hay about a chair brukt

hay about a chair brukt

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Hay About A Chair Brukt

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FargerikLekenVintageFørti minutters kjøretur fra Stavanger sentrum, på Jæren, bor Monica Hattland sammen med mann og barn. Det er lite som minner om det oppussingsobjektet huset var da familien overtok. I dag er boligen gjennomført til fingerspissene. Monica er utdannet interiørkonsulent og jobber hos Fargerike. Hun sier at det er lett å la seg inspirere av farger når hun ser dem hver eneste dag. – Jeg elsker farger, så å jobbe med dem dagen lang er jo drømmejobben. Det er utrolig inspirerende å møte kunder med ulike behov – og ikke minst følge med på trendene som kommer. Selv om jeg i utgangspunktet alltid har vært over gjennomsnittlig glad i farger, er det først de siste par årene jeg virkelig har tatt dem i bruk, innrømmer hun.En ting Monica har vært bevisst på, er at fargene ikke skal ta overhånd. Gjennomgående hvite gulv og vegger gir et hav av spillerom – for farger på både møbler og interiør. – Jeg er opptatt av balanse og at rommet må fungere som en helhet.




Selv om mange av møblene er kjøpt brukt, arvet eller funnet på loppemarkeder er det nok mer utilfeldig tilfeldig, sier Monica. Det er nettopp Monicas trang til det tilfeldige og det uperfekte som gjør at hjemmet fremstår som noe utenom det vanlige.– Noen tenker kanskje at det kan bli litt mye av det gode. Surfebrett i interiøret er neppe hverdagskost for alle og enhver, og flere av plansjene inneholder jo motiver som ikke er direkte vakre. For meg er det nettopp denne morsomme, uhøytidelige, litt naive blandingen som gjør hjemmet personlig. Det skal ikke være for stivt og sterilt.Monica er en ekte handywoman. Tingene hun ikke arver eller kjøper brukt, lager hun helst selv. Ikke bare er det til gode for miljøet, det gjør også hjemmet mer personlig. Kjøkkenbordet har hun snekret selv og bedyrer at det er et utrolig enkelt DIY-prosjekt: Det er bare kjøpe det treverket du vil ha og sage i vei. Alt av møbler har hun også malt selv. Også her er rådet enkelt: Våg å eksperimentere.




Blir det ikke perfekt den første gangen, er det bare å male over.Likevel – noen råd er alltid gode å følge: – Ta med deg en prøve hjem fra malebutikken og sjekk den med jevne mellomrom på ulike tider av døgnet. Kanskje blir nyansen helt annerledes om kvelden, og langt fra det du hadde sett for deg, avslutter Monica.  Huset med det rare i Abonner på Rom123I rom123 finner du siste nytt om trendene akkurat nå, tips til fornyelse og enkelt gjør- det- selv stoff. Dette er interiørbladet som gir deg de beste ideene og de smarteste tipsene til hjemmet ditt!HAY White AAC22, About a Chair 22 Soap Oak HAY About a Chair 22, AAC22 Soap oak/WhiteDesignet av Hee Welling AAC22- About a Chair - er designet av Hee Welling & HAY, og er vår absolutt bestselger stol! Både store og små elsker sittekomforten på denne spisestol. Det er lite vedlikehold som kreves, og den er utrolig solid. Kombinasjonen av eik og hardplastikk, gir denne stol et levende preg, og spisetol About a Chair  er i samme serie som den utrolig populære barstol About a Stool(AAS).




Denne finst i mange farger på skallet/setet. Et godt tips fra oss er at du mixer farger, da det fort kan bli ganske stilig. AAC22 blir mest brukt som kjøkkenstol eller spisestol, men kan fint også brukes til kontor, møterom, venterom, eller til og med på kafeer og resteuranter.AAC 22 er også tilgjengelig med full polstring på hele skallet, polstring på fronten eller man kan kjøpe med en løs sittepute.Dersom du vil ha en annen fresh farge sjekk ut de andre AAC 22 som ligger i nettbutikken vår. Zorbing (globe-riding, sphereing, orbing) is the recreation or sport of rolling downhill inside an orb, generally made of transparent plastic. Zorbing is generally performed on a gentle slope, but can also be done on a level surface, permitting more rider control. In the absence of hills some operators have constructed inflatable, wooden, or metal ramps. Due to the buoyant nature of the orbs, Zorbing can also be carried out on water, provided the orb is inflated properly and sealed once the rider is inside.




