674x180 SPIDER-NEW ament

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

home deco tips Organise With Tiscali


Organise With Tiscali

IS YOUR often in a state of disarray with trays, baskets and chopping boards left in the sink, and everywhere else? Do you need help organising your kitchen utensils without burning a here in your pocket?

If so, then you need a new Tiscali multipurpose stainless steel sink.

Tiscali is proud to present three new stainless steel sinks: the Bangke, EFA and EPA.

Now, you can have proper storage space for everything you need around the sink, for a neat and tidy kitchen.

The Bangke and EFA sinks come with a unique surface that is oil-stain-free, easy to clean and has high scratch resistance.

The Bangke sink also comes with accessories such as a hanging basket, water filter, defrost board, chopping board and double-layer drainage to ensure a less chaotic environment in the kitchen.

Besides sinks, Tiscali also offers a wide range of cooker hoods and gas stoves.

Monday, October 20, 2008

Eric Leong and His Casa Impian / Profile


The popular interior designer, Eric Leong was born in Kluang, Johor and completed his education in Johor and Singapore. He holds 2 major academic qualifications - Degree in Business Studies, and later Degree in Interior Designing.

He has been collecting home-decor magazines since his youth time, and often become a ‘consultant’ to his mother, suggesting improvements here and there for their house.

He rose to prominence soon after starring in Casa Impian - which today has become the household name of interior designing and decorating industry in Malaysia. Casa Impian is the county’s first and most popular interior design make-over show. In the show, Eric display its magical touch by transforming plain, boring looking space into area of breath-taking look and feel. The show has continued for more than 6 seasons, and in later development, the show was re-branded as Deko Bersama Eric.

Eric has the capability to produce design of distinguished styles that include contemporary, traditional, Mediterranean, English-style, Oriental, Indian and tropical. He continuously shares his tips and wisdom such as how to make wise fabric selection, upholstery, mix and match and floral arrangement that reflects the lifestyle and interest of the house owner.

What sets him apart from other designers is his ability to throw challenges which may seem daunting for many but consistently rises to occasion. He is given only 8 hours to transform or make over the selected participant’s houses, but his expert combination of flooring selection, painting, lighting and decorating skills allow him to deliver stunning results. Best of all, those selected for the make over do not have to pay a single cent! He certainly knows how to make people happy.

Additionally, Eric also writes periodically for popular magazines such as Home Pride, Anjung Seri, Impiana and Living Taste, sharing his over 15 years of experience in the design industry. He believes that well arranged and decorated space is not only good for design, but it also helps to become an ‘agent of healing’. His article entitled “Healing Space” was recently featured in Health Today, the widely popular international health magazine. What we see today in Eric’s overwhelming success is only a small part of his colorful life. Like many other successes, he also has his period of ‘darkest days’ too. In 1999, his first interior design business that he co-built with a friend collapsed thanks to the infamous Asian economic crisis. Eric had to face a series of hardship that include being chased by the vendors and contractors, and was put into a deep crisis of debt. He toiled and worked hard to settle his problem and only after 5 years he managed to get out from his financial difficulty. Life of Eric Leong could not have been better since.

5 tips for decorating your Kids' Room


Creating a room for your baby can be an enjoyable labour of love with a long-lasting impact. Here are some helpful stress-free decorating tips to consider for your infant's room:

1. Always keep your child's safety in mind. Be sure to check out safety guidelines before implementing any design idea. Use ICI Dulux Paints for their 100% mercury-free and lead-free formula that keeps your infant safe

2. Use your hands! Paste large stickers, put up your own shelving and sew your own bedsheets for the little one

3. Paint walls with a colour that will last through future updates in furniture and accessories. Turn the page for suggestions on colour schemes.

4. Try to future-proof your decorations and furniture. For instance, use furniture that can double as toddler beds, or try out room design themes that can last beyond the first years of infancy
5. Use clear colours that allow easy coordination with toys, accessories and future additions such as study tables. Come for some suggested colours you might want to consider.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Garden Style By Penelope Hobhouse


The design and planting of fine gardens is an art best learnt by example. Inhis book, uses some of the finest gardens in the world tohow how to lay out and plant formal, patterned, natural and flower gardens.er examples range from, California,ith its spectacular curving staircase and rectangular pool, to theekyll-inspired planting of white foxgloves in the wild garden atnightshayes, Devon; from the excitement of the summer flower border atontrancart, Dieppe, to the simple greeness of a garden room at La Pietra inuscany.;But this book is more than a tour of beautiful gardens. Penelopeobhouse informs, advises and inspires on every aspect of garden design. Shexplains how to relate a garden to its setting; the importance ofstablishing a proper structure, whether as an end in itself or as a backdropor decorative planning; and how to create a successful small garden. Thesehemes are balanced by in-depth portraits of more than 20 gardens, someamous like Great Dixter, Villandry and Giustry, other less known and

