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French civil servants join strikes 20, November 2007

Filed under: News — frenchgirlinfinland @ 8:27 pm
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Schools closed, flights were delayed, trains again weren’t running, and newspapers weren’t printed as civil servants joined transport workers in strikes Tuesday to challenge President Nicolas Sarkozy’s program of sweeping reform for France.

A defiant Sarkozy said voters gave him a mandate for reform when they elected him in May, adding: “We will not surrender and we will not retreat.”

“France needs reforms to meet the challenges imposed on it by the world,” he told a meeting of mayors.

Sarkozy previously had remained uncharacteristically silent about the transit strikes that have hobbled the national rail network and transport in and around the capital for a week.

He said the walkout must stop before it brings “the economy to its knees.”

“You have to know how to stop a strike,” said the conservative. “You have to think of all of those who have to go to work.”

He reiterated his determination to press ahead with the pension reform that prompted labor leaders to call the open-ended strike. But he also suggested that he is not looking to crush unions in the reform process.

“I do not want a winner and loser,” Sarkozy said.

The walkouts looked increasingly like the last gasp of a protest movement that started with train drivers but seems to be losing some punch after a week of major travel disruptions.

Talks with transport unions are to start Wednesday and the government said it would take part.

Tuesday marked the seventh full day of the transit strikes against pension reforms.

Hundreds of thousands of civil servants — teachers, customs agents and tax inspectors — also stayed off the job to press for pay raises and job security. Sarkozy has promised a slimmed-down and reformed civil service, France’s largest employer with more than 5 million workers.

Although civil servants and transport workers have different demands, together their protests stood as the biggest test since Sarkozy took office with a determination to revamp France through reforms and cost-cutting.

More than 300,000 teachers — about 40 percent — were on strike Tuesday, the Education Ministry said, and some schools were forced to close. Flights also were delayed and postal services were affected.

National newspapers were absent from kiosks as printers and distributors joined the walkout. Strike-hit France-Inter radio broadcast music and a message of apology instead of its regular programming.

National weather service Meteo France, which has 3,700 employees, said a third of the staff members were on strike.

Thousands joined protest marches in Paris and other cities. The Paris demonstration had a picnic atmosphere, with music, roasted sausages and balloons marked “Public Service is a Public Good.” The demonstrators marched across the Left Bank to the gold-domed monument at Les Invalides, site of Napoleon’s tomb.

About one in seven employees at France’s main energy utilities, Electricite de France and Gaz de France, were on strike, the companies said.

Striking air traffic controllers caused delays averaging 45 minutes at Paris’ two airports, Charles de Gaulle and Orly, affecting both short domestic routes and long-haul flights.

Despite the pressure on Sarkozy, the government has stood firm. Prime Minister Francois Fillon said Monday that reforms must move forward.

The transit strike has caused massive disruption on the national rail network and in Paris’ Metro and commuter lines.

The government says the transit walkout is costing France’s economy between $440 million and $513 million a day and could dent economic growth if it lasts.

Train drivers are protesting Sarkozy’s plans to extend their retirement age. The government has insisted that for talks to start, unions must move toward a return to work. It also says the core of the reform — that all workers must work for 40 years to qualify for full pensions — is nonnegotiable.

Sarkozy was elected on promises to reform France — from its courts to its creaking university system, its army of civil servants to rail workers whose special retirement privileges he vowed to eliminate.

Campuses are also bubbling with discontent. Knots of students have been blocking classes at dozens of France’s 85 state-run universities to protest a law allowing them to seek nongovernment funding. Critics fear the change will mean schools closing their doors to the poor and scrapping classes that can’t attract private funding.

(Source: Yahoo)

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Marimekko 20, November 2007

Filed under: Mode/Muoti/Fashion — frenchgirlinfinland @ 7:44 pm
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Marimekko est une grande entreprise finlandaise de design dans le secteur de l’habillement et des textiles. Elle conçoit, fabrique et commercialise, en Finlande comme à l’étranger, des vêtements, de la décoration d’intérieur sur textile, des sacs et d’autres accessoires. La notoriété de la marque s’est fait grâce à son style : un ensemble de motifs simples et de couleurs très puissantes.

Marimekko fut fondée en 1951 par Armi et Viljo Ratia. La marque s’est fait connaître dans le domaine de l’habillement dès les années 1960. Kirsti Paakkanen est sa propriétaire et directrice générale depuis 1991.

La marque est connue mondialement. Il existe 25 magasins de détail en Finlande et un à Stockholm en Suède, des filiales en Suède et en Allemagne, des agents commerciaux et des importateurs dans douze pays. Les principaux acheteurs sont la Suède, les États-Unis, l’Allemagne, le Japon, la Russie et la Norvège. Marimekko a environ 800 revendeurs un peu partout dans le monde.

(Source: Wikipedia)

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Marimekko Oyj on suomalainen tekstiili- ja vaatetusalan pörssiyhtiö, jonka perustivat Armi ja Viljo Ratia vuonna 1951.

