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Martha Stewart Weddings, Spring 2011
March 11th, 2011 — Books, Wedding
Wedding: Program Inspiration
March 11th, 2011 — Stationary, Wedding
This Program is hilarious, would be a wonderful way to entertain guests before your wedding ceremony begins.
Image: Style Me Pretty
WIFE with Style: Gwen Stefani
March 10th, 2011 — WIFE with Style
WIFE Sweet Treat: Dynamo Donuts
March 10th, 2011 — Resturants, Things I Love
At the moment I’m trying to find a way to San Francisco just to feed my craving for my favorite food…Donuts! Dynamo Donuts serves up the most creative flavors like: Meyer Lemon Huckleberry, Molasses Guinness Pear, Banana De Leche, Chocolate Rose Geranium Hazelnut, Strawberry Earl Grey, Pumpkin Chocolate Chip, Caramel De Sel, Candied Orange Blossom and their famous Bacon Maple Apple
Dynamo uses Clover Organic Milk for it’s coffee and donuts. Each donut utilizes organic, sustainable, and local ingredients whenever possible. They are always handmade daily by Sara and her dedicated staff. We offer a rotating selection of 7 to 10 donut flavors per day so quality and freshness of ingredients can be guaranteed. EVERYDAY is Bacon Donut Day!!!
2760 24th Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
(415) 920-1978
7am – 5pm Tuesday – Saturday
9am – 4pm Sundays
CLOSED MONDAYS
THE HUSBAND: “Men’s Lib”
March 9th, 2011 — Article, The Husband
Why it’s time to reimagine masculinity at work and at home.
Newsweek Article By: Andrew Romano and Tony Dokoupil
What’s the matter with men? For years, the media have delivered the direst of prognoses. Men are “in decline.” Guys are getting “stiffed.” The “war on boys” has begun. And so on. This summer, The Atlantic’s Hanna Rosin went so far as to declare that “The End of Men” is upon us.
There’s certainly some substance to these claims. As the U.S. economy has transitioned from brawn to brain over the past three decades, a growing number of women have gone off to work. Men’s share of the labor force has declined from 70 percent in 1945 to less than 50 percent today, and in the country’s biggest cities, young, single, childless women—that is, the next generation—earn 8 percent more than their male peers. Women have matched or overtaken men as a percentage of students in college and graduate school, while men have retained their lead in alcoholism, suicide, homelessness, violence, and criminality. Factor in the Great Recession, which has decimated male-heavy industries like construction and manufacturing, and it’s no wonder so many deadline anthropologists are down on men. But while the state of American manhood has inspired plenty of anxious trend pieces, few observers have bothered to address the obvious question: if men are going off the rails, how do they get back on track?