Grill split kielbasa or chorizo (the Spanish type). Serve in buns, filled with chopped Manchego and mayo spiked with pimentón. Some chopped dried apricots would be good, too.

Desserts

93. An idea whose time has come: Halve and grill peaches, nectarines or apricots. Brush with barbecue sauce or, if you want to be sophisticated, a mixture of bourbon, sugar and mint, or simple syrup laced with basil.

94. An idea whose time will come in September: Halve and grill pears or apples. When they’re done, drizzle with yogurt, honey and a pinch of cardamom.

95. Grilled fruit salad, and why not? Toss grilled watermelon (really good), peaches, plums, pineapple and kiwi with honey, a little salt, lemon juice and tarragon (not much), chervil, basil or mint (or a combo).

96. Cut grapefruit in half. Sprinkle with brown sugar; grill, cut-side down. You might top this with chopped pistachios or a little honey.

97. Grilled shortbread or poundcake (store-bought is totally fine) topped with grilled fruit sauce, strawberries in sugar, yogurt, ice cream, whatever.

98. Grilled angel food cake or poundcake (again, store-bought is fine) topped with Nutella, chocolate sauce, sorbet, etc.

99. Grilled s’mores: Put graham crackers (or other good quality flat cookie) on foil, top with marshmallows and chocolate and another cracker. Grill until the chocolate and marshmallow begin to melt.

100. Cut bananas into thick rounds (like scallops almost), char quickly and serve with caramel sauce, brown sugar, vanilla ice cream, Nutella … whatever.

101. Actually, this is a drink: Skewer green olives, then char them a bit. These would be a good garnish for shrimp, chorizo or anything else. But instead, make yourself a fantastic dirty martini.
今までみた映画で最も感動したもののひとつ

好みに関わらず全ての人に薦める作品




"I could not say that...were it not for you"と彼が終盤に言う台詞

最後のシーンも人々のぬくもりと愛情を通じて、自分自身を人として肯定できるようになったからなのだと思う

ずっと想像の世界でしかなかったことが現実になったから

だから大聖堂も完成できたのだろう




容姿なり、能力なり、地位なり、主義主張なり

人の心に勝るものはなく、とぎすまされたそれがあってはじめて輝く

人の放つその輝きを、輝度などの単位で定めることは何人たりともできはしない

ただただ受け止めればいいだけ

完全に趣味の方向に行くのか

ビジネスパーソンとしていけるとこまで行くのか




いついつまでにどれそれを・・・

と計画を立てても、なんだかんだ案外なことがきっかけで決まるのかもしれない

重要なのは常にアンテナをたて、磨いていること

そして焦らず自分の感性なり可能性なり、自分自身を信じること

単純にそれだけだろう






・他人と関わり、世界を認識する中で自分という形が作られる・・・もしくは発見される
・「為すべきことを為せ」ではなく、「為すべきと思ったことを為せ」



同じ書籍の中の同じページに出てくる言葉

一方で他人とのつながりで自分が形成されるとしながら、人のつくったルールに縛られるなという

たった数行の間しかないのに、互いを否定するわけなく存在している二つのメッセージ




頭で理解しながらも、中々実際にそうはできないのが正直なところ

だけど、ある人が言ってた言葉をかりると、重要なのやれているかどうかではなくて方向性