More details

Garden Style

By Penelope Hobhouse

Published by frances lincoln ltd, 2002

ISBN 0711219877, 9780711219878

216 pages

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

http://irenovate.com.my/ home deco mart


http://irenovate.com.my/

Welcome to iRenovate.com.my

iRenovate.com.my aims to provide you, our customer, a whole new level of office and housing improvement on renovation.

iRenovate.com.my is not your ordinary contractor for hire. We take into account of our clients ever changing housing and office needs, style and budget. We are a customer-oriented and focused on delivering an excellent service to you. You can walk into our showroom for an obligation free interior design and renovation consultation. We will draft out an affordable renovation package based on your requirements or designs.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Forget the credit crunch - Style for less kasa impian



IKEA

Don't let the credit crunch stop you from updating your home. Our shoestring budget ideas will help you wave good-bye to your dated look. Big impact, little cost.

1. IKEA at your fingertips

. Hail the Scandi retailing institution that bought us the £150 sofa. Since launching 50 years ago, the Swedish flatpack giant has delivered endless bargains with style. The Bram steel palm leaf bowl (£5.99) tops our wish list. So, unless you're craving their meatballs, shop their products from the comfort of your armchair. Like this style? Buy the Look.

2. Cut back on cost, not on style

Dressing head-to-toe in designer gear is no guarantee to style. In the same vein, throwing cash at your home is not the solution. Juxtapose the old and bespoke with the mass produced for a home with personality. Are you an apprehensive shopper? Use the mydeco Plan my Room tool to test out products in 3D before you buy. About 40,000 products like this Curved wood dining chair (£24.95) from Dwell have been modelled so you can design your room on a budget.

3. Colour me wonderful

'The best way to update a room is with key accessories. Colourful, distinctive rugs can really brighten up a space,' says Michelle Alger, furniture and lighting buyer for Liberty. 'Add vibrant, patterned or image-embellished cushions.' We've fallen in love with this Douppion silk cassis cushion (£20) from Heals.

4. Bring nature inside

are uplifting yet costly. Instead of buying fresh flowers on a weekly basis, save some pennies and go down the faux flower route. You would never believe that Bloom's faux flowers aren't the real thing. This white garden rose arrangement has been now £38, reduced from £54.

5. Lick of paint

Instead of spending a fortune replacing your kitchen or bathroom, update it with a funky splash of colour. 'It's so easy to update a wall with gloss paint. The finish looks clean, shiny and modern and really makes the colour pop,' says designer Cath Kidston. 'And, of course, it's super-practical.' One tin of Elizabethan red paint (£28) from Designer Paint goes a long way in a downstairs loo.

2. Impact without expense

Instead of splurging out on rolls and rolls of wallpaper, how about creating a feature wall? Pick a wow factor design like this Flamingo wallpaper (£44) from Wallpaperdirect to create real impact at a snippet of the cost. Get creative in your bathroom – mount your design on a thin MDF board, protect with glass splashback and place behind your basin. Trust us, it looks great.

7. Spend wisely

Spend your money where you can see it. So think big – don't waste a fortune on a pretty little ornament that is barely visible. Turn your favorite photo into a piece of art. This Bespoke single image canvas (£70) from 55 MAX will take pride of place in any room.

8. Bargain basement

There's no need to sacrifice style when there are great bargains to be found in the sales. Our favourite brands Graham & Green, M&S, Cargo and Next are all on sale this month. Think of mydeco as your very own one-stop-shop for all the sales. Clear clutter in this Morton low sideboard now £369.50, reduced from £739 from Graham & Green.

9. A frugal fashion: wall stickers

The wall sticker phenomenon is greeted with enthusiasm from commitment phobes, bargain hunters and parents of little ones. Ideal for creating an instant update to any wall at little cost, these blossom wall stickers (£29) from Not on the High Street are a cheap and cheerful decorating solution – just how we like it.

10. mydeco exclusive – get it while you can

The best deals always run out quickly – these bargain hunters don't hang around – so when you spot something you like, jump! Get 50% off this Chubby rattan conservatory chair from Cargo now £100 reduced from £349 just for mydeco users. At checkout, type in the mydeco code my8735. Perfect for indoors or out, the lovely round shape is so inviting you'll be tempted to curl up with a book and forget the world.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

The Garden of Eden



was there before architecture...

