Living Room In The Garden

Theres nothing like smelling the perfume of flowers and witnessing lush greenery right in your courtyard! Outdoor living, with aesthetic utility, is at its best when nature dazzles the eye and nurtures the soul, explains Neera Gulati

Retreat spaces is what I would call them. Landscaping Services  If you have your own land and are building an independent house for yourself and the family, it would be a wonderful idea for you to create a living space away from your main house, which would be a sanctuary you will want to remove from the house to create a sense of privacy and solace. In this busy world, you would love to be away from the busy household chores and create a space outside your house, that is either in the garden area or a backyard. Or if there is space constraint, you could do something in a balcony or a terrace.

One of the most popular outdoor spaces is the outdoor dining room and kitchen. Plans for outdoor dining rooms can range from the basic to the outrageous, depending on your inclination and budget. Merely placing tables and chairs to take advantage of (or to avoid) the sun, with a barbecue set up nearby, may be all you need.

Even so, consider accents to dress up the space, like container gardens and solar powered lights. If you want to go broke, install an entire outdoor kitchen with weatherproof cabinets and appliances to form the ‘walls’ or boundaries of the space which you can then dress up with lively tiles and a dining set, and use a pergola to provide shade and some cover. Outdoor living spaces are often the only access to nature that the modern lifestyle affords. You can create natural spaces at home. It certainly isn’t difficult to build outdoor living spaces. But it does take an appreciation for the ‘divide and conquer’ approach. We take it for granted that our houses are divided into rooms, but the concept for having similar outdoor living spaces may sound odd.

At first indeed, the biggest obstacle standing in most people’s way is that it just doesn’t occur to them to divide up a yard so as to maximize their enjoyment of it. The more conscious we become of outdoor living spaces, the more we can tailor them to suit our needs. Having separate outdoor spaces allows you to create mini landscape designs. Just as you can paint or wallpaper an indoor room using a colour scheme unique to that room, so also you can use colour to make individualised statements for each of your outdoor living spaces. But here, instead of paint or wallpaper, you determine your colour scheme when you select the plants you’ll be using for the area. Proper application of colour theory in landscape design can even influence mood and perception.

More the merrier

The materials which you can use for outdoor living spaces can be different from the indoor rooms. For floors, for eg, you could use grass, patios or decks. For the walls, you could use formal hedges, fences or informal hedges. For the ceiling pergolas, decorative canvas canopies, awnings or lawn umbrellas will be great. Keep both aesthetics and function in mind when constructing outdoor rooms. But in areas dedicated to physical activity, if you have to choose between the two, focus on function. Never compromise on safety. You can make up for compromises in aesthetics later, when you accessorize your outdoor rooms.

Below are examples of outdoor rooms and how to put them together.

Pool areas: Landscaping around swimming pools presents specific challenges regarding safety, maintenance and  privacy. You don’t want people slipping on anything, you don’t want to spend all your time cleaning the debris, and you don’t want the neighbours peering in at you. In selecting a ‘wall’ to enclose the area, all of these considerations come into play. ‘Floor‘ in pool areas must be slip-resistant.

Meditation areas: For meditation gardens, (which is a wonderful way to de stress from your busy schedule), privacy is very much an issue. Here reflection, not physical activity, takes centre stage. Aesthetic consideration, consequently, will carry greater weight. Most people find plants more relaxing than hardscape, so consider planting hedges to form the wall of such outdoor rooms. For a floor, consider a combination of natural materials.

In meditation gardens, a ceiling may come in quite handy. Here, you’ll choose between aesthetics and functionality. A vine covered arbour may be more inspiring to gaze up at, than a lawn umbrella, but the latter will keep you and the books you may be reading, dry. If you’d like something more solid than an umbrella, consider installing a pergola and covering it with fibreglass. But water shouldn’t be banned from contemplative outdoor rooms. If there’s any place in your yard for accessories such as garden fountains and waterfalls, surely its here. There is nothing like the soothing sound of bubbling water to put you into a reflective mood.

You could also create an living room outside. Deck it up with cozy furniture, speakers and ambient lighting, with plants of your choice, and you would love to use this place, all the year round.

Nowadays, most people want to live and entertain in a much more informal atmosphere. Guests also would love to gravitate towards the great room, which blends into the kitchen and outdoor living spaces.

These outdoor dining spaces should reflect the informal yet stylish design of the interior great rooms. Create an outdoor retreat that allows you and your guests to spill outside from the room. Don’t be afraid to mix chandeliers and old antiques outdoors, especially in outdoor dining areas. Utilise a touch of indoor style and unify the space by adding outdoor drapes, pillows and rugs to complete the look.

The use of colour, pattern and texture in fabrics is an excellent way to reflect the indoor space. Add colourful elements by choosing flowering plants to accent containers scattered throughout the outdoor living space.  Mix and match materials in these outdoor settings, juxtapose wrought iron with glass, steel with terracotta, wood against woven components. Outdoor living is at its best when nature dazzles the eye and nurtures the soul. Create your perfect casual environment out.

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Friday, May 9th, 2008

Queen Victoria takes on a regal bearing

ABOARD THE QUEEN VICTORIA — The stock market ricocheted and U.S. presidential candidates bared their knuckles, but aboard Cunard’s newest ship, Queen Victoria, in the southern Caribbean, this was water off a duck’s back. In fact, except for the daily “programme” (this is a British ship), which announced the day’s activities, it would have been almost possible to forget the date.

Bookended by fiery sunrises and dazzling sunsets, tranquil days on calm seas gave way to moonlit nights. “On a cruise,” said marine historian Bill Miller, one of Queen Victoria’s lecturers, “all you have to decide is what to wear and what to eat.”

QUEEN VICTORIA STATS

Length: 964.5 feet

Width: 106 feet

Gross tonnage: 90,000

Number of passengers: 2,014

Number of passenger staterooms: 990

Number of crew: Approximately 1,000

Staterooms with balconies: 712

Top cruising speed: 23.7 knots

Original cost: Around $522 million

And which ship to go on — because they are different. Cunard’s ships are noted for their history, their British traditions and their formal evenings. I wondered how Queen Victoria would measure up to her distinguished predecessors and sister ships, which currently include Queen Elizabeth 2 and Queen Mary 2.

I boarded Queen Victoria in Aruba for the second leg of her 105-day world cruise. We were bound for Acapulco via the Panama Canal.

My first impression was of Queen Victoria’s bulk. She has 16 decks and carries 2,014 passengers and about 1,000 in crew. Though smaller than the QM2, this is not a small ship. However, my balcony cabin was smaller than I expected, with a tiny bathroom. No matter, as it turned out. The balcony was large enough, and here I spent some absorbing hours, listening to the ship cut through the water, observing the changing light, looking at the constellations and photographing the moon, which seemed to be full three nights in a row.

That must have been illusion, but why not? A cruise is part illusion. Grand staircases, mahogany paneling, stained glass, inlaid wood and custom-made carpeting, which the QV has aplenty in her stunning public rooms, lull passengers into forgetting that they are on a big sea, which sometimes can get rough. Once, I crossed the Atlantic Ocean on the QE2 in tandem with the QM2, and even that huge ship, as I looked back at her, was dwarfed by the mighty ocean.

Another illusion is of upper-crust elegance. Royalty, movie stars and billionaires may have traveled on ships at one time, but if and when they’re there now, most passengers aren’t likely to run into them. They would be in their suites, tended by their butlers.

SAMPLE ITINERARIES AND FARES

(All fares are per person, double occupancy)

May 6, 2008: 14-day Mediterranean Delights. From $2,975 (inside stateroom) to $25,175 (Q1 Grand Suite). Balcony fares from $4,175.

July 6, 2008: 12-day Voyage of the Vikings. From $2,2995 (inside stateroom) to $22,895 (Q1 Grand Suite). Balcony fares from $3,895.

October 12, 2008: 12-day Classic Mediterranean. From $2,445 to $22,345 (Q1 Grand Suite). Balcony fares from $3,345.

