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Friday, March 28, 2008

What Your Fabric Color Says About You!

Color is ubiquitous. It is everywhere and in everything. Color is mood altering, energy balancing, absorbing, radiating, enhancing and subduing. And while different cultures place symbolic attributes and meanings on specific colors, scientific research in neurology, psychology & ophthalmology have preliminary evidence that the effects of color do not solely depend on cultural associations, but more importantly, are based on the fact that the human eye perceives color through sensors that are sensitive and responsive to light. This explains why both sighted and blind respond to the color blue, as well as why both adult and child with different nationalities are easier to lose their tempers when in a yellow colored room.

Several findings indicate that color and light have even been used as a source of healing since the beginning of recorded time as well. When you absorb color energy, it travels through the nervous system to the part of the body that needs it. Each body has its own optimum state of well being and is constantly seeking ways to maintain or restore a balanced state. Utilizing color is one way to help our bodies maintain this harmonious state.

In ancient Indian, Chinese & Egyptian cultures, health related treatments were based around the theory that health was not only contingent upon balancing our physical needs, but our emotional, mental and spiritual as well. And color application helped to do that. Feng Shui, chromo therapy and colorology are a few other healing arts based around aspects of the same theory.

Color and light have the ability to balance the energy wherever a person’s body may be lacking. In the ancient Indian healing art of the Kundalini System, colors affect specific energy centers in our body temples that help our seven chakras open & flow freely. These energy centers govern specific organs in our body temples and vibrate to specific colors that can be reenergized through visualization and application.
Crown /Head chakra violet
Third Eye chakra – indigo
Throat chakra- blue
Heart chakra- green
Solar Plexus chakra-yellow
Sacred Plexus chakra-orange
Root/ Base chakra-red

Color has the same ability when applied to the paint & décor of a room. Whether it’s the color of the walls, a piece of upholstered furniture, the window treatment, or a whole décor theme, color gives a room its look and feel and will therefore bring a positive or negative emotion to the person who enters it.

In the ancient Asian concept of the Feng Shui Five-Element Theory, every color is represented. These five elements are fire, water, metal, wood, and earth. Reds, oranges, brilliant yellows, pinks, and purples represent the element of fire, aligning with passion, danger, and a high energy level. White, gray, silver, and gold colors relate to the metal element and should be used as an accent rather than a main color, as they represent clarity and balance. The colors blue and black are associated with the water element and call forth freshness and abundance. Black in used in moderation when decorating a child's room because of its absorbent properties. Green and brown colors relate to the wood element and provide qualities of health and prosperity. Pale yellows and beige colors are related to the earth element and provide a strong, steady, and stable atmosphere. While it is mindful to pay attention to the use of these strong colors when creating or diffusing energy in your home or office, pastel colors can be used more freely. Pastels are moderate colors that do not represent any energy inhibiting dangers.

Have you ever noticed how certain colors make you feel? How that certain dress or suit seems to make your face glow a little brighter? How brown wall paneling or red drapes affects your mood? Color truly does affect us more than we know. But the more we understand how we process and view color, the more we can manipulate its usage through our choice of fabrics.

Below is a list of some of the more common colors found not only in nature and the man made world around us, but in the fabrics that we purchase for the purpose of creating the very look or feel we are speaking of. When you think of it, fabric can truly be used to convey a wealth of energy and information into a garment or home décor. From its color and texture, to its print and design, fabrics speak volumes without making a sound. Hopefully with this additional knowledge and deeper insight into the vibrations around each color, your next fabric selection will hold a deeper purpose and meaning.

Red

Red is an emotionally intense color, evoking energy and desire. It represents the life force contained in our physical bodies. Red attracts attention whether draped on a female form or coveting your plush sofa cushions. But be careful, red can make you appear heavier and raise your blood pressure as well.

Exam: red cars, red shoes, red light district, red stop signs, seeing ‘red’, painting the town ‘red’, red devil

Orange
Orange is an anti-depressant and appetite stimulator. It vibrates with our emotional sides and is reflective of a warm hearted disposition. Many fast food industries effectively use this color in their marketing strategies for this very reason.
Yellow
Yellow is the most difficult color for the human eye to take in, yet it stimulates our minds and helps us to focus, boosts our memory, and enhances our concentration. Maybe this is why legal pads and post-its are marketed by the industry on yellow paper. While some say that yellow is an optimistic color (as in the yellow ribbon put out when soldiers are at war) adults and babies have been documented to lose their temperatures more in rooms coated in this color.

Green
Green carries a harmonizing and relaxing energy. It is the color of nature, fertility, creativity, wealth and good fortune. For women especially, it serves as a womb rejuvenator; stimulating the energy flow of the chi force. Because of greens calming effects, it is the color of choice for most doctor scrubs, hospital waiting rooms, and the green rooms that performers use prior to putting on a show.

