Word: print
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...with the new is Lyell, a lovingly designed shop with a stamped tin ceiling and authentic '40s wallpaper. It sells a well-edited collection of vintage garb and shoes alongside co-owner Emma Fletcher's Lyell line of "vintage-inspired clothes." A circa 1960 Kelly green butterfly-print dress by Japanese designer Hanae Mori and a '70s-era black pleated skirt with a red Provencal-print border hang beside Fletcher's new collection of tulip-print, silk-chiffon tie blouses, velvet jackets lined in silk and '40s-style dresses (the designer's personal favorite: a black silk-and-wool number...
...INDICATORS Reading The Fine Print Japan 's competition watchdog raided Microsoft's Tokyo offices on suspicion that it set unfair conditions when granting software licenses to Japanese computer makers. Microsoft denied the charge, but deleted the provision from future contracts...
...those institutions for which Harvard has few peers; it’s known by cinema buffs and researchers throughout the country for its extensive archive of nearly 9,000 independent, classic and foreign films—and often the last surviving or best quality print anywhere. Though most visible on campus and within Cambridge for its nightly public screenings and visits from filmmakers, the archive’s more significant role takes place behind-the-scenes in collecting and preserving its coveted collection. Film reels age very poorly, undergoing wear and tear from repeated play and chemical decomposition over time...
There is one catch. While both the Olympus and Sony are fast and simple, the price per print (about 50¢ to 70¢) is about twice what you would pay to get prints from an online photo service such as Ofoto.com or off an ink-jet printer. Also, dye-sub prints may fade faster over time. But if you're willing to pay a premium for glossy prints, these petite powerhouses can't be beat...
...Sony PictureStation DPP-EX50 (available in March for $180) has a longer, slimmer, rectangular profile and lets you insert MemoryStick or CompactFlash cards into slots on the device. While the DPP-EX50 takes longer to print each image (about 80 seconds in TIME's tests vs. 50 seconds for the P-10), the results were just as impressive. But unlike the P-10, the DPP-EX50 gives you the option of hooking up to your TV, via the yellow Video In port, for onscreen editing of images. There's even a program for adding borders, designs and text to your...