2009 World Cruise Fares: Fares for 105-day cruise (includes the trans-Atlantic crossing aboard QM2 from Southampton to New York at the end of the World Cruise), from $20,955 to $229,970 for a Q1 Grand Suite. Balcony fares from $29,140. Segments of the World Cruise can be booked at varying prices.

Extras: Liquor is extra, of course, but so are other beverages such as canned soft drinks ($1.75), bottled mineral water ($2/small; $3.50/large) and coffee outside of regular restaurant service ($1 for regular coffee and tea; $1.95 for cappuccino). Wine tastings, when offered, are $35 a person; whiskey tastings are $25 a person. Shore excursions usually cost between $39 and $199 per person. The spa’s hydrotherapy suite, with its heated pool, relaxation room, steam rooms and multi-headed showers costs $35 for a one-day pass. Group yoga and Pilates classes are $45 a week. Internet access is 50 cents a minute, with packages available.

Though the Queen Victoria has two or three formal nights a week, they’re more Swarovski than Harry Winston — and that’s fine. Cruises, I realized, give ordinary people a chance to dress up and explore sides of themselves they usually keep submerged.

On the Queen Victoria, for instance, I met a woman who lives outside Sydney, Australia, who said that after she and her husband signed up for the cruise, she worried for six months that she would look frumpy among all the sophisticated, stylish women. She was relieved to find out that she looked fine. That was useful information.

I also met an accountant from Colorado who was on for the whole World Cruise and who said that her divorce would become final while she was away. She was rethinking her life, wanting to explore creativity that she had previously neglected.

A long cruise provides the opportunity to do that, not only through lectures and classes but through conversations with people from all over the world.

You don’t eat on a cruise ship. You dine — and on the Queen Victoria, the dining options are legion. Passengers are assigned a dining room according to their cabin class, with the Queens Grill for the Grand, Master, Queens Suites and Penthouses at the top of the pyramid, followed by the Princess Grill for passengers in that category.

Both Grill dining rooms are single seating and passengers can order off the menu. In fact, said executive chef Jean-Marie Zimmerman, “when they use our menus, we’re shocked.” Caviar, lobster and truffles are readily available. In good weather, Grill passengers can dine outside in a charming courtyard with an Italianate fountain and lighting fixtures that resemble old-fashioned gas street lamps.

The two-level Britannia Restaurant, where most passengers have dinner and sometimes other meals as well, accommodates 878 people in each of two dinner seatings, with open seating at breakfast and lunch. The food is ample but not inspired — not surprising considering the numbers served. Provisioning and cooking for the 3,000 people aboard the ship is a job of staggering complexity, requiring seven kitchens and mammoth storerooms.

Passengers who want an alternative to their assigned dining room have several options. For an extra $20 at lunch and $30 at dinner, they can try the Todd English restaurant, whose menus were developed by the celebrity chef, but whose kitchen is in Chef Zimmerman’s jurisdiction. The Lido on Deck 9 serves cafeteria-style breakfast, lunch and dinner. At lunch, pasta and pizzas are made to order and are excellent. Another lunch option is the Golden Lion Pub, where large TVs play sporting events and the menu consists of such items as steak and mushroom pie.

Though passengers could compensate for some of these calories just by walking from one end of the ship to the other (Deck 3, which goes almost all the way around, is one-third of a mile), the Queen Victoria has a well-equipped gym and offers a variety of exercise and stretching classes, including yoga and Pilates. Fencing classes, a shipboard first, build stamina and balance. There are paddle tennis and shuffleboard courts, where the action can be far from decorous. Two outdoor swimming pools are seldom too crowded for swimming laps.

While Queen Victoria’s spa, billed as the Cunard Royal Spa and Fitness Centre, doesn’t have the name-brand cachet of the Canyon Ranch spa on the Queen Mary 2, it has a large variety of treatments and experienced therapists. Services under the spa’s jurisdiction include a beauty salon, an acupuncturist, a physiotherapist and a dentist who is equipped to do tooth whitening and emergency repairs.

QUEEN VICTORIA’S STATEROOMS

Queen Victoria has eight kinds of accommodations: Grand Suites, Master Suites, Penthouses, Queens Suites, Princess Suites, Balcony, Oceanview (no balcony) and Inside.

They range in size from 2,131 square feet to 151 square feet. All passengers in the Grand, Master, Queens and Princess Suites eat in the 142-seat Queens Grill or the 132-seat Princess Grill and have their own indoor and outdoor lounges plus an outdoor dining area.

Most passengers eat in the Britannia Restaurant, which serves 830 of the ship’s 1,007 staterooms. The Britannia accommodates 878 guests in two dinner seatings, with open seating at breakfast and lunch.

Most of the staterooms on the Queen Victoria are in the Balcony category and range in size from 242 to 472 square feet, including the balcony. They are attractively furnished in blonde wood with a small desk and sofa and two single beds that can be pushed together or separated. They have small bathrooms with a shower but no tub. (Princess Grill staterooms and up are tub-equipped.)

Storage space in the Balcony staterooms is tight, especially for a ship that takes passengers on long cruises and has many formal nights. Most passengers found the drawer and closet space inadequate and improvised. One woman and her roommate on the World Cruise asked that the sofa in their room be removed so they could place a clothes rack in that space. Another couple brought S-hooks and hung some of their garments outside the small closets. Some people who planned to be on the ship for months went to Wal-Mart and bought a set of plastic drawers.

Cunard says that the cabins will be fitted with more drawers after the World Cruise ends in April.

In a hydrotherapy suite, guests can assuage their backaches under strong jets of water in a heated pool, and then recline on contoured, heated lounges between steam room sessions and play time in a hydra-headed shower.

Among the treatments, the dry flotation bed looked particularly inviting. After a massage, spa director Mark Nel explained, the dry flotation bed turns into a water bed. “The body is weightless in water and you relax. You’ll fall asleep within minutes!”

The dry flotation bed costs $119 for an hour’s treatment. For a less expensive version, life-stressed passengers can sprawl on one of the cushioned teak lounge chairs on Deck 3.

The ship has a casino for those who want it, but it was far less popular than the library, which has 6,000 books and periodicals.

There’s also a supervised playroom for children but few were aboard.

Most passengers were retired or semi-retired. Many had the time and money to book the whole World Cruise from New York City to Southampton.

Among them was Irma Klindt of Pasadena, who has made more than 105 trips with Cunard. She has an apartment in Pasadena but said that she hadn’t opened her Christmas mail yet.

She has been aboard Cunard ships since Dec. 11 and won’t get home until the end of April.

Ms. Klindt, who retired from Pacific Bell more than two decades ago at the age of 55, isn’t an heiress. She travels as inexpensively as possible in an inside cabin. “The world comes to me when I’m aboard the ship,” she said.

The Queen Victoria isn’t perfect and has already had its share of problems. An outbreak of norovirus on the maiden voyage afflicted about 100 people and kept the well-equipped medical center busy.

Stormy seas off Gibraltar prevented the ship from docking. Some of the Britannia dining room service has been spotty. And the staterooms don’t have enough drawers.

Stirling and Clare Kenny of Stratford, Ontario, and Naples, Fla., said they had read the negative criticisms of Queen Victoria’s Christmas cruise and didn’t know what to expect. The Kennys boarded in New York and plan to get off in Sydney, Australia.

They have cruised on most lines operating from North America and this is their 70th cruise. “This is way better than we thought,” Mr. Kenny said. “It meets all my expectations and exceeds them.”

Then he shrugged off comparisons with other ships. “The best cruise is the one you’re on right now,” he said.

QUEEN VICTORIA’S FIRST PANAMA CANAL TRANSIT

On January 21, Queen Victoria approached the Port of Cristobal on the Atlantic side of the Panama Canal. Huge cranes towered against the dawn sky, ready for the ships that carry grain, cargo containers and petroleum between the East Coast of the United States, Asia, and the west coasts of both North and South America. Without the canal, the freighters would have to make a long, treacherous journey around Cape Horn.