Marimekon osake-enemmistö siirtyi vuonna 1991 Kirsti Paakkasen omistamalle Workidea Oy:lle, jonka omistus nykyään on 10 %. 31. lokakuuta 2007 Paakkanen ilmoitti luopuvansa asteittain Marimekon omistuksesta Mika Ihamuotilalle, josta tulee yhtiön uusi toimitusjohtaja ja suurin omistaja.[2]

Ennen Paakkasen johtajuutta Marimekko oli ajautunut 1960- ja 1970-lukujen menestyksestä huonoon tilaan. Vain Euroopassa.

1990-luvulla Marimekko koki renessanssin, kun Maija Isolan 1960-luvulla suunnittelema Unikko-kuosi otettiin uustuotantoon. Kuosin muokkasi aikaan sopivaksi Maija Isolan tytär Kristina Isola. Unikosta tuli Marimekon vuosituhannen vaihteen myydyin kuosi ja sitä on yhdistettynä uudella tavalla erilaisissa materiaaleissa tekstiileistä televisionkuoriin ja saappaisiin. Maailmanlaajuisen suosion näkee siinäkin, että muiden yritysten Unikonkaltaiset kuosit ovat selvästi yleistyneet. Marimekon tuotteisiin kuuluvat muun muassa pyyhkeet, pussilakanat, muoviastiat, posliiniastiat, kankaat, vaatteet, kengät, tunnetut Jokapoika-paidat, Mariskooli, sukat, laukut ja servetit. Marimekolta sai myös pieniä, kangaskantisia muistikirjoja, joiden myynti loppui 1990-luvun alussa.

( Wikipediasta)

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Marimekko is a Finnish company based in Helsinki that has made important contributions to fashion, especially in the 1960s and 1970s. They are particularly noted for brightly-colored printed fabrics and simple styles.

Marimekko was founded in 1951 by Armi and Viljo Ratia, when Armi asked some artist friends to apply their graphic designs to textiles. In order to show how the fabric could be used, the company then designed and sold a line of simple dresses using their fabric. Viljo had been involved in an unsuccessful oilcloth factory, which they converted into a clothing-fabric factory.

Marimekko was first introduced to the United States by the architect Benjamin C. Thompson, who featured them heavily in his Design Research stores. They were made famous in the United States by Jacqueline Kennedy, who bought eight Marimekko dresses which she wore throughout the 1960 US Presidential campaign.

By 1965, the company employed over 400, and the company was in every aspect of fine design, from fabrics to toys, dinnerware, even completely equipped small houses. Marimekko was more than just a fashion brand, it was a lifestyle and point of view. That year, Armi Ratia told Pan Am’s Clipper magazine that she was “against success–it is a sick word. Too many side effects.” In the interview by R.E. Smallman, she also said that she did not like “hats, corsets. There is almost no more bra or even pants–no elegant woman will wear stockings, perhaps even no shoes. The world changes quickly, and this is expression of the new society.”

Armi Ratia died in 1979, which was the beginning of difficult times in Marimekko. In 1985, the company was sold to Amer-yhtymä.

In the beginning of the 1990s, Marimekko was in a bad financial condition and was considered ready for bankruptcy. It was then bought from Amer by Kirsti Paakkanen, who introduced new business methods in the company and is generally seen as having saved Marimekko. In 2005, Marimekko’s revenue had been quadrupled and its net income grown 200-fold. Kirsti Paakkanen is the current CEO of Marimekko and owns 20 % of the company via her business Workidea. In 2007, Paakkanen announced she would gradually hand over her ownership to Mika Ihamuotila, who will be the new CEO and biggest owner of the company.

In 2007, Marimekko began opening individually-owned Marimekko Concept Stores in the United States. Currently there are stores located in Cambridge, Massachusetts; Oxford, Mississippi; Miami Beach, Florida; and the Washington, DC region (Silver Spring, Maryland).

(Source: Wikipedia)

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Virallinen sivusto

Official Website

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H&M Splashes into Spring with Marimekko Retro Classics 20, November 2007

Filed under: Mode/Muoti/Fashion — frenchgirlinfinland @ 7:31 pm
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Finnish Design icon Marimekko is teaming up with Sweden’s biggest clothing retailer, Hennes & Mauritz for a collection to go on sale next spring.

Cheap-chic giant H&M announced on Tuesday it will release a summer collection of some 50 products based on Marimekko patterns from the 1950s to the 1970s.

The range includes clothing and accessories for women, men and children. The collection will hit H&M’s 1,500 shops in 28 countries next April.

On Tuesday, Marimekko’s share price rose 3% in Helsinki on news of the deal.

Paakkanen’s Parting Gift?

“Our design team has long admired Marimekko’s vivid prints and colours,” says H&M design chief Margareta van den Bosch. “When our designers came up with the idea of creating a collection with Marimekko prints, it felt natural and just the right time. The summer collection 2008 will be joyfully fresh like a vitamin injection.”

Outgoing Marimekko CEO Kirsti Paakkanen said the collaboration will “enhance Marimekko’s international recognition among young and fashion-conscious consumers.”

Three weeks ago, Paakkanen announced she is stepping down as CEO and selling most of her shares to the new CEO, Mika Ihamuotila.

Marimekko was established in 1951 — four years after H&M.

( Ylestä)

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Site officiel/ Virallinen sivusto/ Official Website

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