Blue
Like the many shades of green, blue also has a calming and tranquil affect on the mind and body. And while studies have found that people tend to be more productive in rooms painted blue, it is synonymous with a peaceful state. Fashion stylists recommend wearing shades of blue to job interviews because it symbolizes loyalty (as in the phrase, he is a ‘true blue’ friend). Many interior designers make use of the many shades of blue and green in their bathroom and spa decors.

Purple
Purple is a very powerful color. It is the color or royalty and the finer things in life. It reflects a high sense of self both mentally and spiritually, and nurtures creativity.

Exam: purple heart of honor

Turquoise
Turquoise and silver metals are synonymous with the Native Americans who used their natural qualities of protection and dedication for symbolic purposes in many of their jewelry pieces and body adornments. Turquoise stirs the imagination and stimulates concentration as well.

Pink
While red is the color of desire, pink is the color of love void of this desire. It is romance and affection and symbolic of universal love. Pink is flirtatious, yet carries a calming effect on our overall disposition. A case study done in a state prison years ago found that when the bright orange colored uniforms the prisoners wore, were replaced with pink ones, the number of fights and overall level of aggression was reduced. In western culture, pink is symbolic of girls mainly because of the sweetness little girls were conditioned to possess.

Black
Though not truly considered a color, black is still considered very symbolic in many cultures. Most notably symbolic of things dark and mysterious in western cultures, black is often worn by funeral attendants and those in morning. Black is also the color most associated with power and authority. In the fashion industry, black is considered a stylish and timeless color that has not only a thinning affect on the body, but is great for subduing undesirable physical attributes. Because it absorbs energy and light strongly, one must be mindful when furnishing or garmenting too heavy in black.

Exam: black tie event, black magic

White
In many cultures, white is the color of innocence and purity. On the color spectrum, it is considered a neutral color and reflects light as well as energy. In many eastern cultures, it is worn to funerals and other spiritual ceremonies. White is a very revealing color, and as such, requires an attentive eye when used to upholster, garment and window dress.

Brown
Brown is an earthy color representing the natural qualities of Mother Nature. It is considered to be a conservative color and a favorite of many men.

Grey
Grey is the symbolic color of compromise. It denotes renunciation and suppression; this may explain why older depictions of monks and nuns show them with grey colored robes on. If you are looking to liberate yourself from a certain way of thinking, doing or experiencing, grey is the last color you want to surround yourself with.



Lavender
Lavender symbolizes vanity and ultra-femininity. A perfect match for the female essence in all little girls and seasoned women.





What do the primary colors you choose to garment your body and home with say about you?




Check out our selection of novelty fabric here!
Check out our array of solid colored dress fabric here!
Check out our selection of upholstery fabric here!
Check out our array of colorful broadcloth solids here!

Check out our selection of colorful decorative fabric here!


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Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Hillary and Barack in Black & White.


The latest consensus in the Presidential Campaign between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama seems to come down to a power struggle between black & white……..clothing that is.

In the matter of color, there is something to be said about the energy that colors carry and omit. Colors have symbolic meanings depending on various theorists and cultures. In the world of fashion and interior design, colors play an intricle part in enhancing or subduing our assets and flaws. It can shape the mood of the wearer, as well as the environment it covets. Most importantly, specific colors have been conditioned in our minds to be viewed as a source of power and influence, molding the perceptions of both the individual and the onlooker. Such is the case with black & white.

Let’s take black for instance. Black is the ultimate dark. It is considered to be a conservative and conventional color. It can be serious and sophisticated, yet sexy and mysterious. On the streets, black is the sign of the rebel. In the corporate world, it connotes a sense of a very important person. For most, black is undeniably the power color of choice. And in the western battle of good vs. evil….black is always depicted as the bad guy.

When we see Hillary or Barack in black, we tend to see them as serious contenders in the fight for the win. We experience through our senses, their strong, confident and protective armor of black at work. Depending on the media portrayal of the debate at hand, black can have a positive or negative effect on the nation’s image of the candidate. And they know it too.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, we have the color white. As Americans, we have been conditioned to believe that white is the color of everything innocent, honest and pure. Doctors, healers and sages wear white, as well as first time brides. White is considered brilliant and angelic and for some, a power color that invokes confidence and assurity on all levels. In the western battles of good vs. evil…..white denotes the good guy, and good guys always win. Hillary and Barack know this as well and wear it strategically when necessary.

