sabato 30 aprile 2011

GLASS Vase with Stand

This is a new serie of glass Vase with Stand, really iinnovative design, mixed colour and extra quality hand work. We are located direct from venice and we are able to ship in all world without problem with adeguate box. For any question please visit our web site www.morbideidee.com or email us to info @ morbideidee . com.
The vase measure 20 x 25 cm it's something like 9 x 11 inch.

GLASS Vase ALTEA 2907

GLASS Vase Frida 2910

GLASS Vase Maddy 3547

GLASS Vase Ines 2905

GLASS Vase Ilaria 3677

GLASS VASE SARAH 3407


lunedì 25 aprile 2011

New set of goblet with gift box

6 Martini Glass in gift box


6 Grappa goblet in gift box


There are new sets of colored glasses, 6 different colours in a beautiful gift box.
We are able to ship worldwide, in safe condition. For any question please write us to:
morbideidee @ gmail . com or venicesouvenir @ hotmail . it
You can buy directly through our website: www.morbideidee.com

lunedì 4 aprile 2011

Venice Gondola

GONDOLA in VENICE


The gondola is a traditional, flat-bottomed Venetian rowing boat, well suited to the conditions of the Venetian Lagoon.
For centuries gondolas were once the chief means of transportation and most common watercraft within Venice.
In modern times the iconic boats still have a role in public transport in the city, serving as traghetti (ferries) over the Grand Canal.
They are also used in special regattas (rowing races) held amongst gondoliers.
It is similar to punting, except it uses an oar to propel it instead of a pole.
Their primary role, however, is to carry tourists on rides at established prices.

History and usage

Traffic jam with gondolas
The gondola is propelled by a person (the gondolier) who stands facing the bow and rows with a forward stroke, followed by a compensating backward stroke.
Contrary to popular belief, the gondola is never poled like a punt as the waters of Venice are too deep.
Until the early 20th century, as many photographs attest, gondolas were often fitted with a "felze", a small cabin, to protect the passengers from the weather or from onlookers.
Its windows could be closed with louvered shutters—the original "venetian blinds".
After the elimination of the traditional felze—possibly in response to tourists complaining that it blocked the view—there survived for some decades a kind of vestigial summer awning, known as the "tendalin" (these can be seen on gondolas as late as the mid-1950s, in the film Summertime). A sumptuary law of Venice required that gondolas should be painted black, and they are customarily so painted now.
It is estimated that there were eight to ten thousand gondolas during the 17th and 18th century. There are just over four hundred in active service today, virtually all of them used for hire by tourists.
Those few that are in private ownership are either hired out to Venetians for weddings or used for racing.
Even though the Gondola by now has become a widely publicized icon of Venice, in the times of the Republic of Venice is was by far not the only means of transportation: on the map of Venice created by Jacopo de' Barbari in 1500 only a fraction of the boats are gondolas, the majority of boats are batellas, caorlinas, galleys and other boats - by now only a handful of batellas survive, and Caorlina´s are used for racing only.


Gondola´s at SS. Giovanni e Paolo in a painting by Michele Marieschi
During their heyday as a means of public transports, teams of four men—three oarsmen and a fourth person, primarily shore-based and responsible for the booking and administration of the gondola (Il Rosso Riserva)—would share ownership of a gondola.
However as the gondolas became more of a tourist attraction than a mode of public transport all but one of these cooperatives and their offices have closed.
The category is now protected by the Institution for the Protection and Conservation of Gondolas and Gondoliers, headquartered in the historical center of Venice.
The historical gondola was quite different from its modern evolution- the paintings of Canaletto and others show a much lower prow, a higher "ferro", and usually two rowers. The banana-shaped modern gondola has been developed only in the 19th century by the boat-builder Tramontin, whose heirs still run the Tramontin boatyard.
The construction of the gondola continued to evolve until the mid-20th century, when the city government prohibited any further modifications.
The oar or rèmo is held in an oar lock known as a fórcola.
The forcola is of a complicated shape, allowing several positions of the oar for slow forward rowing, powerful forward rowing, turning, slowing down, rowing backwards, and stopping. The ornament on the front of the boat is called the fèrro (meaning iron) and can be made from brass, stainless steel, or aluminium.
It serves as decoration and as counterweight for the gondolier standing near the stern.


Gondolas parked at their moorings

Gondolas are hand made using 8 different types of wood (fir, oak, cherry, walnut, elm, mahogany, larch and lime) and are composed of 280 pieces.
The oars are made of beech wood. The left side of the gondola is made longer than the right side. This asymmetry causes the gondola to resist the tendency to turn toward the left at the forward stroke.
It is a common misconception that the gondola is a paddled vessel when the correct term is rowed i.e. "I rowed my gondola to work".

The profession of gondolier is controlled by a guild, which issues a limited number of licenses granted after periods of training and apprenticeship, and a major comprehensive exam which tests knowledge of Venetian history and landmarks, foreign language skills, and practical skills in handling the gondola typically necessary in the tight spaces of Venetian canals.
The gondola is also one of the vessels typically used in both ceremonial and competitive regattas, rowing races held amongst gondoliers using the technique of Voga alla Veneta.
The origin of the word "gondola" has never been satisfactorily established, despite many interesting theories.
In August 2010, Giorgia Boscolo became Venice's first female gondolier.

Gondola passing under a bridge

Mark Twain visited Venice in the summer of 1867.
He dedicated much of The Innocents Abroad, chapter 23 to describing the curiosity of urban life with gondolas and gondoliers.
Gilbert and Sullivan's two-act comic operetta The Gondoliers is set in Venice, and the show's two protagonists (as well as its men's chorus) are of the eponymous profession, even though the political irony that makes up the core of the show has much more to do with British society than Venice.
The Japanese manga Aria follows a young woman named Akari as she trains as an apprentice gondolier in Neo-Venezia, a city on a terraformed Mars based on Venice.