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Archive for the ‘Miscellaneous’ Category

Aquascutum is one of the quintessential London brands. Regent Street to the core, the company have been on the go since 1851. It’s long been one of my favourite brands, pricey as it is the pieces hold up well in the long-term and the elegant look of the items is timeless. While an Aquascutum coat remains slightly unattainable at present (Student bank account, every time the ATM dispenses money I dance on the street), it is one of the staple pieces I hope to get my hands on down the line.

Efforts to stick Pierce Brosnan in a nice suit and sell the brand to ‘that’ kind of man (You know the kind, boat shoes) are probably an attempt to move the brand away from any association with football hooliganism, the old British hooligan logic being that if it looks nice they’ll wear it while kicking each other in the head. Still, the brand has a rich history and tradition, with many of the items still made in the UK today.

The arrival of the brand in Arnotts, the oldest department store in Dublin, is most welcome. Perhaps no more dancing at the ATM for me….

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You can check out the Aquascutum Sale here, at their website. A number of jobs sites seem to be advertising jobs at the new Arnotts store, if anyone is sick of the couch yet.

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Saturday night drinks in The Bernard Shaw with Simon went well, as they do, and on the way out the door I noticed the flyer for the exhibition ‘Exact Fare Only’. Essentially the exhibition is a collection of pieces from Dublin artists inspired by journeys on Dublin Bus.

The flyer, if you bother taking a scissors to it, can be folded into a the shape of a Dublin Bus. Then, you cut holes for the sides to fit into (I’m a lazy man, notice the masking-tape) and you’re away. If you’ve loads of time like me, you can colour the thing in . Look at it!

Amazing. Get on it. My only regret is not thinking of scanning the sheet up here so you could all spend Monday morning making mini 3D Nitelink buses too. Innovative flyer gets a thumbs up.

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There was a time, back when the world was black and white and “Playstations were made out of wood” (Bo Selecta, well done if you got it) , when you’d come home from town with a good half dozen Dublin focused magazines at the bottom of the bag.

Things have been pretty grim of late, with few Dublin magazines of note. Totally Dublin is a staple of course, but beyond that there isn’t much going. Much as I enjoy a flick through the quality Dubliner Magazine, the Larkinite in me can’t be seen buying The Hedild, (If I want to know what Sinn Féin are up to, I’ll read their website lads…) so I rely on finding a copy on the bus. Le Cool is another one I go seeking out.

Now, Punt has arrived on the scene.

It looks the business, inside and out. I picked my copy up in Tower Records, but it’s available in a whole heap of places, including The Winding Stair, Urban Picnic, Bookworms and elsewhere.

Punt is an ad-free zone by policy. The only ads you’ll find here will be non-commercial and from our Punters

Thank the lord for that.

Pop over here for a looksie. It’ll set you back the cost of a double cheeseburger in Maccies.

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Snapped on the Dublin Bus home from work. Every bus I’ve been on in the last week has been much the same.

Made me long for a simpler time, remember these? Delighted somebody put this on YouTube. Before people were turning pocket money into chunky markers and wrecking the buzz. Embedding disabled it seems, how annoying. Give it a click then.

Wouldn’t catch these kids carrying chunky markers around in those shocking school bags either.

By pure chance, I spotted two friends (including our own jaycarax there on the right), discussing this exhibtion on Facebook. It’s on tonight. Timely.

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This (presumably incorrectly captioned) photograph was on the front page of The Irish Times website for some time this morning. Definitely one of my favourite news ‘fails’ of the year.

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There seems to loads going around at the moment. Have you heard of anymore?

Burdocks are offering fish goujons, chips and can for €4.95.

Milano’s latest online offer is a pizza for 15c (!) when you buy any other main course.

Gourmet Burgers are doing a online deal that you can get a burger for €5 when you purchase  any drink, side or starter.

Wagamana are offering a main meal and drink for €9.95 (Mon – Fri, 12pm – 5pm).

The Italian restaurant Mona Lisa are doing a buy one get one free on any pizza or pasta (Mon – Sun, 12pm – 7pm).

Thumbs up!

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Anyone who’s been following the Blog for a while might remember this post from JayCarax about a great piece of street art done just off the Luas tracks. I’m actually suprised it stayed there that long, but eventually someone realised it’s existence and did a hack job in covering it up…

Controversial Elephant replaced by existential nothingness...

And a couple more snaps of some Dublin graffiti taken on the same day…..

Brings to mind a certain Scary Éire track..!

Located around the back of the historic Smithfield Fruit and Vegetable Markets  is this piece:

This is not a photo oppurtunity...

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A man drives to a gas station and has his tank filled up. While doing this
the clerk spots two penguins sitting on the back seat of the car. He asks
the driver, “What’s up with the penguins in the back seat?”

The man in the car says, “I found them. I asked myself what to do with
them but, I haven’t a clue.”

The clerk ponders a bit then says, “You should take them to the zoo.”

“Yeah, that’s a good idea,” says the man in the car and drives away.

The next day the man with the car is back at the same gas station. The
clerk sees the penguins are still in the back seat of the car.

“Hey, they’re still here! I thought you were going to take them to the zoo!”