"Water walking" using such orbs has become popular in theme parks across the UK.[] There are two types of orbs, harnessed and non-harnessed. Non-harness orbs carry up to three riders, while the harness orbs are constructed for one to two riders. Double-harness spheres have different slope requirements, and must only be operated in specific locations. The longer runs are approximately half a mile. The first zorbing site was established in Rotorua, New Zealand, by David and Andrew Akers. Zorbing at the Chew Stoke Harvest Home September 2010 Hamster balls, hard plastic single layer spheres made for small rodent pets, have been manufactured and sold since at least the 1970s.[3] A Russian article on the Zorb mentions a similar device having debuted in 1973.[4] In the early 1980s, the Dangerous Sports Club constructed a giant sphere (reportedly 23 metres or 75 feet across) with a gimbal arrangement supporting two deck chairs inside. This device was eventually cut up for scrap, with some of the plastic remnants used to cover a compost heap.




[5] Human spheres have been depicted in mass media since 1990, when the Gladiators event "Atlaspheres" first aired, albeit with steel balls. The 1991 film Armour of God II: Operation Condor features a scene in which Jackie Chan appears to roll down a mountainside in a flexible plastic orb very similar to the Zorb, except with only one entrance/exit tunnel, and with more space between the inner and outer orbs. In 1994, Dwane van der Sluis and Andrew Akers conceived the idea for a type of sphere in Auckland, New Zealand, calling their invention the "Zorb". With two other investors they created the firm ZORB Limited, and set to work commercializing sphereing. Their business model was to develop the activity worldwide via a franchise system. In 2000, van der Sluis exited from the company to return to his career as a software engineer; Akers continued to run the company as CEO until April 2006, when he resigned. Around this time, ZORB's European master franchise operator, Michael Stemp, and Hungarian master franchise operator, Attila Csató, ended their affiliation with ZORB and started a manufacturing and sphereing consultancy firm, Downhill Revolution,[7] and created the tubular "human cocktail maker" Spinfizz.




[8] Andrew Akers and his brother David Akers have since teamed up with Chris Roberts to create the OGO (Outdoor Gravity Orb) and The Fishpipe. Sphereing is also referred to as Orbing or Zorbing, and Zorbing entered the Concise Oxford English Dictionary in 2001 where it was defined as: "a sport in which a participant is secured inside an inner capsule in a large, transparent ball which is then rolled along the ground or down hills". The zorb is double-sectioned, with one ball inside the other with an air layer in between (unlike the water walking ball, which is usually a single thin-walled ball). This acts as a shock absorber for the rider, damping bumps while traveling. Orbs are lightweight and made of flexible plastic, as opposed to the rigid plastic, for example, of a hamster ball. Many orbs have straps to hold the rider in place, while others leave the rider free to walk the orb around or be tossed about freely by the rolling motion. A typical orb is about 3 metres (10 ft) in diameter, with an inner orb size of about 2 metres (6 ft 7 in), leaving a 50–60 centimetre (20–24 in) air cushion around the riders.




The plastic is approximately 0.8 millimetres (0.03 in) thick.[] The inner and outer orbs are connected by numerous (often hundreds of) small nylon strings. Orbs have one or two tunnel-like entrances. Zorbing is performed at commercial locations, where prospective riders pay a fee for each ride or for a whole day's activity. 'Hill-Rolling' (the generic name for this activity) is practised in the United Kingdom, New Zealand, the middle of Sweden, Estonia, the Gold Coast in Australia (currently not available), North Pole[], Canada, the Czech Republic, Poland, the Slovak Republic, Switzerland, Japan, Kochi in India, Phuket in Thailand and Slovenia.[] In the United States, there are facilities in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee (near the Great Smoky Mountains National Park)(permanently closed), Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin, Amesbury, Massachusetts, and Roundtop Mountain Resort, Lewisberry, Pennsylvania (near Hershey). Several franchise-based companies have entered the market, e.g. SphereMania and Orb 360, as well as companies like OGO Inc and Downhill Revolution which do not sell franchises but do offer consultancy services and products to suitable operators.




The Guinness Book of World Records recognises two sphereing records, set over two consecutive days in 2006: Although the cushioning design of the orbs prevent many serious injuries, light injuries such as bruises and grazes can often be sustained by colliding with objects or tripping whilst the orb is rolling down an incline. Even though severe injury is rare, there have been cases of children passing out due to lack of air, and even some deaths. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission has urged consumers to stop using water walking balls "due to the potential risks of suffocation and drowning", and reports that several states have banned their use. In June 2009 a teacher died and a pupil was seriously injured in the Czech Republic while trying zorbing. In January 2013, at a ski resort in Dombay, Russia, a man died from a broken neck and another was seriously injured when the Zorb they were in rolled out of control down a mountain, hitting rocks and eventually coming to a stop a kilometre away on a frozen lake.

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