Tips In Choosing A Restaurant For A Romantic Date

Are you needing tips in choosing a restaurant for a date?

You’re out to impress. You invite your partner to meet you at a hot new restaurant in town for a romantic date after work. On the night, you drive into town only to find few car parking options. You shell out $50 to park the car and then sprint to the restaurant which is 2 km away — uphill.

Your partner is waiting on the street for you to arrive. The line for the restaurant is about 50 people long and extends upstairs and out of sight. You resign to joining the end of the line and both of you pull out your phones for entertainment during the wait.

Thirty minutes later, the line of man-bun wearing hipsters has disappeared and you are finally face to face with the maître-d’. “Thirty-minute wait for a table. You can wait in the bar or give us your mobile number”.

You opt for the bar wait and ask for a menu. A quick scan reveals that there’s not much on offer to suit your partner’s food intolerances. At this point, the night is a massive fail. You abandon the restaurant and grab noodles from a place down the street.

How to avoid a date fail?

Research and planning are key to avoiding the dinner date fail. Let’s assume you are officially a couple and this is not a date with a Tinderella or a Tinderfella (choosing a venue for a blind date is a whole other story).

First, let’s avoid having to call an ambulance because your partner is turning blue at the table – that’s never romantic. Find out what type of food your date is allergic to, doesn’t like, or doesn’t eat due to religious, ethical or other reasons. (You might want to write them down if the list is long for future reference.)

Already feeling stressed? Hang in there, you can do this!

A restaurant with special meaning for both of you is always a good choice. Otherwise, ask around for restaurant recommendations, check TripAdvisor, the restaurant guide of your local newspaper and any other sources you like.

Tip: In the desktop version of tripadvisor.com, there’s a ‘romantic’ filter for restaurants that you can apply to the search results. Unfortunately, it’s not available in the mobile app version.

Once you’ve narrowed down the list, check out online information about the restaurants on your short list. You might have to call the restaurant (like, speak to a real person) as well.

Here’s what you should check out in choosing a restaurant for a date:

The menu – can you eat it… and can you pay for it?

the menu

Does the menu cater for any dietary requirements you and/or your partner have? Does it have enough options that you will both like? Does the drinks list offer a range of choices (and not just beer)? If your partner is a foodie then somewhere with a degustation menu will be a winner – all those delicious little morsels that just keep on coming. If your partner is vegan then avoid the BBQ joints (just a tip!).

Do check the prices beforehand. You don’t want to blow your budget on one meal and regret it until the next pay day. An expensive restaurant is not necessarily a romantic one. Show that you’ve put more thought into it than just choosing the most expensive place in town.

Effort = Romantic.

See Also: 7 Ways To Inject Romance Into Your Relationship

Avoid the no-bookings policy

The whole no-bookings thing that’s popular with new restaurants is to be avoided. Making a booking is essential to a successful evening. You don’t want a long wait before being seated or get there to find you’ve got no chance of getting a table.

Consider the night of the week

Which nights of the week is the restaurant open? Lots of restaurants are closed on Mondays so your choices will be less. Tuesday is a quiet night and you might get better service (but balance this with potentially being the only ones in the restaurant). A Friday or Saturday night might be more relaxed, without the thought of work the next day, but the restaurant might be crowded and noisy.

See Also: The Role of Karma in Your Relationships

Interior design – what to look for

romantic table decoration

Table density

Look at photos of the restaurant. Are the tables so close together that you’ll be part of the conversation with the people next to you? Awkward. Look for somewhere with tables that are well spaced. A corner table is ideal. Never the large communal table.

Women, in particular, like to have a wall behind them. Apparently it’s some deep seated need to feel like no-one can sneak up behind them. A cosy corner with at least one bench seat is ideal.

Noise

The currently popular industrial design trend means lots of hard surfaces and lots of noise, which makes conversation difficult. Choose somewhere with furnishings and fittings that absorb noise. You are looking for upholstered chairs, carpet or wooden flooring (not concrete or tile) and maybe drapes. Do a Google image search for the restaurant and have a look at the photos. Also check TripAdvisor for comments about the place being noisy.

Lighting

Everyone benefits from soft lighting. Avoid restaurants with harsh fluoro strips that make you look like a zombie, fresh out of the grave. Refer to photos online and note the lighting.

A view

If you think there might be awkward silences, then choose a restaurant that offers something to look at other than each other. A nice view or a busy street scape is ideal. Avoid live music or theatre restaurants where the noise level will prevent flowing conversation.

If you want to really minimise the risk of a doomed date, then visit the restaurant beforehand (and about the same time of day as you’ll be dining) and check it out.

Service

Good service is essential. You don’t want to leave the restaurant in a bad mood after waiting an hour between courses or having to ask three times for another drink. Check out the online reviews for descriptions of the service. And be nice to the wait staff during your meal – they can make or break your date.

