Baubles to splurge on
A selection from the editors of ForbesLife India, ForbesLife and Network18 Publishing


The Vipp ShelterPrice: &euro485,000 / $585,000This pre-fabricated plug-and-play getaway facilitates an escape to nature. It is neither a house nor a mobile home, but a spacious, functional, and liveable industrial object. A steel grid structurally supports the two-level transparent shell, where only the bathroom and bed loft is shielded from the main living space. The interior is fitted with Vipp products, ranging from hooks to lamps to kitchen essentials. The only choice left to the customer is where to place it. vipp.com
If that’s the case, it could be time for an anti-magnetic watch. Tissot introduced the world’s first anti-magnetic timepiece in 1929, and a few decades later, Rolex unveiled the Milgauss, which, as its name implies, was built to resist magnetic interference up to 1,000 gauss. (The typical refrigerator magnet, by comparison, is about 50 gauss.) For 2014, Rolex gave the Milgauss ($8,500) a stylish update—and the trademark green sapphire crystal only makes the Z blue dial appear more electric.
Around the same time Rolex debuted the first Milgauss, Omega unveiled its own anti-magnetic watch, the Seamaster 300. And in 2012, it took a great step forward with the world’s first anti-magnetic watch movement, the calibre 8508, which uses anti-ferrous materials. The new Seamaster 300 Co-Axial ($6,000) is resistant up to 15,000 gauss.
Earlier this year, Ball introduced the Engineer II Magneto S ($3,000), which uses a unique camera-style iris made of a metal alloy to shield the movement from about 80,000 amperes per metre, or about 1,000 gauss. (Picture the James Bond logo sealing off the case.)
Despite all of this protective technology, these watches still can’t guard one basic magnetic property. After all, they’re very attractive.
Bronze and Teak TablePrice: Table: Rs 1,95,500 lamp: Rs 82,700This bronze splayed-leg side table is made of solid teakwood, topped off with a white bronze silver finish. Combine it with the Mirande table lamp, which has a Scandinavian appeal to it with its sleek and straight lines.saritahanda.com Courtesy: Better Interiors
Hermès Nautilus Price: Fountain pen: $1,650 ball point pen: $1,350When Hermès set out to write a new chapter in its 177-year-old history, it was missing one essential element: A pen. Although the legendary French brand has sold stationery, notebooks and desk sets for years, it had never created a writing instrument. Until now. Produced in collaboration with Australian design god Marc Newson and Japan’s Pilot company, the Hermès Nautilus is a marvel of innovation in the same league as Jules Verne’s famed vessel. Constructed from aluminium and stainless steel, with a rhodium white-gold nib, the Nautilus is available as a fountain pen or a ballpoint that uses black or blue ink, with three additional exclusive colours: Red, ebony and the signature Hermès orange. As if the sleek, sculptural design weren’t seductive enough, the true genius of the Nautilus is that the pen is capless with a retractable nib. To release it from its shell it requires a simple twist of the upper half. It’s enough to remind you that writing is still a pleasure.Hermes.com
Happy feet: (From top) Leather penny loafer by Ralph Lauren leather driving shoe by Ferragamo suede Gommino Club by Tod’s
Nautical Collection metal pilot sunglasses by Ralph Lauren ($260)
Phineas sunglasses by Mykita ($497)
PS 01PS sunglasses by Prada Linea Rossa ($300)
Original sunglasses EA2013 3042 by Emporio Armani ($200)
First Published: Jul 21, 2015, 06:27
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