The 50-mile-long canal cuts through the Isthmus of Panama at one of the narrowest points between North and South America. Three sets of locks raise ships 85 feet to Gatun Lake and then lower them again. The 90,000-ton Queen Victoria would just fit in a lock, with two feet to spare on either side and just under 18 feet front and back,

On the day before the transit, lecturers Diane and John Stockman had referred to the Panama Canal as “the eighth wonder of the world.” Seventy-five thousand people worked on it; around 32,000 people died in the effort. It took decades to build. A French team tried, starting in 1880, but were defeated by mosquito-borne diseases and a flawed plan. In 1904, an American team began work on the canal and succeeded. Without fanfare, on Aug. 15, 1914, a freighter, the SS Ancon, became the first commercial ship to make the transit.

At 6 a.m. on January 21, three Panamanian pilots came aboard the Queen Victoria to assume navigational authority for the ship. The morning sky was fiery red, illuminating the dense jungle that borders the canal. Magnificent Frigate birds soared overhead.

Two men rowed a boat toward the Victoria to throw the lines needed to hitch the ship to small locomotives called “mules” that would guide her through the locks. Over the years, more complicated technology has been tried, but the rowboat-toss method has proven best. Then the ship nosed her way into the first of the Gatun locks and the gates swung closed behind her.

It takes 52 million gallons of water to move a ship through the Panama Canal. The concept is simple. As a ship ascends, water flows from Gatun Lake at the crest of the system into the locks below, raising the ship in steps to the level of the next lock. When that level is reached, the forward gates open and the ship proceeds into the next lock to repeat the process.

At 23-mile-long Gatun Lake, the ships pause to await their turn to begin the downward journey. There, water drains from each lock until the ship is level with the one below. The descent is especially tricky on the Pacific side, where there are 18-foot tides.

For passengers and most crew, it’s a splendid spectacle. For a ship’s navigation officers, a Panama Canal transit is a long, tiring day. Scraped paint is probably inevitable, and Queen Victoria got her share.

But after nearly 100 years, there is a matter-of-fact quality to this remarkable journey. Around 14,000 ships go through the canal every year, and everyone knows their job.

To appreciate what this eight- or nine-hour crossing really means you would have to know that Gatun Lake is still one of the largest manmade lakes in the world, that the Panama Canal was the most expensive construction project that the United States had ever undertaken until that time and that the canal was dug with steam shovels removing enough earth to circle the globe four times.

Though the locks were so well built that they have never needed to be replaced, dredging and construction go on continually, especially at the Galliard Cut, which crosses the Continental Divide and is prone to landslides. Near the Centennial Bridge just north of the Pedro Miguel locks, a new channel is being built that will accommodate larger ships than can get through the present locks. It is scheduled for completion in 2014.

The cost to transit the canal is by tonnage. Traveler and adventurer Richard Halliburton swam the canal in 1928 and paid 36 cents. The Queen Victoria paid $275,000.

In late afternoon, she reached the Miraflores locks and was released into the Pacific. Hundreds of people on shore waved and cheered as this great ship completed her first Panama Canal transit. People on the ship waved back. Some had tears in their eyes.

So many large ships are built every year that we might take them for granted, but they are amazing feats of engineering as is the canal itself. One of Queen Victoria’s lecturers, Ben Cameron, recalled a line from Shakespeare that seemed appropriate to the moment: “What a piece of work is man!” Shakespeare wrote in “Hamlet.”

There are times when humanity’s best shines through. This was one of them.

– Terese Loeb Kreuzer

Terese Loeb Kreuzer is editor of Travel Arts Syndicate; TravelArts-Syndicate.blogspot.com.

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Monday, February 25th, 2008

Five things firsttime cruisers should know

Here are five things first-time cruisers need to know.

1. Must I use a travel agent to book a cruise?

Every cruise line has a Web site. You can easily book your own trip, but it’s much easier to do so with an agent’s guidance.

Which cruise is right for you? Do you like partying in discos and bars, or would you prefer Tommy Dorsey-style music in the cocktail lounge? For shore excursions, are you up for kayaking, or do you want the trolley tour? Do your kids need a babysitter, organized arts and sports activities or a teen lounge?

You can research and compare what each ship offers, or get advice from Web sites like CruiseCritic.com or TripAdvisor.com . But it costs nothing extra to consult a travel agent, “and you’ve got a professional who may actually have seen or been on the ship doing the work for you,” said Bob Sharak, the association’s vice president for marketing.

2. Do I have to eat in the formal dining room with strangers and dress for dinner?

Most ships have various dining options: buffets, cafes, specialty restaurants and formal dining rooms. Many ships offer dress casual nights in the formal dining rooms. But even formal dress nights don’t necessarily mean tuxedos and gowns; a suit or dress will do. (Some folks dress casually even on formal nights.)

Some cruise lines let you sit where you want in the dining room. If not, chances are you’ll have fun meeting other people at your table.

The dining room can also help you avoid loading your plate repeatedly at the buffet. Portions are controlled (although you can always request more than one entree or dessert), and some menus highlight low-fat or low-calorie options.

3. What should I pack?

Bring flip-flops or other slip-on shoes, and a robe or cover-up for walking from the pool to your cabin.

Pack for the weather. A New York-Caribbean trip in winter means a few cold days at sea. Alaska in August? Bring rain gear.

Some ships have self-serve washing machines and dryers, some don’t. Sending dirty clothes out to the ship’s laundry can be costly. So bring enough clothing for your trip, or find a coin-op laundry in port. Your stateroom bathroom may have a pullout clothesline for drying swimsuits or hand-washed items.

If you want a clock by your bedside, bring one. Not all staterooms have them (though you can arrange a wake-up call).

The stateroom bathroom will have shampoo and soap, but not necessarily free moisturizer and conditioner, like you’d expect from a hotel.

4. Does the price include everything?

Cruise prices include the room, food and some beverages. Free drinks might include coffee, tea, iced tea, lemonade and, with breakfast, juice.

Luxury cruise lines may not charge extra for wine or liquor. On many other lines, you can’t get soda for free, but you can buy beverage packages with unlimited soda ($6 a day is typical).

You can spend a lot on alcohol, casinos, spas, Internet access, video games and shopping. If you’re on a budget, stick to free activities %26mdash; pool, gym, shows and in port, a stroll through town or the beach instead of that pricey helicopter tour.

If you want shore excursions, you’ll find vendors offering tours in each port. They may charge less than the cruise line charges for similar outings.

But if you have your heart set on a certain activity, book in advance through the cruise line and consider it money well-spent. Popular tours will sell out.

“If you’re dying to do a glacier sightseeing trip in Alaska, you’ve booked it in advance and it’s taken care of,” said Sharak. “Or if your tour bus gets a flat tire and is tardy coming back to the ship, if you’ve booked it through the cruise line, that ship is not going to leave without you.”

5. How much and whom do I tip?

Some luxury lines forbid tipping.

Other cruise lines recommend certain amounts. Some offer prepaid gratuity options or levy a service charge for dining room staff and the person who cleans your room. A typical tip for stateroom attendants is $3.50 a day; dining room staff tips run $5-$10 per day, with that amount shared by your waiter, wine steward and maitre d’.

With prepayments, you’re charged a gratuity for each person in your party, for each day of the cruise. So even if your kids never eat in the formal dining room, prepaid tips will go to the servers on their behalf. You might be better off deciding on tips near the end of your cruise, in case it makes more sense to tip a buffet worker who delighted your children each night at dinner with a magic trick.

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Sunday, February 17th, 2008

Cunard’s new queen of the ocean is 1st class

Tranquil days on calm seas gave way to moonlit nights. “On a cruise,” said marine historian Bill Miller, one of the ship’s lecturers, “all you have to decide is what to wear and what to eat.”

And which cruise line’s ship to go on %26mdash; because they are all different. Cunard’s ships are noted for their history, their service standards, their British traditions and their formal evenings.