Getting there… and home again

Think about transport. If you are arriving separately then choose somewhere with a bar (or one nearby) that the first person can wait in if the second is running late. Check out parking or public transport options beforehand (don’t get stung with the night-spoiling parking fees mentioned earlier). If you plan to drink then check Uber to make sure there are plenty of drivers cruising the area.

There, that was painless wasn’t it? The good news is that you’ve probably got a list of great restaurants that will be suitable for a romantic dinner—a list you can keep handy for next time. The even better news is that you should have a wonderful night with your date.

The post Tips In Choosing A Restaurant For A Romantic Date appeared first on Dumb Little Man.

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Vieyra Arquitectos Design a Contemporary Home in the Lomas Country Golf Club, near Mexico City

Project of the Month: Estonian National Museum


© Takuji Shimmura

© Takuji Shimmura

For the last three centuries, museums -as an architectural typology- have transitioned from being an important node in the city to becoming an icon of identity for a whole culture. Museums have transformed into a civic landmark in a local and international scale.

This month we highlight the Estonian National Museum which not only proposes a strategy for meeting spaces and exhibition, but also stands as a cultural, historic and territorial recognition of the country. Placed as an extension of the ruins of an old aeronautical field used during the Soviet occupation, the museum contrasts it’s historic context with a new building that rises as the projection to a new reality and a national future.

Estonian National Museum / DGT Architects

Historic Location.

The proposal is located in a former aeronautical Soviet field with the purpose to recover this unoccupied space and expose it as part of the national memory. Considering the features that the territory offers, an extension of the field is proposed taking advantage of it’s scale, achieving a space that hosts several cultural activities and a new use for the territory that contrasts with the existing. All this with the purpose of projecting a new reality and desire of a great national future.


Courtesy of DGT Architects

Courtesy of DGT Architects

© Arp Karm

© Arp Karm

These ideas are formally embodied as a large inclined roof ranging from 3 meters to 14 meters high. This structure connects the two main accesses that link symbolically the “new” with the “old” and at the same time leaving a free view to the interior so that the users can fully understand the length and scale of the building.


© Takuji Shimmura

© Takuji Shimmura

© Takuji Shimmura

© Takuji Shimmura

The choice of materials as enhancement of the climate and the national landscape.

The outer skin of the building was designed as translucent layers that maintain constant connection with the surrounding landscape. The glass facade protects from the rain, snow and extreme weather conditions. This is achieved with three layers of glass that regulate the temperature and allows the direct sunlight inside through the building’s south facade where the exhibition halls and the sheltered spaces are located. The curtain wall acts as a rain cover that conforms to the facade giving a sculptural feature to the traditional Estonian patterns and at the same time integrating the landscape environment as a constant in the territory and context.


© Takuji Shimmura

© Takuji Shimmura

Courtesy of DGT Architects

Courtesy of DGT Architects

© Takuji Shimmura

© Takuji Shimmura

Courtesy of DGT Architects

Courtesy of DGT Architects

The dimensions of the museum based on flexible use in the future.

The challenge for the architects was not only to contribute with a design for a new museum, but to give the community a space with all the attributes of a museum of the 21st Century, considering it not only as a storage and exhibition space but also a place for social interaction and cultural recognition, remembering that it was a lost space transformed into a series of public spaces.


Courtesy of DGT Architects

Courtesy of DGT Architects

Courtesy of DGT Architects

Courtesy of DGT Architects

Estonian National Museum / DGT Architects (Dorell.Ghotmeh.Tane)
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Glass bubble dress features in Iris van Herpen’s Autumn Winter 2016 couture collection



Dutch fashion designer Iris van Herpen has created a dress using thousands of hand-blown glass balls for her haute-couture collection, shown in Paris this week. (more…)

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Andrea Leadsom speech verdict: buy shares in Michael Gove

Tory leadership contender’s ‘major speech on the economy’ was little more than a catalogue of slogans about optimism

In a speech in Westminster, Leadsom, the leading pro-Brexit candidate, appeared to ditch the economic strategy of her former boss George Osborne and sought to reassure the financial markets that Britain could cope with leaving the EU.

Together we will write another great chapter of prosperity and tolerance and hope.

Related: Tory leadership battle: Andrea Leadsom says ‘let’s banish pessimists’ – live

Related: Angela Leadsom calls for ‘prosperity not austerity’ in Tory leadership pitch

That was *not* as billed a ‘major speech on the economy’ by @andrealeadsom. More a series of optimistic hopes and soundbites

So Leadsom pitch…higher pay, no austerity, better training, banish pessimism . The Land of Milk and Honey ???

Continue reading…

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Activity Landscape / JAJA Architects


© Rune Johansen

© Rune Johansen


© Rune Johansen


© Rune Johansen


© Rune Johansen


© Rune Johansen

  • Engineering: Vision+
  • Foundation: Lokale- og Anlægsfonden

© Rune Johansen

© Rune Johansen

As small town communities often lack inviting and active public spaces, the Activity Landscape introduces a model for a low-cost sports hall that offer an outdoor and sheltered informal space that playfully encourage activity and recreation, all day and all year around.