They also say that the mother of all arts this century is ! It use to be architecture… something has changed. I like that shift. Like everything else, things are trying to get back to basics. Music is unplugged, architecture is moving back into the garden… God has a lot more input in the garden, I think. It is alive and growing. Architecture is man trying to be god. Not too long ago architecture was build for the gods, nowadays it is build for the rich Dubai Arabs. This is when some of us realised we have to return to basics. . In Eden, Adam tried to be god for a while by eating the apple; his genes have been passed down to some of us. We will entertain ourselves for a while building things but in the long run we will yearn to return to that original garden.

Ever since Le Corbusier detached the building from the land with Villa Savoye, and in fact detaching the landscape from the attention of the architect, architecture has floundered and landscape architecture flourished. You think?

I’ve only seen pictures of Villa Savoye. Visited his Ronchamp a couple of years ago. Absolutely beautiful architecture but the relationship to the land and the wider landscape is not so hot. Fast forward to today, we have a lot of architects who see architecture as detached from the landscape. The thinking is compartmentalized. Buildings are designed as ubiquitous sculptures that can be placed anywhere on earth. This can be very problematic. . The gardens and the wider landscape are totally locked into their buildings. It is not really about the competition between architecture and landscape architecture, it is more about the two coming together to form something that is greater than the two. These masters are magical.

You try to visit Bali as often as you can. I guess that's as close an ideal for living with nature we have. But the model of everyone owning and cultivating his/her plot of land is surely not sustainable- especially with rampant urbanisation. We stack homes upwards so we can free more land for greenery in between them. But how do you "lock" the landscape between these high-rise so that they are not left over spaces to be beautified by landscape architects? Are you happy with the level of inter-disciplinary approach you advocate in your work?

It is a common complain that landscape architects are not brought in early enough and are left with left-over spaces between the buildings but sometimes it is just a good excuse for doing a lousy job. I am not a big advocate of coming in early. Some of our best works are done when we came in late. The reason being the gestation time is a lot shorter and the design ideas are a lot fresher. In our industry the lapse between ideas and implementation is between 3-5 years. That is a long time. Whilst I believe that design ideas are not meant to be fashionable but in a period of 5 years I find myself doing and appreciating things differently, most of the time making things a lot simpler.

I have no problem with left-over space especially when it is a precondition for that negotiation to have total freedom to do what I like. I usually have more problems with interference by third parties; get in early where options are too many, designs are then done by committee. We have a term for that in Malaysia, the 'rojak' (mixed salad) scheme, where everyone’s opinions are considered, and ending up with the lowest common denominator.

Lately my preference is to work with a set of preferred clients and architects. We have got to a level where there is a lot of trust; we can second guess each other. That level of inter-disciplinary approach you described has become almost second nature, negotiations are less, pretty and meaningless drawings are less, and we can concentrate on what’s important.

I mean, don’t you wish to come on early enough in a project's design phase where you can address the ecological and land use issues instead of this aesthetics of left-over land parcels?

What gives you the impression that I am so ecological?? I have some major confessions to make on this!

But seriously, I believe that ecological and sustainable issues are not in the sole domain of landscape architects. An enlightened client and architect is almost a prerequisite. We can come in early and articulate such issues, but such enlightenment of the team usually happens long before, usually the project before the last. The question is not how early we come in, it is about that consistent effort that will lay the groundwork for that next project. For developers it is very much about the realisation of the hidden value on ecological issues, otherwise there is no action. Enlightened developers are emerging, not necessarily educated by us, but more likely by Al Gore and his inconvenient truth on global warming. But it is true that we are getting involved in projects a lot earlier nowadays.

Recently we looked at a 2000-acre site in Malaysia. The planners and architects did not think it necessary to investigate the site. "It is a flat site." "There is only 2m difference from one end of the site to the other." Eventually when we did visit the site, there were ponds and lakes with cyan blue water and a beautiful orang asli village in an oil palm estate in the middle of the site. The standard modus operandi in this part of the world is to shift any orang asli settlement to the fringe of the site in order for "value" development to happen in the centre, likely to a swamp near a cemetery or a sewerage treatment plant. Our early involvement in this case helps in preserving the existing location of the orang asli village and giving a rationale to locate the new town central park around it and the cyan blue lakes.

