Time for another Throwdown Thursday with this space-y throw rug from Anthropolgie! Yes, they are advertising it for a kids playroom, but if I had a house right now that needed furnishing, you better believe I would buy it for myself. ;)
- Summer
seen from United States
seen from Indonesia
seen from China
seen from Peru

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from France

seen from United States
seen from Netherlands
seen from Peru
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from India
seen from Yemen
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Netherlands
Time for another Throwdown Thursday with this space-y throw rug from Anthropolgie! Yes, they are advertising it for a kids playroom, but if I had a house right now that needed furnishing, you better believe I would buy it for myself. ;)
- Summer
the white stripes - seven nation army
-ax and ~PM~
Soooooo this happened today, and in addition to throttling our Twitter mentions, we’ve been alerted to some fantastic threads we somehow overlooked, including this amazing rug from Jaime Odabachian’s eponymous family business. Odabashian was founded in 1921 by Jaime’s Armenian grandfather, and the company’s mission is to weave stories through design, literally.
As Jaime explained in his email to us:
The rug was produced in a hand-tufted technique and is a tribute to the work of the discovery of the first Pulsar by Jocelyn Bell and Anthony Hewish in 1967 and the subsequent use by Peter Saville of the image to design the iconic “Unknown Pleasures” album cover by Joy Division.
We exhibited the rug at Zona Maco Art fair in 2017 and they are available on a made-to-order basis.
Pulsars are the surviving remnants of supernova explosions, rapidly spinning neutron stars emitting a beamed column of light (like a lighthouse) along one axis while rotating around another axis. The rug features 80 successive periods of the first pulsar observed, CP1919, stacked on top of one another. The original image was produced at the Arecibo Radio Observatory in Puerto Rico.
If you aren’t already familiar with the image, this article via Scientific American goes deep into the origin of the design. And this short YouTube video explains how the pulsar data came to be transformed into the classic Joy Division album cover which took on a life of its own (including this DIY version!). Lastly, Summer wrote about both pulsars and Dame Jocelyn Bell for Syfy Wire last year.
You can follow Odabashian on Instagram and Facebook, and be sure to check out our other pulsar themed posts here.
- Summer & Emily
This post contains affiliate links.
I am very intentionally posting these for #ThrowDownThursday instead of #WeeWednesday because I am not even pretending I would buy them for a kidlet instead of myself. I WANT TO SIT ON A PLANET POUF!!! And curl up in a fuzzy moon-phase sleeping bag, for that matter.
Mini Planet Bean Bag Chair
Sleeping bag set
(Personalized, sleeping bag only, pillowcase only)
--Emily
flogging molly - drink and fight
-ax and ~PM~
the rolling stones - street fighting man
-ax and ~PM~
public enemy - fight the power
-ax and ~PM~
the flaming lips - yoshimi battles the pink robots
-ax and ~PM~