Color is everywhere, and image is everything. As we watch the debates, view highlights leading up to the elections, and Google Hillary and Barack in our attempts to catch up with the latest news in this history making moment of time, take a second to check out the number of occasions, and location of events, that they choose to wear their black or white. I am sure they are as consciously aware of their choices, as we are subconsciously aware of the affects those color choices have on our perceptions of each of our potential Presidents, as well as the in the world around us.




What is your power color?



Check out our full selection of fabric here!
Check out our selection of new black fabric here!
Check out our selection of new white fabric here
!

Check out our selectionof black wool suiting fabric here!





** For more on colors and their symbolic meanings, qualities and energies stayed tuned......





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Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Easter Around The Town. Happy Sewing!

Just as Santa Clause represents Christmas, a hopping life-size bunny with a basket full of colorful eggs is the quintessential image of Easter.

But how did the Easter bunny and egg hunts become synonymous with Easter anyway? And how are these various images connected to the Christian version of the holiday? Aside from the historical findings that the hare, eggs and the Prophet Yahshua’s resurrection from the dead are all symbols of ‘fertility and life’, I cram to see any other relation.

In fact, my earliest memories surrounding Easter period, remind me of a haute couture fashion show on the runways of the House of God. The biggest question was not whether or not today would be the day you asked for forgiveness for the time you cheated on your math test, but whether or not today would be the day you wore your new royal crepe back satin dress with the coordinating clasp styled hand bag. Between the spirited cat walks up the isles from the young ladies in their embroidered brocades, silky chiffons and elegant furs, to the young men in their raw linens, suiting fabrics and stylish suedes. The after service gossip overshadowed the sermon this Easter Sunday. Even more important was whether or not Sister Victoria’s Easter bonnet would outdo Sister Evelyn’s for the second year in a row. It never ceased to amaze me how she was able to keep that two-foot wide lilac gingham check printed hat with floral trim positioned so neatly while catching the Holy Spirit at the same time. I wouldn’t be surprised if TV celebrity Tyra Banks began her modeling career and got the inspiration for her current hit show ‘America’s Next Top Model’, while sitting in the pews of this very church as a child.


Whether this holiest of Christian Holidays finds you decorating baskets for your yearly Easter egg hunt, decorating your dinner table for the traditional family Easter dinner, or finding just the right sparkle organza to match that brand new pink lame fabric you bought for your special Easter Sunday dress, let J&O be your #1 source for the perfect Easter holiday fabric.





Check out our Easter fabric here!
Check out our selection of Religious fabric here!
Check out our dress fabric collection here!
Check out our novelty fabric section here!





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Tuesday, March 18, 2008

MLB Fleece is a Hit!



Take me out to the ball game.
Take me out to the crowd.
Buy me some J&O fabric.
I don’t care if we never shop anywhere else

‘cause it’s the best fabric store in the world!


With opening day less than 20 days away, and the cold weather still lingering in the midst, MLB (major league baseball) fans are eagerly gearing up for another round of submarine style pitches, sneaky stolen plates and out-the-park home run hitters from their favorite teams. With all the excitement of the spring season ahead, it’s easy to overlook some of the simple things that will make the long innings on hard stadium seats a little more comfortable.


It's root, root, root for the home team.

I don't care if they loose.


Whether you’re rooting from the plastic seats of the ball park or from the soft cushions of your favorite couch, our MLB fleeces can offer that extra bit of softness and warmth to go along with the rooting fans and the foot-long hotdogs that make a day at the park all worthwhile.

At J&O, we carry some of the coolest MBL fleece fabrics for our baseball fans nationwide. With a few yards of material and a little creativity, your team spirit can be expressed in the form of a simple logo filled craft project to carry or wear when the pitcher takes the mound.


If you’re a New York Mets fan, make great seat cushions for the ‘fanny’ in you. If you are a diehard Philadelphia Phillies fan, gather your family and lay a home-made fleece throw across your laps or around your shoulders to keep the nippy nights under the big lights a little more special. And if you’d rather be watching dare devil men speed around and around the Nascar track as screaming fans cheer on instead, but you have a knack for crafts too, then gather a yard or two from each teams fleece to make unique gifts for friends and loved ones that they will surely cherish even after the last game has been won.



Yes it's one, two, three strikes you’re out, at the ole ball game!


Out of fabric that is, if you wait too long.

Hurry before it's all gone.

Order your MBL fleece today!






Check out our full MLB fleece fabric section here!
Check out our baseball novelty fabric selection here!


Check out our other fleece fabric here!


Check out our full novelty fabric section here!




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Monday, March 10, 2008

20th Century Designers Rule! Vintage Fabric Rocks!