Your "Sekeping Serendah", inspired by Peter Stutchbury, is a primer in "touching the earth lightly." But can a high-rise building also "touch the earth lightly"?

It is a matter of defining "touching the land lightly" differently in the case of high rise high density buildings. There can still be a lot of respect for the land. Sometimes we advocate less blocks and compensate with much higher blocks and leave some land untouched. We have also advocated building high rises with a large area of do-nothing land instead of spreading out all over the site with row houses and retaining walls. We have just completed a high rise development where the rock outcrops are kept intact. We have to fight on multiple fronts as there are a lot of interests to have the rocks blasted away for some lame safety considerations. The neighboring site did just that and they spend months blasting and hacking away at the rock. I don’t think the genus loci was very happy. I guess every piece of land calls for its own solutions.

Touching the land lightly is about listening very carefully what the land is telling us. It takes a bit of effort. I have on numerous occasions encountered planners and architects who do not think it necessary to visit the site. Plans are drawn without even a contour plan. I guess the assumption is that the land can be flattened anyway. We have all these heavy machineries at our disposal. You can almost imagine the result in most of these cases.

Geoffrey Bawa builds a series of 4 to 5-storeys building for the Kandalama hotel in Sri Lanka. It is painted black and native plants are crawling out from every nook and cranny. It is totally integrated into the land. I bet it could go 20-storeys and it still works. He was touching the land very lightly.

Touching the land lightly is also more than just the physical manifestation. The process of healing the land is an extension of that same philosophy. In Kandalama’s case, every guest that checks into the hotel take away an equivalent of their own waste in the form of plant compost when they check out, elegantly packed. That is a very gentle thought.

Also in the same philosophy is getting the land to reclaimed the buildings, having the land touch the building gently. The jardin vertical and vegetated walls of Patrick Blanc are leading in this area. He has open up some tremendous possibilities for cities, a paradigm shift in which we view the land and the garden. When we have stacked up homes to cater for urbanization, horizontal surfaces might be scarce, but there are a lot of vertical surfaces. Like the limestone cliffs and waterfall cliffs, they could be graciously cladded with vegetation. I am sure Patrick Blanc’s vegetated wall was inspired by these.

There could be tremendous amount of greenery in future cities. It does not need to look like Batman’s Gotham city.

Sunday, July 20, 2008

PRODUCT ENDORSEMENT Your LifeStyle Guru

PRODUCT ENDORSEMENT

Your LifeStyle Guru



your 'BRAND' SPOKES-PERSON

Brand is the proprietary visual, emotional, rational, and cultural image that you associate with a company or a product. When you think Volvo, you might think safety, when you think Nike, you might think of Michael Jordan or "Just Do It.", just like that we welcome you to ERIC that gives you an image of " ".

The fact that you remember the brand name and have positive associations with that brand makes your product selection easier and enhances the value and satisfaction you get from the product. Hence brand with ERIC today and be remembered..


Drop us an email for more info 'brand@ericleong.com.my'

A good brand name gives a good first impression, is easy to remember, and evokes positive associations with the brand.


Brand archetype and personality adds emotion, culture and myth to the brand identity by the use of a famous spokesperson (Bill Cosby - Jello),or a character (the Pink Panther) or an image ....

You're in good hands with ERIC

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

eric house





the urban sleek furniture collection by
"urban glamour" is a series of simple, sleek, modern appeal perfect quality finished furniture. Inspired by the urban living … the collection include sofas, chairs, coffee table, side table, sideboard console, dining table and chairs, bed room set etc.



the urban style ready to wear fashion
"the style people" is a in house label of simple, clean cut new urban design ready to wear guys and gals fashion line. coming soon…



the urban hip home fashion
"urbanismo" is the label for the "MUST-have" item like Sofa, Occasional Furniture, Lighting, Soft Furnishing, Funky Cushion, Home Accessory, Magazine, Book, Bath product, candle, Fresh Flower Arrangement, gift idea etc. It showcase of NEW urban décor and ambience. Styled in the modern context, mixed of culture element… coming soon…



the architectural and
designcity the mook - a new style of quarterly publish magazine covering architectural, interior design, urban living and hip interior news around the world. coming soon…

Monday, June 23, 2008

How to Make a Small Room Appear Larger


If you can stand in the middle of your room and touch the walls on all four sides, then you probably need to add some visual space to your room (either that or see a surgeon about those gorilla arms of yours!). If the neighbor next door has a closet bigger than your room (and it’s not a walk-in closet!), then you need a little help "growing" your small room!