“Oh, I did,” says the driver, “and we had a great time. Today I’m taking
them to the beach.”

Kelli, a 10-year-old female penguin, was kidnapped from Dublin Zoo this morning by three men. She was found several hours later on Rutland Street and was taken back to the Zoo by gardaí from Store Street. Gardaí are now hunting for the men involved.

Motive? Off – season college prankers? Criminals hoping to hold her for ransom? North Dublin brigade of the Animal Liberation Front (ALF)?

Media reports: BBC, RTE and Irish Independent.

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A real gem this, spotted on the wonderful Irish Election Literature Blog. It’s Trevor Sargent. Of course, one of the only Green TD’s who might still have a job after the next election following a Grade A piece of theatre that made sure he came away looking like the last Green who hadn’t turned yellow. Here he is performing ‘The Garden Song’ for an audience of children.

Of my local TD’s, it’s either Mary Harney or No-Go Gogarty I’d pay the most to see whip out the guitar.

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Karma

Dame Street.A nice one to spot on the way to work.

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It’s a good question for a pub quiz- How many bridges span the Liffey from Heuston Station to where Dublin meets the sea? No doubt you’ll get a plethora of answers, but you’ll rarely get the right one. You can guarantee people will forget that two bridges traverse the water at Heuston, they’ll forget about the little Rory O’Moore Bridge that has more history than most of them, or the DART Loopline at Butt Bridge. They might even forget the ugly abomination that is the East Link, the last connection between Northside and Southside before Dublin Bay separates the two…

Perhaps Dublin's best known bridge, The Ha'Penny Bridge.

The correct answer, if you want to know, is seventeen, starting at Sean Heuston Bridge and working all the way along the river to the Eastlink Bridge at Dublin Port. I’m not going to cover them all in this piece; I won’t be covering the bridges we all know, like O’Connell Bridge or the Ha’penny Bridge for that matter. What I will do is take a look at some of the ones to the west of O’Connell Bridge; ones I find interesting mainly due to who they’re named after or because of their historical importance.

-Sean Heuston Bridge (ex-King’s Bridge, Sarsfield Bridge) 1829

The first incarnation of the bridge was built in 1828/ 9 and named Kings Bridge to commemorate a visit by George IV to Dublin in 1821.  After the declaration of the Free State  in 1922, it was renamed Sarsfield Bridge, in memory of Patrick Sarsfield, leader of the Jacobite Rebellion of 1641. (I’ll talk about the 1641 Rebellion later.) In 1941 the bridge was again re-named, this time after Sean Heuston, a member of Na Fianna h-Éireann who played a prominent role in the Easter Rising of 1916.

At 19 years of age, Seán Heuston was Captain of a twenty three strong company of men, mostly Fianna h-Éireann members around his own age, who were directed by James Connolly to take “The  Mendicity (Institute on Ushers Island) at all costs”. Their goal was to prevent British re-inforcements coming into the city from The Curragh Camp and the West. They held out until Wednesday afternoon, until they were scattered by the 10th Battalion of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers. One of the more striking stories of the Rebellion (or one of countless stories to tell of that week) is that of the Liutenant of the 10th Battalion, Lieutenant Gerald Aloysius Neilan who was shot and killed by a sniper from the Mendicity, while his brother Anthony Neilan took part in the Rising on the Rebel side. He was one of two Liutenants killed in Dublin that day, with another nine members of the 10th Batt. killed at the Mendicity,  as per a report to Prime Minister Asquith by General Sir John Maxwell.  Seán Houston was captured with 22 other men and executed by firing squad on May 8, 1916 in Kilmainham Jail on the charge that he “… did take part in an armed rebellion and in the waging of wars against His Majesty the king such act of being of such a nature as to be calculated to be prejudicial to the defence of the Realm and being done with the intention and for the purpose of assisting the enemy.”

 Kingsbridge Station was later renamed Heuston Station in his honour.

Nothing like this anymore of course, theres more silt than water under it, and the LUAS runs across it!

The Bridge itself was reconstructed in 2003 and now carries the LUAS from Tallaght to the Point.

– Rory O’Moore Bridge, (ex- Victoria & Albert Bridge, Queen Victoria Bridge) Watling Street to Ellis Street, 1859 (Previous structures: 1670, 1704)

“Oh lives there the traitor who’d shrink from the strife, who would add to the length of his forfeited life. And his country, his kindred, his faith would abjure; No we’ll strike for old Ireland and Rory O’Moore.” (more…)

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In The Sun.

Come In And Visit. If you saw my recent post, showing photographs of O’ Connell Street on the day after Lord Nelson said farewell, you’d notice this familiar shopfront in the background. In the reflection you can see The Happy Ring House, another great O’ Connell Street shopfront.

This guy is appearing all over Dublin.

See?

I love a badly named head-shop. Up In Smoke wins the day. This one is on Moore Street. The lad behind the counter could not have looked more bored.

Business, not quite as usual.

This is up at Parnell Square, by the bus-stop. It’s been there yonks. I always tell myself when I’m passing it, that today is gonna be a gud day.

How long until all these buildings vanish in the name of progress? Moore Street at 9pm, this day last week.

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