I boarded the Queen Victoria in Aruba for the second leg of its 105-day world cruise. We were bound for Acapulco, Mexico, via the Panama Canal.

My first impression was of Queen Victoria’s bulk. It has 16 decks and carries 2,014 passengers and around 1,000 crew. Though not as large as sister ship the Queen Mary 2, this is not a small ship. But my balcony cabin, which I shared with my aunt, was smaller than I expected, with a tiny bathroom.

No matter, as it turned out. The balcony was large enough, equipped with two chairs and a table. I spent hours there, listening to the ship cut through the water, observing the changing light, looking at the constellations and photographing the moon, which was brighter than I had ever seen it and seemed to be full three nights in a row.

That must have been illusion, but why not? A cruise is part illusion. Grand staircases, mahogany paneling, stained glass, inlaid wood and custom-made carpeting, which the QV has aplenty in her stunning public rooms, lull passengers into forgetting that they are on a big sea. Once I crossed the Atlantic Ocean on the Queen Elizabeth 2 in tandem with the QM2, and even that huge ship, as I looked back at her, was dwarfed by the ocean.

Another illusion is of upper-crust elegance. Many passengers choose suites, tended by butlers. And the Queen Victoria has two or three formal nights a week, though they’re more Swarovski than Harry Winston %26mdash; and that’s fine. Cruises give ordinary people a chance to play dress up.

A woman who lives outside Sydney, Australia, told me that after she and her husband signed up for the cruise, she worried for six months that she would look frumpy among all the sophisticated, stylish women. She was relieved to find out that she looked fine.

The layout of the Queen Victoria is conducive to sociability. The lovely, high-ceilinged Queens Room, where afternoon tea is served, and which is also used for classes and for ballroom dancing in the evening, is centrally located on Deck 2, not far from several bars and lounges.

Afternoon tea is flawless. White-gloved waiters bring pots of tea followed by trays of little sandwiches, scones with jam and clotted cream and pastries %26mdash; all accompanied by a harpist.

You don’t eat on a cruise ship, you dine. On the Queen Victoria, passengers are assigned a dining room according to their cabin class, with the Queens Grill for the Grand, Master, Queens Suites and Penthouses at the top of the pyramid, followed by the Princess Grill for passengers in that category.

Both Grill dining rooms are single seating, and passengers can order off the menu. In fact, said executive chef Jean-Marie Zimmerman, “when they use our menus, we’re shocked.” Caviar, lobster and truffles are readily available. In good weather, Grill passengers can dine outside in a charming courtyard with an Italianate fountain and lighting fixtures that resemble old-fashioned gas street lamps.

The two-level Britannia Restaurant, where most passengers have dinner and sometimes other meals, accommodates 878 passengers in each of two seatings, with open seating at breakfast and lunch. The food is ample but not inspired.

Provisioning and cooking for the 3,000 people aboard the ship is a job of staggering complexity, requiring seven kitchens and mammoth storerooms. Bakers work around the clock. Fifteen pastry chefs make pastries for each day’s consumption. Separate kitchens are devoted to vegetable preparation, meat and fish.

Passengers who want an alternative to their assigned dining room have options. For an extra $20 at lunch and $30 at dinner, they can try the Todd English restaurant, whose menus were developed by the celebrity chef, but whose kitchen is in chef Zimmerman’s jurisdiction.

The Lido on Deck 9 serves cafeteria-style breakfast, lunch and dinner. At lunch, pasta and pizzas are made to order, and are excellent. Another lunch option is the Golden Lion Pub, where large TVs play sporting events and the menu consists of items such as steak and mushroom pie.

The Queen Victoria has a well-equipped gym and offers exercise and stretching classes, including yoga and Pilates. Fencing classes, a shipboard first, build stamina and balance. On paddle tennis and shuffleboard courts, the action can be far from decorous. Two outdoor swimming pools are seldom too crowded for swimming laps.

While Queen Victoria’s spa doesn’t have the name-brand cachet of the Canyon Ranch spa on the Queen Mary 2, it is well run with a large variety of treatments and experienced therapists. Services under the spa’s jurisdiction include a beauty salon, an acupuncturist, a physiotherapist and a dentist who is equipped to do tooth whitening and emergency repairs.

In a hydrotherapy suite, guests can assuage their backaches under strong jets of water in a heated pool, and then relax on heated lounges between steam room sessions and play time in a hydra-headed shower.

Among the treatments, the dry flotation bed looked particularly inviting. “You have your standard massage,” spa director Mark Nel explained. “Then you then climb on the dry flotation bed. It gets filled with water beneath you. You’ll fall asleep within minutes.”

The ship has a casino for those who like to gamble, but it was far less popular than the library, which has 6,000 books and periodicals and spans two decks, joined by a spiral staircase.

Although the Queen Victoria has a playroom for children, few were aboard. Most passengers were retired or semiretired. Many had the time and money to book the whole world cruise from New York to Southampton.

The Queen Victoria isn’t perfect and has already had her share of problems. An outbreak of norovirus on the maiden voyage afflicted around 100 people and kept the well-equipped medical center busy. Stormy seas off Gibraltar prevented the ship from docking. Some of the Britannia dining room service has been spotty, and the staterooms don’t have enough drawers.

Stirling and Clare Kenny of Stratford, Ontario, and Naples, Fla., said they had read the negative criticisms of Queen Victoria’s Christmas cruise and didn’t know what to expect.

The Kennys boarded in New York and plan to get off in Sydney. They have cruised on most lines operating from North America, and this is their 70th cruise.

“This is way better than we thought,” Stirling said. “It meets all my expectations and exceeds them.”

Then he shrugged off comparisons with other trips they had taken. “The best cruise is the one you’re on right now,” he said.

IF YOU GO

About the Queen Victoria

The ship has eight kinds of accommodations: Grand Suites, Master Suites, Penthouses, Queens Suites, Princess Suites, Balcony, Oceanview (no balcony) and Inside. They range in size from 2,131 square feet to 151 square feet.

Most of the staterooms are in the Balcony category and range in size from 242 to 472 square feet, including the balcony. They are attractively furnished in blond wood, with a small desk and sofa and two single beds that can be pushed together . They have small bathrooms with a shower but no tub. (Princess Suite staterooms and up are tub-equipped.)

Storage space in the Balcony staterooms is tight, especially for a ship that takes passengers on long cruises and has many formal nights. Most passengers found the drawer and closet space inadequate and some improvised by removing the sofa in favor of a clothes rack, using hooks to hang some of their garments outside the small closets or buying a set of plastic drawers at a port stop. Cunard says that the cabins will be fitted with more drawers after the world cruise ends in April.

Ship stats: Length, 964.5 feet; width, 106 feet; gross tonnage, 90,000; number of passengers, 2,014; number of passenger staterooms, 990; number of crew, about 1,000; staterooms with balconies, 712; top cruising speed, 23.7 knots; original cost, about $522 million.

Sample itineraries

%26#8226; May 6: 14-day Mediterranean Delights. From $2,975 (inside stateroom) to $25,175 (Q1 Grand Suite). Balcony fares from $4,175.

%26#8226; July 6: 12-day Voyage of the Vikings. From $2,295 (inside stateroom) to $22,895 (Q1 Grand Suite). Balcony fares from $3,895.

%26#8226; Oct. 12: 12-day Classic Mediterranean. From $2,445 to $22,345 (Q1 Grand Suite). Balcony fares from $3,345.

%26#8226; 2009 world cruise fares: Fares for 105-day cruise (includes the trans-Atlantic crossing aboard QM2 from Southampton, England, to New York at the end of the cruise), from $20,955 to $229,970 for a Q1 Grand Suite. Balcony fares from $29,140. Segments of the cruise can be booked at varying prices.