Mid 20th Century art meets fabric with these legendary artists and designers. If you’ve recently reupholstered your sitting room chairs or engaged in the arduous yet fulfilling task of selecting fabric for a long overdue window treatment, then most likely you have met some of our fine textile designers along the way…..at least on fabric.

Geometri Lilac, Quatrefoil Violet, Circles Khaki, and Pavement Rust; better known as Verner Panton, Alexander Girard, Earnes and George Nelson. And while we may not be able to introduce you face to face, we’d like to take a moment to give you a little background history on our famous upholstery and decorative designers.

Verner Panton (Feb 1926 – Sept 1998) is considered one of Denmark’s most influential 20th century furniture and interior designers. During his career, he created innovative and futuristic designs in a variety of materials and vibrant colors. Panton’s most well-known furniture models are still in production today.


In the late 1960’s and early 1970’s, Verner Panton experimented with designing entire environments. Creating radical and psychedelic interiors by combining his hand crafted curved furniture, wall upholstery, textiles and lighting, he utilized circular patterns and cylindrical furniture that he became famous for in the years after his death.

George Nelson (1908-1986) was one of the founders of American modernism. He was born in Hartford Connecticut and studied architecture at Yale University where he received his bachelor degree in the fine arts. He went on to become a writer and would often times argue with ferociousness, the modernist principles that often times offended industrial designers of that time.

By 1940, George Nelson had drawn popular attention with several innovative concepts including the “family room” and the “storage wall”. He designed under Herman Miller for many years after, and was said to be one of the most eloquent voices on design and architecture in the USA of the 21st century.

Alexander Girard (1907-1993) was one of the foremost designers of American textiles in the 20th Century. His work is characterized by lively, bold and colorful geometric patterns. He created fabrics for Herman Miller that were used on the designs of Charles and Ray Earnes.


Charles and Ray Earnes were a husband and wife design team full of boundless enthusiasm. Their unique synergy led to revolution of sorts and a whole new look in furniture. Lean and modern, playful and functional, sleek, sophisticated, and beautifully simple summed up their signature pieces. It was the ‘Earnes look’.

That look and their relationship with Herman Miller created what would later become the world renowned Earnes lounge chair. Charles and Ray achieved their monumental success by approaching each project the same way: Does it interest and intrigue us? Can we make it better? Will we have "serious fun" doing it? They loved their work, which was a combination of art and science, design and architecture, process and product, style and function. "The details are not details," said Charles. "They make the product."

Each of these architects and designers from the Mid 20th Century has transferred their artistic talents and gift of eye to the fabric textile industry, creating simple yet modern prints and designs for both upholstery and decorative collections. At J&O, we are proud to offer these timeless prints from truly remarkable artists with innovative ideas and vision.

With an Alexander Girard or Verner Panton designer print, you are not only getting top shelf fabric, you are taking home a piece of art and history as well.


Check out our Verner Panton fabric collection here!
Check out our George Nelson fabric collection here!
Check out our Alexander Girard fabric collection here!
Check out our Charles and Ray Eames Fabric collection here!



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Tuesday, March 04, 2008

"There's No Place Like J&O." Wizard of Oz Fabric.

In the 1939 American musical fantasy film The Wizard of Oz, Dorothy is accompanied by a heartless scarecrow, a brainless tin man and a cowardly lion on her way to the Emerald City in search of the magical remedy that would fill the self perceived voids within her and her new friends, and transport her back home where a loving and protective family awaited her.

Each character believed that what they desired to obtain most for themselves, could only be granted and given to them by another. When in truth, each individual was whole and complete within themselves….if only they believed.
The Wizard of Oz became one of the most beloved films of all times, with the movies’ theme song, Over the Rainbow, becoming a memorable song of inspiration and hope for the dreams and aspirations of Americans around the country .
And now this wonderfully symbolic and culturally significant work of art can be yours to fashion and recreate with the same imagination that spirited this wonderful movie, as only you can.
The Wizard of Oz has history and tells a story, encouraging a strong mind, a giving heart and a courageous nature respectively.

What story does the fabric you have on hand tell about you?

And how does it symbolically reflect various aspects of your spirit and personality?
Stay tuned .......

To find out where this path leads, just follow the yellow brick road.
What your favorite selections say about you may be deeper than you know.
In the meantime, you don’t have to wait on a fairy princess and ruby reds to make your fabric wish come true, with the click of a button you can check out all the magical fabric we have to offer right here at J&O.





Check out our Wizard of Oz fabric collection here!
Check out our Novelty cotton fabric here!
Check out all our new fabrics here!



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J & O Fabrics is a leader in online fabric stores with hundreds of discount fabrics including: upholstery, quilt, quilting, drapery fabric, fleece, decorator, felt, retro, upholstery fabrics and more!