Browsing Category

Uncommon Knowledge

Uncommon Knowledge

Uncommon Knowledge: Want To Get To Know Bitters Better?

September 25, 2015

Cocktail Bitters Set | UncommonGoods

Drinks have been using bitters—alcohol infused with herbs, spices, and botanicals—to create their signature cocktails since the 18th century. They balance a drink’s flavor and aroma, while also cutting any over-the-top sweetness. On their own, however, they’re rather unpleasant. Employing the commonly held belief that anything that tastes unpleasant must be good for you, bitters manufacturers in the 18th Century began claiming that the potions could cure everything from malaria to indigestion. During the Civil War, the Union Army purchased whole train cars of bitters to act as “a positive protective against the fatal maladies of the Southern swamps, and the poisonous tendency of the impure rivers and bayous.” Though the actual medical benefits were, in fact, next to nothing, the 94-proof potency certainly helped to steel nerves. Finally, in the 20th century, the government stepped in and put a stop to the false medical claims and shortly after, all but a few bitters brands began to die off. The few remaining bitters were quickly picked up by savvy bartenders who helped usher a classic cocktail revival in the 1990s. A second classic cocktail boost during the 2010s and the drinking-as-DIY phenomenon gave them a third resurgence that’s still going strong today.

Cocktail Bitters Set | $34.99

Uncommon Knowledge

Uncommon Knowledge: Can You Control a Teen?

September 18, 2015

Mason Jar Speaker & Amplifier | UncommonGoods

You might not be able to control their taste in music or their new fangled tastes in technology, but you can actually corral them like a couple of trendily dressed sheep. The secret behind it is kind of a bummer—naturally occurring hearing loss. Sound is made of pressure waves that alternate between compressing and stretching through air at a certain frequency. The higher the frequency, the higher the resulting pitch you’ll hear. Dogs have highly evolved hearing, which is how they can hear those fancy dog whistles and we can’t. While we’re born being able to hear a wide range of frequencies, this range narrows as we get older in a natural process called prebycusis. In an effort to take advantage of this deterioration, there is now a machine—the aptly named The Mosquito—that emits a high pitch frequency that, according to science, only those under the age of 24 can hear. How does this control the youths of the world? Put the machine in a spot where you’re sick of pesky kids loitering and—bingo—the sound gets so annoying to their bionic, youthful ears that they scatter to the wind. The downside of the sound? The kids have caught on and can make it a ringtone for their cell phone. Text message dings, us Old Ears are none the wiser.

Mason Jar Speaker & Amplifier | $65

Uncommon Knowledge

Uncommon Knowledge: Will Everything Be OK?

September 14, 2015

This Too Shall Pass Paperweight | UncommonGoods

Inspiration comes in many forms, and, if you’re like our artists, you may look to a famous phrase or line of vital verse to help keep you positive. But sometimes, such pep talks can feel less than genuine. When you feel that an obvious dose of perky poetry just won’t cut it, consider this familiar philosophical phrase: this too shall pass.

Say it aloud a few times, and you may feel a certain sense of detached calm. It’s like a Zen version of “go with the flow,” meaning that no matter how bad things get, they’re bound to turn around because all of existence is in flux. Whoa…heavy, right? But wait a minute—it gets heavier. When you really think about it, the phrase also means that no matter how good things are, they’ll change for the worse. So much for positive inspiration!

The phrase can be traced back to the Persian Sufi poets, and has since been credited to a nebulous “Eastern” king, who asked his court to provide a phrase that would smooth everything out, making him feel better when he was down, and bringing him down a notch when he was manic. Whether or not this fable has any basis in fact, the “Eastern” associations are probably thanks to the tenets of Buddhist enlightenment, which seeks release from the perceived, material world and the cycle of existence. In other words, it’s the realization that all of this stuff isn’t important, because the only constant is change…

And if that’s still too heavy for your taste, try this exuberant, marching band setting of the sentiment and turn that frown upside down!

This Too Shall Pass Paperweight | $36

Uncommon Knowledge

Uncommon Knowledge: What’s a Thing?

August 31, 2015

From Big Things | Uncommon Knowledge

What’s a thing? As anyone knows, it’s anything. Literally. It’s an all-purpose word that can mean an object, an affair, a situation, a mild obsession or phobia (she’s really got a thing about spiders), or, with a capital T, a certain large, lumpy, orange member of the Fantastic Four. But here’s the thing: before it was a catch-all term, a thing—from the Old Norse þing, was a sort of democratic assembly held throughout the Viking lands of Northern Europe. Viking things were an early experiment with a representative system, allowing disputes to be settled through nonviolent mediation rather than by the bloody conflict that we tend to associate with the Vikings. The egalitarian, socialist principles of modern Sweden may be traced to the concept of the Viking thing. And while the modern concept of representative democracy has its roots in ancient Greece and the Iroquois confederacy, it also owes something to medieval Scandinavia.

So, the next time you’re going to “a thing,” think of the Vikings who first made a thing an official thing. Just don’t picture the assembled Norsemen with horned helmets… that’s an invention of the nineteenth century imagination. For the real Vikings, sporting horns just wasn’t a thing.

From Little Things Planters – Set of 3 | $45

Uncommon Knowledge

Uncommon Knowledge: Did Coney Island save lives?

