2009.11.2510:11

Tiffany Silver

p>TiffanyCoby Charles Tiffany in 1837 founded in the United States NEW YORK, beginning Tiffany is only small stationery, jewelry stores, but there is the great Charles ideals and aspirations. The hope that Tiffany will become the worlds No. 1 brand;in 1886 pioneered by christmas jewelry Code of platinum six claw diamond ring, let the whole world discovered the beauty of original jewelry and minimalist style,silver bangles, until a990 Worlds Fair in Paris, Tiffany first emerge, access to global attention, tight Followed by a second-generation leader Louis Comfort Tiffany actively participate in the World Event, Tiffany grabbed a number of known gold medals in 1979, John Loring employed as the third generation of Tiffany design director, he recruited many well-known designer to join. Led by so many jewelry designers,silver rings is definitelygoing to become a world-renowned brand.

2009.11.2410:30

The Robbery at Jewelry Store

The Palo Alto Police Department responded to an armed robbery at the silver cufflinks Jewelry store at Stanford Shopping Center. Two suspects entered the jewelry store armed with what appeared to be a large tool and took expensive silver money clips away. The suspects told the approximately 15 employees and 12 customers to get down on the floor. The suspects then smashed a glass enclosed jewelry case and took an unknown amount of silver pendants. The suspects quickly fled the store, ran north through the mall to a parked vehicle. They were last seen speeding away west bound on Sand Hill Road.

Suspect number one is described as a black male adult wearing a black mask, black baseball hat, black sweatshirt and black pants and shoes. This suspect was about 5'9" tall with a thin build.

Suspect number two was last seen wearing a white baseball hat, black mask, black sweatshirt, black pants and shoes. He is described as 5'9" tall with a heavy build. Both suspects fled the store and ran to a waiting vehicle.

The vehicle is described as a white, Hyundai Elantra with four doors, license plate number 5XYM351. This vehicle was stolen out of Fremont on July 5, 2007 at 2:30pm.

Witnesses saw a third suspect sitting in the driver's seat of the suspect vehicle. He is described as a black male adult about 25 years of age. The driver sped away from the mall, after suspects one and two climbed into the vehicle.

None of the employees or customers in the store during the robbery was injured.

2009.11.2310:12

Tiffany Store Becomes a Tourism Attraction

Many foreign tourists chose to visit New York - the most expensive U.S. city - because the weakened dollar made hotels, food and entertainment more affordable. And the most important is xmas necklaces store.

Christopher Heywood, the Director of Travel and Media Relations for NYC & Company, said Europeans are at a special advantage.

"We've seen a tremendous momentum from European markets as a result of the weak dollar," he said. "We've seen a particular increase in markets like the U.K., which saw a 25 percent increase in 2007, and Spain which saw an increase of about 37 percent and Italy which went up 36 percent."

Heywood says foreign tourists are especially important to New York City's tourism market because they stay in the city for longer and spend more money than the average American tourist.

" xmas tiffany shopping is one of the big drivers of tourism to New York City," he explained. "Europeans are literally coming here with one suitcase and leaving with two or three. They are getting considerable savings here. And, they are buying up major U.S. brands. They are frequenting stores like Abercrombie & Fitch, they are going to buy Tiffany Accessories, Levis jeans, Apple iPods."

Tourism is one of New York's most important industries. But, visitors to the city fell off after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

In recent years, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg has been actively trying to draw visitors back to the city. A global promotional campaign called "This Is New York City," says New York is safer, cleaner and more vibrant.

2009.11.2110:44

Tiffany Jewelry Business

Like most moral strictures that are actually obeyed (the classic example: Do not worship a golden calf), this one never impinged on my life-style. It's not as if I toil for a New York City tabloid and have to beg some hard-boiled city editor, "Please, I'll do anything--Madonna, Heidi Fleiss, even Shannen Doherty. Anything but the Trump beat."

But my high-minded aversion to shameless self-promoters vanished with the recent birth of silver bangles jewelry business. Make no mistake, this is not the beginning of a screed on Family Values left over from last year's Republican National Convention. The way I see it, the marital status of Donald Trump and Marla Maples is a private matter best left to their attorneys, their accountants and their spokesmen. Instead, what fascinated me was their decision to name this blue-eyed baby girl Tiffany.

Even as the lawyers fretted over the child's heir rights, the tabloid tom-toms spread the word that the infant's moniker was a belated art-of-the-deal tribute to real estate air rights. The eponymous Trump Tower was built in 1983 with the help of that patch of Manhattan sky owned by Tiffany & Co. How much more tasteful had the parents simply explained that silver rings rhymes with epiphany.

The advertising world is in a swivet because familiar mass-market brand names such as Pampers and Marlboro are suddenly reeling from low-priced generic competitors. Tiny Tiffany, in contrast, symbolizes the enduring cachet of a certain type of luxurious commercial pedigree, silver bracelets. What could be more emblematic of this shopping-obsessed century than a finde-siecle vogue for naming children after favored stores? After all, the latest list of the most popular names for girls already veers toward the comically pretentious, with Nicole, Brittany and Ashley far outpacing plain Jane and simple Susan.

2009.11.2010:41

Tiffany Exhibition

If summer's weather turns out to be as capricious as that of this winter, the best portable coolers around may again become popular. Remember fans, those hand-held arcs that were generally pleated but not always? Some pretty snappy examples of the genre have been commissioned by xmas tiffany for an exhibition on April 19 and 20.

It is a special exhibition for all the fans and very unforgettable. More than 100 artists, designers and celebrities have donated fans they designed. KARL LAGERFELD sent an 18th-century fan with Tiffany Accessories of himself on the back, and ROY LICHTENSTEIN painted bonsai trees on a Japanese fan.

The designs will be auctioned to benefit the New York Philharmonic, and maybe some of them will show up on May 26 at the orchestra's Victorian Ball.

But unless Arnold Schwarzenegger is carrying it, the Tiffany keys by RICHARD MEIER, the architect, won't be among them. That little number, a metal sculpture of a fan mounted on a pipelike column, weighs 30 pounds.