%26#8226; Extras: Liquor is extra, of course, but so are other beverages such as canned soft drinks ($1.75), bottled mineral water ($2 small; $3.50 large) and coffee outside of regular restaurant service ($1 for regular coffee and tea; $1.95 for cappuccino). Wine tastings, when offered, are $35 a person; whiskey tastings are $25 a person. Shore excursions usually cost between $39 and $199 per person. The spa’s hydrotherapy suite, with its heated pool, relaxation room, steam rooms and multi-headed showers, costs $35 for a one-day pass. Group yoga and Pilates classes are $45 a week. Internet access is 50 cents a minute.

Information

1-800-728-6273, www.cunard.com

Terese Loeb Kreuzer, editor of the Travel Arts Syndicate, is the author of “How to Move to Canada” (St. Martin’s Griffin, 2006).

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Sunday, February 17th, 2008

Reposition yourself for a tranquil TransAtlantic journey

Bathroom door latched, I headed outside for a chair on my private balcony, where the grays of the sky, without a hint of sun, matched those of the churning ocean. The balcony above shielded me from a light rain.

The gloom of such inclement weather, with capricious seas, might dissuade even the most ardent cruisers from considering a trans-Atlantic voyage %26mdash; usually offered in spring and fall, when cruise lines reposition their ships between winters in the Caribbean and summers in Europe.

But the crossings, more than a dozen each season, often run at nearly full capacity because thousands of sea lovers are willing to chance the weather for the rewards of the laid-back journey, with long days afloat and few, if any, port stops.

Besides, the price is usually less than $100 a day per person (for two) in an inside cabin %26mdash; I have seen prices as low as $70 a day %26mdash; and often less than $150 a day for an outside cabin with balcony.

My repositioning cruise in October was on the 3,100-passenger Emerald Princess, a new ship that spent the summer of 2007 in the Mediterranean and was headed across the Atlantic for a Caribbean winter. The 17-day cruise began in Venice, Italy, and ended in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. The first 10 days were in the Mediterranean and around Spain to Lisbon, Portugal. Of the last seven days, six were at sea, a journey of about 3,600 miles from Lisbon, with a stop in the Azores.

On that lazy Sunday morning in the middle of the Atlantic, I sat on my balcony with a book and a blanket, well satisfied with the grayness and moisture in the tangy sea air. Soon, the cabin steward would bring my morning melons, muffins, milk and a pot of coffee. The day ahead offered several hundred pages of reading, several hours of writing in my journal, some exercise on the deck, perhaps a movie, a nap, a fine dinner, evening entertainment and another 500 miles closer to Florida. What was not to like?

Passengers older, quieter

We were a ship of coffee-drinkers, novel-readers, gamblers, card-players, deck-walkers and nappers. Some passengers joined organized activities %26mdash; bingo and lectures and the like %26mdash; but most relaxed in the joys of nothing doing, no schedules, no excursions, no land in sight.

Passengers without private balconies found nooks and crannies on the outside decks. A regular contingent of older folks, bundled in blankets, camped out on chairs facing the sea on the covered Promenade that circled the ship on Deck 7.

“It’s a different crowd,” said Martin Ford, passenger services director on the Emerald Princess. “Salt air is what brings them to the ship on a repositioning cruise. An older crowd, mostly retired. People who prefer days at sea to exploring ports. On regular Europe cruises, we do 10 cities in 11 days. And it’s hot, so when passengers get back on board, it’s all over for the day. Not much time to enjoy the ship. On this cruise, we also have more variety of menus, and we whack on more entertainment.”

Of the 3,000 passengers, said Ford, nearly everyone had sailed before. On Princess, as on most cruise lines, repeat guests are rewarded with perks, such as free laundry and free Internet use.

One night I attended a party of about two dozen passengers who had sailed a minimum of 365 days on the Princess fleet of ships. These folks talked about ships, voyages and continents of their pasts. We swapped stories.

One couple had sailed nearly 900 days, more than two years of their lives. I was the only one who had sailed on the Pacific Princess in the early 1980s during a filming of a segment of the old television show “The Love Boat.”

Unpredictable weather

A tip from Ford about trans-Atlantic cruises: “Be prepared for all sorts of weather and sea conditions.”

We had fine weather and relatively gentle seas. The Mediterranean in mid-October was predictably warm from Venice to port stops at Naples and Civitavecchia (for Rome), Italy; Cannes, France; Barcelona and Cadiz, Spain; and Lisbon.

The weather held across the cooler Atlantic. We faced a few gloomy mornings, but most days provided sunshine and temperatures in the 60s. If you stayed out of the wind, you would be warm.

Our only rough night was the first one out of Lisbon, on our 800-mile crossing to the islands of the Azores. All night, in near gale force winds, huge foamy swells of ocean whooshed off the bow, raining spray as high as the top decks.

About midnight, I stood for a few moments on my balcony until, shivering and drenched, I headed to bed, only to be awakened half a dozen times during the night by creaking walls or a vibration as the ship hit a serious force of water.

The rest of our journey was peaceful. After a sunny day at sea and another at the port of Ponta Delgado in the Azores, where I did a long walk on our last piece of terra firma, the Emerald Princess set a straight course for a five-day run to the Bahamas and Fort Lauderdale.

As anyone who understands navigation knows, straight is not the shortest route across the ocean. Our course, 255-256 degrees, was explained by Fergus Stewart, third officer on the Emerald Princess bridge, which is the control room that juts out from either side of the ship, high above the bow, to give pilots the best views of nearby waters:

The shortest distance between two points (the Azores and Fort Lauderdale) would follow the curve of the Earth. But that course, in the Northern Hemisphere, would have taken us toward the north.

Anticipating warmer weather toward the south, the captain chose a straight course from the Azores to Fort Lauderdale. Our course was about 40-50 miles farther than if we had followed the curve of the Earth.

Stewart said that repositioning cruises set a course even more to the south later in the fall, so a ship might take six days to get across the Atlantic from the Azores instead of five.

Exploring the ship

The Emerald Princess is the newest ship of Princess Cruises, an old line with British traditions that is now part of the Carnival fleet. Princess pioneered the popular outdoor Movies Under the Stars on a huge screen visible on the pool deck. Movies run all day and into the evening, with popcorn.

Top innovation on the Emerald (and sister vessel Crown Princess) is the adults-only Sanctuary, a private outdoor deck near the spa with cabanas, cushioned lounge chairs (for singles and couples) and attendants who provide drinks, snacks and spa services such as massages. The cost is $15 each time you enter.

The other major change from earlier ships is the room assigned to Sabatini’s, a highly rated specialty restaurant with a Northern Italian theme (and a $20 cover charge). Sabatini’s on Emerald has top-deck views of the sea, as well as a comfortable balcony with tables outside, where often I ate my buffet lunch from the cafe below.

You’ll find good wine lists at $25-$50 a bottle at Sabatini’s and at the ship’s second specialty restaurant, the Crown Grill ($25 cover charge), which serves steaks, chops and seafood. All other dining rooms serve food at no extra charge.

On a ship longer than three football fields and tall enough for 15 passenger decks, there was plenty of room for roaming. I took long morning walks, starting at the aft end and exploring each deck, working my way toward the bow.

I met dozens of passengers from the United States, Canada and Europe, including families who were coming to Florida for the winter. Two men said they were working for the Hobart company, servicing the 71 dishwashers aboard. So far, they said, they had found 69 of the 71. They had yet to find a door that would take them to their final maintenance chores.

I had some of the same frustrations searching for the ship’s golf simulator, where passengers play famous golf courses by hitting balls at a computer-operated screen. Charts showed it was on a top deck aft, but stairs didn’t seem to go there, and as part of my seagoing exercise program I was eschewing elevators as I made my way back and forth from my cabin (Deck 11) to the Internet room (Deck 5), to lunch (Deck 15), the library (Deck 7), then back to the cabin to change for dinner (Deck 6). I found the simulator after climbing a series of outside steps and walking around the putt-putt golf course.