August 24, 2015

On the Boardwalk | Uncommongoods

The Brooklyn amusement park certainly saved the lives of roughly 6,500 babies, that’s for sure. Back in 1903, Dr. Martin A. Couney had developed an incubator to treat premature babies. At the time, hospitals had devoted little attention to these early births and therefore had no special equipment developed for them. Before Dr. Couney could convince hospitals to use his invention, he needed proof that it would work—and funding a study was expensive. Enter Coney Island. They set up an attraction that acted as a hospital ward with real doctors and nurses. One wall was made of glass so visitors could pay a dime and see the tiny infants. It may not have been the most dignified facility—outside, carnival barkers would pull people in with loads of sideshow-worthy hyperbole—but his research was essentially paid for and as many as 6,500 babies of the 8,000 treated survived as a result of his set up. He never charged the parents for treatment and eventually, any child who was prematurely born in New York City would be rushed to Coney Island to be placed on exhibit—Couney even treated his own daughter, who weighed less than three pounds at birth. In 1943, the exhibit closed down as more hospitals began to open their own preemie wards. Okay, Wonder Wheel, what have YOU done for the advancement of the medical community recently?

On the Boardwalk by Renee Leone | $145-$230

Uncommon Knowledge

Uncommon Knowledge: What Makes a Planet ‘Just Right?

August 17, 2015

27330_zoom1

Back in the 1970s, when the search for planets outside our solar system (exoplanets) was little more than a fairy tale, astronomers surmised that Earth was the only spot in our stellar neighborhood where conditions were conducive to life—not so close to the sun that life was too hot to handle, nor so far away that life was given the permanent cold shoulder. Earth’s orbit allowed for abundant liquid water, a key ingredient for the development of life as we know it. Showing their whimsical side, those 70s scientists named this habitable zone the “Goldilocks Zone,” after the little girl who sampled the three bears’ porridge and settled on the bowl that was just right. Officially, this sweet spot of planetary hospitality is called the Circumstellar Habitable Zone, or CHZ, but Goldilocks provided a cuter and more memorable nickname.

Now that the discovery of exoplanets is in full swing, worlds in the Goldilocks Zone of other stars tend to get the most publicity, as they’re most likely to support extraterrestrial life, whether its alien bacteria or little green men. Meanwhile, discoveries here on Earth have us re-thinking the boundaries of the Goldilocks Zone itself. From microbes that flourish under Arctic ice to organisms that hang out in the scalding hot, total darkness around ocean floor volcanic vents, life can exist in places that finicky Goldilocks would have avoided altogether. For that matter, a tiny “bear” has got them all beat: the tardigrade, or “water bear.” Along with surviving in solid ice or boiling water, tardigrades can tolerate cosmic rays and the vacuum of space—conditions way outside of Goldilocks’ comfort zone. These tough little troopers prove that life is far more tolerant than the three bears’ high-maintenance home invader.

A New Day | $40.00

Uncommon Knowledge

Uncommon Knowledge: Does a Paper Fan Make You Hotter?

August 11, 2015

26552_zoom1 (1)

Flashback: It’s the last few days of school, there’s no air conditioning, you’re sticking to your desk chair. Suddenly, you remember the stacks of loose-leaf paper tucked in your Trapper Keeper. You draw a quick smiley face with your cherry-scented marker and you quickly fold the paper back and forth, back and forth. You take a moment to admire your handiwork before enjoying the blessed cool air created by your lined paper lifesaver. Life makes sense again. Then, out of nowhere, your teacher utters what should be the official motto of professional educators in the summer: “You know, you’re actually making yourself hotter by using up energy to fan yourself.” According to our research? LIES. Your body loses heat through radiation, thermal conduction, and evaporation through sweat. The latter two occur when the air is cooler and drier than your skin—enter the humble fan. Now here comes the teacher’s argument. Sure, you may feel cooler, but what about the energy you’re expending to move that little fan? Well. When you’re at rest, your body is producing about 100 watts of energy. Waving a fan? Add just one watt. However, with the increased air velocity that the fan produces, you can double your heat loss—that means that for just 1% of the effort, you can be twice as cool. Fan away.

Paper Plane Embroidery Hoop Art | $26.00

Uncommon Knowledge

Uncommon Knowledge: How Can Your Cat Help With a Broken Leg?

August 3, 2015

22064_zoom1
There are as many theories about why cats purr as there are types of cats (we’re lookin’ at you, T. S. Eliot). It’s common knowledge that cats purr when they’re content, like when they’re being fed or stroked, but their unique, vibrating sound may also have a specific connection to their human masters. A University of Sussex study suggests that cats may have developed a ‘soliciting’ purr to obtain food and attention from humans, similar to the co-evolutionary benefits shared between humans and dogs. But there’s another reason that early humans may have made some feline friends: domestic cats purr at a frequency of 25 – 100 vibrations per second, an ideal range for reducing stress, lowering blood pressure, relieving pain, and promoting healing in both bones and soft tissues. So, essentially, a purring kitty in the vicinity may have served as a form of furry first aid. Elephants, by the way, also make a low-pitched, purr-like sound to communicate, though you probably wouldn’t want one to sit on your lap.

Cat Tao Glasses – Set of Four | $35.00