Here are some miracle visual tricks to make your room appear larger:

1. Use light values when painting your room. That does not mean you are doomed to white walls! (padded or not!) Try a pretty celadon or chamois (light green or cream beige, for those non-lyrical decorators out there!)

2. Place the large pieces of furniture against the walls so the open space in the middle isn’t broken up. "The large piece of furniture against the wall completely COVERS the middle of the room.

3. Choose a sofa and chairs with open arms and exposed legs. This allows light to filter under the furniture, making the room appear airier.

4. Consider smaller scale furniture. A sofa or bed that takes up less area will help visually open the room. (Probably not a good idea to put a king-sized bed in that closet!)

5. Use vertical space for storage. Add a hutch or floor-to-ceiling bookcases as a storage solution to reduce the amount of floor space taken. (But I would discourage hanging books and bric-a-brac from the ceiling - you never know what will land on your head in the middle of the night!)

6. A large mirror in the room will reflect light around the room. This is especially effective with near a window so the outdoors can be reflected.

7. Arrange furniture at an angle if possible. This gives visual interest to the small space.

With a few visual tricks and some rearranging of furniture, you can make any room appear bigger than its actual size

Monday, May 12, 2008

home deco mart with Eric Leong http://www.ericleong.com.my http://www.ssf.com.my/


http://www.ericleong.com.my
http://www.ssf.com.my/

ABOUT ER!C

Your LifeStyle Guru

the Celebrity Designer

sapa yang tak kenal eric kasa impian,seorang yang botak dan kepalanya penuh dengan inpirasi untuk menghias rumah sesiapa sahaja yang dia inginkan,saya adalah peminat beliau yang boleh dikatakan no 1 di Malaysia kerana apa sahaja yang eric ingin lakukan ketika menghias rumah saya pasti akan meminatinya,ini ada sedikit cerita mengenai eric,

Eric Leong a Kuala Lumpur-based stylish and bold interior designer. Eric born in Kluang a small town in Johore states (the south gate of Malaysia) and was raise in Johor Bahru the state capital of Johore. He completed his formal education in Johor Bahru and furthers his study in Singapore. Eric holds two major qualifications in both Interior Design and Business Studies.

With his cheerful, helpful and happy go lucky character Eric has gained his title as the “Malaysia most favorite interior designer”.

In 2001 Eric started his interior design make-over show – Casa Impian (Malaysia first interior made-over TV show and

currently running its 6th season.) he managed to showcase his magic touch on an ordinary interior space and transform them into the breath-taking space thus once again Eric gained another title - “Raja Hias” / “the Design King” of Casa Impian.

Eric celebrates his '15th Year Anniversary' in the industry this year.

Di sedutan yang akan dating saya akan menceritakan banyak lagi cerita tentang kehidupan eric,

Sekian terima kasih

Friday, April 18, 2008

rahsia dari dapur oleh home deco mart


Assalamualaikum dan selamat sejahtera kepada pembaca yang setia dan budiman sekalian,
hari ini saya dari home deco mart ingin berkongsi pengalaman dan rahsia dari dapur kepada semua,
Baru-baru ini saya baru sahaja mendapat seorang cahaya mata, hanya tuhan sahaja yang tau bertapa saya gembira dan bersyukur terhadap kurnian seorang puteri bernama hanny qistina,cerita tentang mendapat cahaya mata,ada satu saya nak kongsi pengalaman saya kepada semua pembaca sekalian,malam sebelum anak saya dilahirkan saya digemparkan tentang seekor ular tebu telah masuk ke rumah saya dan ular tersebut telah bersalin kulit di dapur rumah saya,alangkah terkejutnya saya tentang kejadian tersebut kerana rumah kediaman saya berada di tingkat 4 sebuah apartment,


kejadian itu memang menjadi satu tanda tanya kepada saya sehingga kini kerana saya berasa hairan macam mana ular tersebut masuk ke rumah saya,


pelikkan semua,


sekian terima kasih

Thursday, March 6, 2008

five easy steps to your new kitchen by kasa-impian


kasa-impian

get inspired

take your time browsing through the ikea catalogue to choose the door style tou like.a visit to the ikea store is recommended.there you can see and try our full-build kitchen sets in the showroom.

kasa-impian measure your kitchen

save time and money at the start by measuring the height and length of all the walls in you kitchen,plus distances between windows,door and any appliances you may have.

kasa-impian
choose cabinets

before buying any cabinets,first locate the cooking,cooling and washing areas,and note the position of all plumbing,air vants and eletrical outlets.then select the choice of smart interior cabinet fittings from the rationnal range to suit your every day storage and organisational needs.

kasa-impian choose features

nothing will work as in the kitchen as your sink,taps and worktop.that's why ikea only uses materials that offer good durability and strength. pickfrom a number of different desings and combination to match your choose door style.

kasa-impian personalise it,

lastly, add some personal touches to make your new kitchen truly yours.select matching cover panel,decor strips,khobs and handles,wall storege accessories and lighting.