Sleeping with salt air

Of all the indulgences that vacationers consider when booking a cruise, the most popular is paying extra for a cabin with a private balcony. When compared with an inside cabin, outside cabins with a balcony usually double the cost. But this can be money well spent, especially if you will have sea days such as crossing the Atlantic. Many a day I sat for hours on my balcony, reading, snoozing or just staring out to sea. That’s as close as you’ll get on a big cruise ship to feeling one with the relentless, rolling, endless ocean.

Most nights, I slept with the balcony door open. The cabin steward always closed the door and drew the curtains while I was at dinner. The cabin may as well have been a basement cubbyhole.

When I returned, my first act was to open the curtains and door, inviting the salt air into my cabin, listening to the ocean rushing past in swirls of frothy water forced from the bow, gazing over white- capped waves as far as I could see out into the night.

Wind and water lulled me to sleep. During the night, at least once, perhaps several times, I would awaken, rolling out of bed to stand for a few minutes on the balcony, taking in the beauty and the power of the ocean.

On the last night of our voyage across the Atlantic, as we glided through the Bahamas and toward the coast of Florida, I awoke to look at the night sky, full of stars. I could see also a developing thin line of light on the western horizon where Florida awaited.

On his first voyage in 1492, Christopher Columbus spent five weeks sailing from the Canary Islands off Spain to the Bahamas. We had reached the Bahamas from the Azores in five days. The last morning on the balcony of my cushy cabin, I was thinking that five weeks would have been just about right.

David G. Molyneaux is editor of TravelMavens.net and a blogger at TravelMaven.typepad.com.

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Sunday, February 10th, 2008

Industry Experts Elect the Top 10 Home Decor Trends for 2008

Much like we can expect from the American people in next year’s election, the votes among the nation’s top interior designers and manufacturers are split when it comes to forecasting what will be “hot” in home decor in 2008.

The good news is that there’s no mudslinging or veto power. In fact, design bipartisanship is encouraged, as it results in a myriad of choices for today’s style- and value-conscious consumers.

Here are the top 10 trends on the ballot for 2008:

1. The Incumbent – Wall murals are always a hot ticket, particularly those produced by Hopkins, Minn.-based Murals Your Way (www.muralsyourway.com), the industry leader in the production of decorative wall murals for more than 35 years. “Personalization is the key driver in mural selection,%26#8221; says Todd Imholte, president of Environmental Graphics, the company that operates Murals Your Way. %26#8220;We are finding more and more people choosing a mural that fits their personality.” With a gallery of more than 5,000 images, as well as the ability to create a custom mural from a personal photo or artwork, the possibilities are truly endless.

2. The Front-Runner –Timothy Corrigan, recently named to the AD100: Top International Architects And Interior Designers by “Architectural Digest” and to the “Robb Report” Top 40 Interior Designers in the World, predicts an increased emphasis on “cozy comfort.” More vibrant, colorful rooms that feature antiques and upholstered, over-stuffed furniture found in secondhand furniture stores, flea markets and estate sales will create an easy, comfortable home without sacrificing elegance or beauty.

3. A Grass Roots Initiative – Recycling, reusing and refurbishing will come into play when developing and producing home products, says Lori West, ASID, of Bliss Creek Interiors. Recycled carpeting, grass cloth wall covering, bamboo flooring and a simple, decluttered environment will foster an enhanced earth awareness and conscientiousness of living.

4. The Caucus On Color – A “spice-infused” palette will be the hottest look in accent colors for the coming year, according to Davis Remignanti, lead design consultant for Furniture.com. Carnelian, flax, russet and acid green will be especially popular, with blue as the dark horse candidate. Reflective materials like chrome, mirrors and mercury glass will make strong room accents.

Celebrity design expert and author Kathy Peterson of “Kathy Peterson Inspired” forecasts unexpected color combinations like chartreuse with aqua, brown with burgundy, and deep purple with dark red. The Olympics in China will also influence color on the warmer side, adds West, with reds blended with coppers, burnished oranges and browns.

5. Lobbying For Lighting – Jeff Dross, trends expert and senior product manager for Kichler Lighting, notes that smaller dining rooms have created a demand for smaller furniture and fixtures. Pendant-sized, three-light chandeliers, such as the new Pendalette, boast an original, clever design while providing a unique source of task or accent lighting. Dross also sees a continued emphasis on energy-efficient products, as well as a growing interest in kitchen cabinet lighting with multiple light sources.

6. Adding Textures To The Ticket – “More and more people will be looking to appease all of their senses, including that of touch,” says Kathy Hoffman, ASID, of Susan Fredman %26amp; Associates, Ltd. A unique blend of textures %26#8212; such as silky, velvet drapery; fabulous, nubby pillows; and natural stone fireplaces %26#8212; will create a clean, attractive space that also calms and soothes.

7. Primary-Ly Modern – According to Hilary Sopata, ASID, of Interior Visions Designs, Inc., the style in 2008 will be all about floating objects. Spheres hung at different heights forming the new chandelier, chairs that cantilever out from their bases, and plinth base furniture with a shadow underneath for a hovercraft sofa look will provide a streamlined, contemporary style.

8. Campaigning For Less Busy Kitchens – Traditional kitchens will continue to become simpler as far as trims and molding details are concerned, according to Kaye Hathaway, ASID, of dea design group, ltd. Heavy carvings and elaborate moldings have come to an end, and glazed paints and rich warm woods like cherry and alder will be very fashionable. Quartersawn or riff-cut white oak will make a comeback in more modern kitchens.

9. A Nomination For Glamour – “The recent interest in natural materials has spawned a renewed fascination for glamorous and refined designs,” adds Remignanti, in a look he calls “Luxe Redux.” Refined silhouettes and finishes, gently swept lines, strong geometric forms and finishes that emphasize exotic veneers will create a look that is elegant, but in an approachable and welcoming way.

10. An Age-Old Platform – A design trend that originated more than 5,000 years ago, Feng Shui maximizes the “life areas” of a home by balancing the elements of nature (water, fire, metal, wood and earth.) Joyce Kocinski, ASID, of Design in Balance, predicts a continued interest in rearranging or replacing furniture and accessories to enhance the positive energy of each living environment.

No matter how design industry experts debate the issue, the poll on 2008 trends is clear. With equal representation given to a variety of home decor influences, no quorum will be needed to create a personal, livable home environment.

Courtesy of ARAcontent

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Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Historic cruise ship rendezvous

It was the first and only time the three ships will ever meet. The Queen Victoria was launched in December and the QE2 will be retired later this year and turned into a floating five-star hotel in Dubai.

Thousands of New Yorkers stood along the waterfront of Lower Manhattan to watch the three grand vessels twinkling in the winter darkness as they lined in front of the Statue of Liberty amid fireworks.

“They are big!” said Brammy Sturley, 8, who watched from aboard a Circle Line boat nearby in the harbor. Brammy’s dad Steve described the boy as a “Cunard fanatic.”

A cold rain began to fall on the crowd on shore before the fireworks were over, but Manhattan resident Nadine Ellman, who sailed twice on the QE2, wasn’t about to leave early. “This is for the die-hards,” she said. “I’m having such a good time.”

“You’ll never see it like this again,” said John Stella of Staten Island, who impressed other spectators with his knowledge of Cunard history, mentioning, among other things, that the QE2 transported troops in the 1982 Falklands War.

The twin sailings and rendezvous underscored several differences between the older and newer Cunard vessels.

The meeting of the ships started about a half-hour late because it took more time than expected to get the QE2 in place. Cunard spokesman Brian O’Connor said the QE2 has older propulsion and navigation technology than the other two and had to be guided by tugboats.

The QE2 was built in the 1960s with trans-Atlantic crossings in mind, while the Queen Victoria is a modern cruise ship with a lower front hull. As the two ships sailed from England to New York on the first leg of their trip, they encountered rough seas, including waves so high that they washed over the bow of the Queen Victoria. No one was injured, according to O’Connor. But the waves did not wash over the bow of the QE2, which is taller in front than the newer ships.

After reaching New York, the two ships headed together to Fort Lauderdale, Fla. They were expected to arrive there Jan. 16. They will later part and continue their world tours separately.