© Rune Johansen

© Rune Johansen

The first example of the Activity Landscape opened earlier this year and have become a popular focal point in Harboøre, DK. In contrary to traditional sports halls that are tailor-made for formal sports and mostly used during the winter, the Activity Landscape creates a seamless transition between the interior and exterior space, which opens up for a wider range of informal as well as formal usage. From in- and outdoor skating, soccer, flee-markets or concerts, the Activity Landscape offers a new type of public space where activity can extend beyond the sheltered space and out to the open.


© Rune Johansen

© Rune Johansen

The design consists of two mail elements: The building and landscape.


Floor Plan

Floor Plan

Cladded with translucent polycarbonate sheets on a basic structural frame, the building is essentially a large shelter that reduces glare while offering a natural ambient lighting indoors that accentuates the spatial relation to the outdoors.


© Rune Johansen

© Rune Johansen

Hills of grass, asphalt and concrete undulate in, out and around creating a playful landscape that interacts with the building while encouraging a range of activities. The smooth asphalt and concrete hills, for instance, are perfect for skating and bicycling. The grass are better suited for climbing, running and tumbling down. Altogether, the hills and its surfaces creates an in- and outdoor spatial composition that encourage recreation and social interaction.


© Rune Johansen

© Rune Johansen

Long Section

Long Section

Model

Model

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Cymon Allfrey Architects Ltd Design a Light and Open Contemporary Interior in New Zealand

Bradnor Road by Cymon Allfrey Architects Ltd (9)

Bradnor Road is a residential project completed by Cymon Allfrey Architects Ltd in 2015. It is located in Fendalton, Christchurch, New Zealand. Bradnor Road by Cymon Allfrey Architects Ltd: “This home sits on a tree lined cul-de-sac in Fendalton, Christchurch; adjacent to the Wairarapa Stream. It was designed to replace a home lost in the 2010/2011 earthquake sequence. Our brief was to create a contemporary environment that was light and..

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💙 Golden Eagle on 500px by Sami Matar, USA☀ NIKON……

💙 Golden Eagle on 500px by Sami Matar, USA☀  NIKON… http://ift.tt/1UpwjVQ

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One Powerful Phrase To Use When You Feel Life Crumbling Down Around You

How wonderful it is when life is going smoothly, everyone is happy, work is good and everything seems to be going right. Our bills are paid on time, our relationships are amazing, our health is great. Life is almost perfect. Wouldn’t it be nice if this was our life every day, all the time? We know, however, that in reality, only part of this, if any at all, is true. Sometimes, it just seems like our life is crumbling down around us and there is absolutely nothing we can do to stop or prevent it.

There never really is a good time for bad things to happen ironically though we find ourselves saying this couldn’t have happened at a worse time. Is there a right time for bad stuff to happen? Doesn’t it seem like when one bad thing happens it’s almost like the domino effect? It’s suddenly one thing after another. Just when you think you can’t take another bad event, something else happens. A job loss, a death, a friend leaves her partner and needs a place to stay, your kid is in jail for who knows what. It never ends.

life_crumblingSo what do you do? Who do you call? How on earth are you supposed to handle all this? All you really want to do is scream and cry and run away forever. Screaming and crying is totally acceptable and highly encouraged. The running away part, not so much. It does seem like your world is collapsing around you and it very well could be but…

There is one key phrase. One very powerful phrase that, if you keep repeating it to yourself, not only will you eventually believe it, but it will make you become slightly more optimistic, more in control, a tad more powerful yourself and you will definitely have hope for tomorrow.

So many times when things are going bad the first thing we say to ourselves is why is this happening to me? or how much more of this am I supposed to take? or maybe this sounds like you I can’t take much more! The very last thing that pops in our head is to be positive or optimistic. We are in a state of despair and talking about rainbows and unicorns do not enter our thoughts, at all.

But they should. Once the shock of whatever has happened worn off, it’s time to kick into resolution mode. We don’t always see or have the answers, but with the right attitude and the right key phrase, answers will come quicker. So what is the powerful key phrase that is going to help us keep our wits about us when it feels like our world is crumbling down around us? What is the one thing that we should be telling ourselves over and over again in times of trouble?

I’m going to be ok.

Sounds like malarkey. Bullshit even. But really, you are going to be ok. You have survived so much already up to this point. Your success rate is 100%. You’re here, still kicking and still at it. You will definitely be ok. It may not seem like it today or tomorrow. Maybe not even in a week or a month, but by this time next year, you will see, it will all just be a distant memory, perhaps a sad one, but still nothing more than a memory. It will all be over and your life will be pretty good.

The trick to this key phrase working is repetition. Keep saying it over and over again. Replace why is this happening to me? with I’m going to be ok or everything will be ok or something positive to that effect. Use whatever positive phrase works best for you just pick one and say it. Again and again. I am going to be ok. Because, really, you will.

The post One Powerful Phrase To Use When You Feel Life Crumbling Down Around You appeared first on Change your thoughts.

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Abandoned Train by Milton Gray Abandoned train somewhere…

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