Monday, March 3, 2008

Home Improvement atau pembinaan rumah



When someone is thinking about home improvement it is probably because one of two things is happening, the first is the basic wish to improve the look of the house, of the functionality of different things. Make rooms look better and change them and improve the quality of life, the second option is that one is plan to sell his or her house and needs to put in some work to make it worthy of a better price for the property.

Obviously both are of the same importance, and the same rules tips and advice regarding home improvement apply to those who want to improve their living space as to those who wish to improve the prospect of selling their houses, but naturally it is better used by those who are going to improve the home as a function of their daily experience and that they will allow be the ones to gain form the changes they are about to make.

Home improvement is very general term for the changes that you can make in the interior of your house, the family rooms, the kitchen and the home office, or the changes that you can make in your backyard or garden, patio or porch. The garden changes are usually more significant as they allow you to make a complete change to what was there before, not only bringing in new features and installing new things into your garden, but also changing the entire layout of the garden. The third kind of home improvement changes you can make involved the outside of the house, and generally the fundamental things that make your house, these are sometimes a little more difficult and you will need to think about maybe getting some professional help for these tasks, unless you know what you are doing.

Home improvement tasks also require that you make a plan of the time frame and the different changes you are about to make, since you do not want the house to stay in a home improvement phase for too long, you should think about what needs to be done, and when to do it. Most home owners prefer to make indoor changes in winter, taking care of the living rooms and the kitchen, the spring and summer are a good time to make changes to the roof, to any concrete work you may have in your property, installation of new things in the garden or backyard and work on the house shutters.

As with all other things you will need to make sure you understand that these home improvement have costs, and that usually doing things by yourself will save you some serious money, but not time. There are a lot of home improvement centers in which you can find almost anything you need for your house, you can also research on the internet and find interesting new things and cheap ideas for home improvement, the great thing about home improvement is that you can do almost anything in your house, and change your living environment completely, so don’t wait, research and prepare, and good luck with your home improvement.

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Kasa impian mempersembahkan Luxury bathroom faucet by Teknobili - Oz Diamond Edition faucet made from pure Gold



For those seeking something with a little bit of glitz… the Oz Diamond Edition bathroom faucet from Teknobili has just arrived. A luxury bathroom faucet, the Oz Diamond Edition could really be a girl’s best friend, completing her fabulous, opulently fashioned bathroom. Designed by the architect Nilo Gioacchini, the Oz collection faucets have been reproduced (with a very special twist) by Professor Alberto Cotogno. Winner of the International jewel Oscar, the professor has created a work of art entirely in gold. Encrusted with a generous, dashing line of 282 natural diamonds, the Oz Diamond Edition faucet is strictly for those with the taste and means to enjoy such an exclusive pleasure. Those who demand the best can revel in the glamour and sparkle of the Oz Diamond Edition faucet from Teknobili.

Sunday, February 24, 2008

SSF Home Deco Mart



Seperti mana yang kita tau,di Malaysia memang ada bermacam-macam kedai menjual perabot dan aksoseri hiasan rumah,salah satu nya SSF home deco mart.

Disana kita boleh mendapatkan bermacam-macam keperluan dan hiasan rumah,dengan itu sedikit sebanyak membantu kita untuk mencari hiasan rumah kita di satu tempat sahaja.dengan itu jangan lah ketinggalan untuk pergi ke sana kerana anda akan ketinggalan untuk mendapatkan hiasan-hiasan terbaru.

Malaysia’s leading one stop Deco Mart that gives you great ideas and inspirations, fantastic range of imported décor products and home deco themes exclusively for the desired lifestyle you seek. Likewise, give your home a character with your personal touch.

Our décor products bring your ideas to life anywhere, anytime. With us, you can change the atmosphere at every corner that suits you best. Our main clients are florists, interior designers, bridal boutiques, home furnishing outlets, developers, commercial showcases and hotels all around Malaysia.

(Home Decoration Products, Handicrafts, Wedding Accessories and Artificial Flowers)

Friday, February 22, 2008

kasa impian ku


kasa impian ku

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