The QE2 will make one more final call in New York on Oct. 16 before retiring as part of its “Farewell to America” trans-Atlantic crossing.

The QE2 is the longest-serving vessel in the 168-year history of the Cunard line. Since launching in 1967, it has traveled more than 5 million nautical miles, including more than 800 trans-Atlantic crossings with 2.5 million passengers. The ship was sold for $100 million to Dubai World, an investment company that manages projects for the government in Dubai.

Carolyn Spencer Brown, editor of CruiseCritic.com, said the QE2 “represents a previous era, in style and substance, of ocean liners, and it’s an era that so many of today’s younger, newer-to-cruising travelers will never see. It’s an utterly unique experience with a dedicated class system onboard %26mdash; four classes of passengers who dine in four different restaurants that reflect the fares they pay. The emphasis on sea days, with erudite lectures and elegant meals, including afternoon tea that’s the best in cruising … will probably not be mimicked so beautifully in my lifetime.”

The Queen Victoria has three classes of passengers, but the differences in amenities are not as distinct as they were on the QE2. The staterooms are smaller but more of them have balconies. Like the other two ships, it has Cunard’s trademark red-and-black smokestack, a “Queens Room” ballroom where elegant events are held, as well as a pub where guests can wash down fish and chips with a pint.

But the new ship has some features that the others do not, such as a 6,000-volume, two-deck-high library, a “Cunardia” history museum, fencing classes and a theater with private boxes.

Both the QM2 and the Queen Victoria also have restaurants overseen by the celebrity chef Todd English in addition to their regular dining rooms.

The 151,000-ton QM2, which began sailing in 2004, is the largest of the three, carrying 2,592 passengers in 1,296 staterooms, plus 1,253 crew members.

The 90,000-ton Queen Victoria, which will homeport in Southampton, carries 2,014 passengers in 990 staterooms, plus 1,001 crew members.

The 70,000-ton QE2 carries 1,792 passengers in 1,002 staterooms, plus 921 crew members.

Cunard Line, a unit of Carnival Corp., is building a new Queen Elizabeth at Italy’s Fincantieri shipyard, which built the Queen Victoria, with delivery in 2010. The new vessel will be Cunard’s second-largest after the QM2. It will allow Cunard to keep three Queens in service after the QE2 retires. But the new vessel will not be called the QE3 - just simply the Queen Elizabeth. See more about Cunard online at www.cunard.com

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Friday, January 25th, 2008

QE2 on final world tour Queen Victoria on first after meeting with QM2 in NYC

NEW YORK — Cunard’s new Queen Victoria cruise ship is on its first world tour, sailing in tandem with the Queen Elizabeth 2, which is on its 26th and final trip around the globe.

The two ships had a historic rendezvous Jan. 13 in New York Harbor with the Queen Mary 2, which homeports in Brooklyn.

It was the first and only time the three ships will ever meet. The Queen Victoria was launched in December and the QE2 will be retired later this year and turned into a floating five-star hotel in Dubai.

Thousands of New Yorkers stood along the waterfront of Lower Manhattan to watch the three grand vessels twinkling in the winter darkness as they lined in front of the Statue of Liberty amid fireworks.

“They are big!” said Brammy Sturley, 8, who watched from aboard a Circle Line boat nearby in the harbor. Brammy’s dad Steve described the boy as a “Cunard fanatic.”

A cold rain began to fall on the crowd on shore before the fireworks were over, but Manhattan resident Nadine Ellman, who sailed twice on the QE2, wasn’t about to leave early. “This is for the die-hards,” she said. “I’m having such a good time.”

“You’ll never see it like this again,” said John Stella of Staten Island, who impressed other spectators with his knowledge of Cunard history, mentioning, among other things, that the QE2 transported troops in the 1982 Falklands War.

The twin sailings and rendezvous underscored several differences between the older and newer Cunard vessels.

The meeting of the ships started about a half-hour late because it took more time than expected to get the QE2 in place. Cunard spokesman Brian O’Connor said the QE2 has older propulsion and navigation technology than the other two and had to be guided by tugboats.

The QE2 was built in the 1960s with trans-Atlantic crossings in mind, while the Queen Victoria is a modern cruise ship with a lower front hull. As the two ships sailed from England to New York on the first leg of their trip, they encountered rough seas, including waves so high that they washed over the bow of the Queen Victoria. No one was injured, according to O’Connor. But the waves did not wash over the bow of the QE2, which is taller in front than the newer ships.

The QE2 will make one more final call in New York on Oct. 16 before retiring as part of its “Farewell to America” trans-Atlantic crossing.

The QE2 is the longest-serving vessel in the 168-year history of the Cunard line. Since launching in 1967, it has traveled more than 5 million nautical miles, including more than 800 trans-Atlantic crossings with 2.5 million passengers. The ship was sold for $100 million to Dubai World, an investment company that manages projects for the government in Dubai.

Carolyn Spencer Brown, editor of CruiseCritic.com, said the QE2 “represents a previous era, in style and substance, of ocean liners, and it’s an era that so many of today’s younger, newer-to-cruising travelers will never see. It’s an utterly unique experience with a dedicated class system onboard — four classes of passengers who dine in four different restaurants that reflect the fares they pay. The emphasis on sea days, with erudite lectures and elegant meals, including afternoon tea that’s the best in cruising … will probably not be mimicked so beautifully in my lifetime.”

The Queen Victoria has three classes of passengers, but the differences in amenities are not as distinct as they were on the QE2. The staterooms are smaller but more of them have balconies. Like the other two ships, it has Cunard’s trademark red-and-black smokestack, a “Queens Room” ballroom where elegant events are held, as well as a pub where guests can wash down fish and chips with a pint.

But the new ship has some features that the others do not, such as a 6,000-volume, two-deck-high library, a “Cunardia” history museum, fencing classes and a theater with private boxes.

Both the QM2 and the Queen Victoria also have restaurants overseen by the celebrity chef Todd English in addition to their regular dining rooms.

The 151,000-ton QM2, which began sailing in 2004, is the largest of the three, carrying 2,592 passengers in 1,296 staterooms, plus 1,253 crew members.

The 90,000-ton Queen Victoria, which will homeport in Southampton, carries 2,014 passengers in 990 staterooms, plus 1,001 crew members.

The 70,000-ton QE2 carries 1,792 passengers in 1,002 staterooms, plus 921 crew members.

Cunard Line, a unit of Carnival Corp., is building a new Queen Elizabeth at Italy’s Fincantieri shipyard, which built the Queen Victoria, with delivery in 2010. The new vessel will be Cunard’s second-largest after the QM2. It will allow Cunard to keep three Queens in service after the QE2 retires. But the new vessel will not be called the QE3 - just simply the Queen Elizabeth.

Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Friday, January 25th, 2008

QE2 on final world tour Queen Victoria on first after meeting with QM2 in NYC

NEW YORK — Cunard’s new Queen Victoria cruise ship is on its first world tour, sailing in tandem with the Queen Elizabeth 2, which is on its 26th and final trip around the globe.

The two ships had a historic rendezvous Jan. 13 in New York Harbor with the Queen Mary 2, which homeports in Brooklyn.

It was the first and only time the three ships will ever meet. The Queen Victoria was launched in December and the QE2 will be retired later this year and turned into a floating five-star hotel in Dubai.

Thousands of New Yorkers stood along the waterfront of Lower Manhattan to watch the three grand vessels twinkling in the winter darkness as they lined in front of the Statue of Liberty amid fireworks.

“They are big!” said Brammy Sturley, 8, who watched from aboard a Circle Line boat nearby in the harbor. Brammy’s dad Steve described the boy as a “Cunard fanatic.”

A cold rain began to fall on the crowd on shore before the fireworks were over, but Manhattan resident Nadine Ellman, who sailed twice on the QE2, wasn’t about to leave early. “This is for the die-hards,” she said. “I’m having such a good time.”

