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Cottage Life

Gift guide: Everything CL staffers are wishing for this holiday season

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We asked the staff of Cottage Life: what’s on your wish list?

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Cottage Life

Canadiana alert: Check out this puzzle-maker

“I think it’s in the Constitution that you have to have a puzzle at the cottage,” jokes Brigitte Gall. She and her husband, photographer Michael Bainbridge, founded TheOccurrence, a toy and game company, in 2018 after watching their friends huddle around a puzzle of van Gogh’s “The Starry Night” on a freezing New Year’s Eve. “We looked at each other and had that little lightbulb moment,” recalls Brigitte. “We could make puzzles with Michael’s photography.”

They launched the company just before the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. (“We accidentally opened up a jigsaw puzzle business at exactly the right time,” says Michael.) By now they’ve made roughly 30,000 puzzles; TheOccurrence specializes in niche Canadiana imagery including scenes from Ontario cottage country. The Road Trip series—featuring road signs from areas including Haliburton and Lanark County—is a favourite of Brigitte and Michael’s. They spent days traveling around cottage country and photographing the signs. “It was really surprising, actually, to see how much the culture of a place was evident in the road signs,” says Michael “And it’s fun to capture that for each of the different places.”

Learn more about TheOccurrence

Brigitte is a long-time Haliburton cottager, and the couple moved to the area full-time in 2009. They support the community however they can, from manufacturing the puzzles in-house to using environmentally conscious materials such as 100 per cent recycled board and paper, and water-based inks for printing. Brigitte takes pride in the puzzles and the company. “We’re like the Ravensburger of the north.”

This article was originally published in the August 2022 issue of Cottage Life.

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Potins

DC Entertainment block Rihanna trademarking her name

DC Entertainment has blocked Rihanna from trademarking her first name.

The company, which owns the rights to the ‘Batman’ series, is trying to stop the ‘Rude Boy’ hitmaker – who was born Robyn Rihanna Fenty – claiming the rights to the moniker as they believe it’s too similar to their legendary comic book Robin, Batman’s sidekick.

According to a complaint filed in the US Patent and Trademark Office last week, DC have argued that the names are ”virtually identical” and believe ”consumers are likely to be deceived” if she trademarks the name.

The company – which is part of Warner Brothers – added Rihanna’s use of the superhero sidekick’s name could tarnish his reputation.

The complaint continues: ”(Rihanna’s) registration is likely to cause dilution by blurring and tarnishing the famous opposer’s mark.”

According to Billboard, the 27-year-old star wanted to patent the name with the aim of launching an online magazine when she filed the request back in June 2014, but DC, who published their own Robin comic book in 1990, believe it will cause confusion”.

They said: ”(A publication called Robyn) is likely to cause confusion, cause mistake, or to deceive the public.”

Boy Wonder Robin first made his first appearance in a DC comic book issue in 1940.

Categories
Potins

DC Entertainment block Rihanna trademarking her name

DC Entertainment has blocked Rihanna from trademarking her first name.

The company, which owns the rights to the ‘Batman’ series, is trying to stop the ‘Rude Boy’ hitmaker – who was born Robyn Rihanna Fenty – claiming the rights to the moniker as they believe it’s too similar to their legendary comic book Robin, Batman’s sidekick.

According to a complaint filed in the US Patent and Trademark Office last week, DC have argued that the names are ”virtually identical” and believe ”consumers are likely to be deceived” if she trademarks the name.

The company – which is part of Warner Brothers – added Rihanna’s use of the superhero sidekick’s name could tarnish his reputation.

The complaint continues: ”(Rihanna’s) registration is likely to cause dilution by blurring and tarnishing the famous opposer’s mark.”

According to Billboard, the 27-year-old star wanted to patent the name with the aim of launching an online magazine when she filed the request back in June 2014, but DC, who published their own Robin comic book in 1990, believe it will cause confusion”.

They said: ”(A publication called Robyn) is likely to cause confusion, cause mistake, or to deceive the public.”

Boy Wonder Robin first made his first appearance in a DC comic book issue in 1940.