“You’ll never see it like this again,” said John Stella of Staten Island, who impressed other spectators with his knowledge of Cunard history, mentioning, among other things, that the QE2 transported troops in the 1982 Falklands War.

The twin sailings and rendezvous underscored several differences between the older and newer Cunard vessels.

The meeting of the ships started about a half-hour late because it took more time than expected to get the QE2 in place. Cunard spokesman Brian O’Connor said the QE2 has older propulsion and navigation technology than the other two and had to be guided by tugboats.

The QE2 was built in the 1960s with trans-Atlantic crossings in mind, while the Queen Victoria is a modern cruise ship with a lower front hull. As the two ships sailed from England to New York on the first leg of their trip, they encountered rough seas, including waves so high that they washed over the bow of the Queen Victoria. No one was injured, according to O’Connor. But the waves did not wash over the bow of the QE2, which is taller in front than the newer ships.

The QE2 will make one more final call in New York on Oct. 16 before retiring as part of its “Farewell to America” trans-Atlantic crossing.

The QE2 is the longest-serving vessel in the 168-year history of the Cunard line. Since launching in 1967, it has traveled more than 5 million nautical miles, including more than 800 trans-Atlantic crossings with 2.5 million passengers. The ship was sold for $100 million to Dubai World, an investment company that manages projects for the government in Dubai.

Carolyn Spencer Brown, editor of CruiseCritic.com, said the QE2 “represents a previous era, in style and substance, of ocean liners, and it’s an era that so many of today’s younger, newer-to-cruising travelers will never see. It’s an utterly unique experience with a dedicated class system onboard — four classes of passengers who dine in four different restaurants that reflect the fares they pay. The emphasis on sea days, with erudite lectures and elegant meals, including afternoon tea that’s the best in cruising … will probably not be mimicked so beautifully in my lifetime.”

The Queen Victoria has three classes of passengers, but the differences in amenities are not as distinct as they were on the QE2. The staterooms are smaller but more of them have balconies. Like the other two ships, it has Cunard’s trademark red-and-black smokestack, a “Queens Room” ballroom where elegant events are held, as well as a pub where guests can wash down fish and chips with a pint.

But the new ship has some features that the others do not, such as a 6,000-volume, two-deck-high library, a “Cunardia” history museum, fencing classes and a theater with private boxes.

Both the QM2 and the Queen Victoria also have restaurants overseen by the celebrity chef Todd English in addition to their regular dining rooms.

The 151,000-ton QM2, which began sailing in 2004, is the largest of the three, carrying 2,592 passengers in 1,296 staterooms, plus 1,253 crew members.

The 90,000-ton Queen Victoria, which will homeport in Southampton, carries 2,014 passengers in 990 staterooms, plus 1,001 crew members.

The 70,000-ton QE2 carries 1,792 passengers in 1,002 staterooms, plus 921 crew members.

Cunard Line, a unit of Carnival Corp., is building a new Queen Elizabeth at Italy’s Fincantieri shipyard, which built the Queen Victoria, with delivery in 2010. The new vessel will be Cunard’s second-largest after the QM2. It will allow Cunard to keep three Queens in service after the QE2 retires. But the new vessel will not be called the QE3 - just simply the Queen Elizabeth.

Copyright 2007 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Friday, January 25th, 2008

Industry Experts Elect the Top 10 Home Decor Trends for 2008

Much like we can expect from the American people in next year’s election, the votes among the nation’s top interior designers and manufacturers are split when it comes to forecasting what will be “hot” in home decor in 2008.

The good news is that there’s no mudslinging or veto power. In fact, design bipartisanship is encouraged, as it results in a myriad of choices for today’s style- and value-conscious consumers.

Here are the top 10 trends on the ballot for 2008:

1. The Incumbent – Wall murals are always a hot ticket, particularly those produced by Hopkins, Minn.-based Murals Your Way (www.muralsyourway.com), the industry leader in the production of decorative wall murals for more than 35 years. “Personalization is the key driver in mural selection,%26#8221; says Todd Imholte, president of Environmental Graphics, the company that operates Murals Your Way. %26#8220;We are finding more and more people choosing a mural that fits their personality.” With a gallery of more than 5,000 images, as well as the ability to create a custom mural from a personal photo or artwork, the possibilities are truly endless.

2. The Front-Runner –Timothy Corrigan, recently named to the AD100: Top International Architects And Interior Designers by “Architectural Digest” and to the “Robb Report” Top 40 Interior Designers in the World, predicts an increased emphasis on “cozy comfort.” More vibrant, colorful rooms that feature antiques and upholstered, over-stuffed furniture found in secondhand furniture stores, flea markets and estate sales will create an easy, comfortable home without sacrificing elegance or beauty.

3. A Grass Roots Initiative – Recycling, reusing and refurbishing will come into play when developing and producing home products, says Lori West, ASID, of Bliss Creek Interiors. Recycled carpeting, grass cloth wall covering, bamboo flooring and a simple, decluttered environment will foster an enhanced earth awareness and conscientiousness of living.

4. The Caucus On Color – A “spice-infused” palette will be the hottest look in accent colors for the coming year, according to Davis Remignanti, lead design consultant for Furniture.com. Carnelian, flax, russet and acid green will be especially popular, with blue as the dark horse candidate. Reflective materials like chrome, mirrors and mercury glass will make strong room accents.

Celebrity design expert and author Kathy Peterson of “Kathy Peterson Inspired” forecasts unexpected color combinations like chartreuse with aqua, brown with burgundy, and deep purple with dark red. The Olympics in China will also influence color on the warmer side, adds West, with reds blended with coppers, burnished oranges and browns.

5. Lobbying For Lighting – Jeff Dross, trends expert and senior product manager for Kichler Lighting, notes that smaller dining rooms have created a demand for smaller furniture and fixtures. Pendant-sized, three-light chandeliers, such as the new Pendalette, boast an original, clever design while providing a unique source of task or accent lighting. Dross also sees a continued emphasis on energy-efficient products, as well as a growing interest in kitchen cabinet lighting with multiple light sources.

6. Adding Textures To The Ticket – “More and more people will be looking to appease all of their senses, including that of touch,” says Kathy Hoffman, ASID, of Susan Fredman %26amp; Associates, Ltd. A unique blend of textures %26#8212; such as silky, velvet drapery; fabulous, nubby pillows; and natural stone fireplaces %26#8212; will create a clean, attractive space that also calms and soothes.

7. Primary-Ly Modern – According to Hilary Sopata, ASID, of Interior Visions Designs, Inc., the style in 2008 will be all about floating objects. Spheres hung at different heights forming the new chandelier, chairs that cantilever out from their bases, and plinth base furniture with a shadow underneath for a hovercraft sofa look will provide a streamlined, contemporary style.

8. Campaigning For Less Busy Kitchens – Traditional kitchens will continue to become simpler as far as trims and molding details are concerned, according to Kaye Hathaway, ASID, of dea design group, ltd. Heavy carvings and elaborate moldings have come to an end, and glazed paints and rich warm woods like cherry and alder will be very fashionable. Quartersawn or riff-cut white oak will make a comeback in more modern kitchens.

9. A Nomination For Glamour – “The recent interest in natural materials has spawned a renewed fascination for glamorous and refined designs,” adds Remignanti, in a look he calls “Luxe Redux.” Refined silhouettes and finishes, gently swept lines, strong geometric forms and finishes that emphasize exotic veneers will create a look that is elegant, but in an approachable and welcoming way.

10. An Age-Old Platform – A design trend that originated more than 5,000 years ago, Feng Shui maximizes the “life areas” of a home by balancing the elements of nature (water, fire, metal, wood and earth.) Joyce Kocinski, ASID, of Design in Balance, predicts a continued interest in rearranging or replacing furniture and accessories to enhance the positive energy of each living environment.

No matter how design industry experts debate the issue, the poll on 2008 trends is clear. With equal representation given to a variety of home decor influences, no quorum will be needed to create a personal, livable home environment.

Courtesy of ARAcontent

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Friday, January 25th, 2008