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Suzanne Couture Modelmaking

Location
227 West 29th Street
Neighborhoods
Suzanne Couture Modelmaking 1 Artist Studios Chelsea

With her hair pulled up underneath a paint-stained bandana printed in old cartoons, Suzanne welcomed us into her 29th Street studio. While talking a mile a minute on her headset, she helped two assistants as the three of them finished up a project that needed to be installed the next day. "Make yourself at home!" she chimed. "We've been up for three days straight, and all we need now are the lights."

"If you can imagine it, Suzanne can build it." From giant cupcakes to life-sized cows to the airplane that Suzanne is currently constructing, there is nothing that she cannot and will not attempt to create for a customer. She has been in the business of model making since the 1980s, producing incredible replicas for magazines, television, ad agencies, food companies, and on and on. Whatever a client's vision, Suzanne and her team seem to be able to build it three dimensionally.

Her studio is an artist's paradise: Completely comfortable in the haphazard placement of all things artistic, she moved through the space with ease as she worked on her current project for Van Cleef & Arpels.

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Suzanne Couture Modelmaking 1 Artist Studios Chelsea
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Suzanne Couture Modelmaking 9 Artist Studios Chelsea

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American Bartender's School

Approaching almost fifty years, the American Bartender's School, owned by Joseph Bruno, has been teaching mixologists the ‘ology of mixing. Having moved in the ‘80s from their original location on Madison Avenue, the school offers forty-hour courses, with students leaving as certified bartenders with a license issued by the New York State Board of Education. Joseph contends that a bartender’s success is determined by conversation, “no matter how good the drink is. ” That being said, technical skill is far from lacking at this institution. Combining lectures and a “lab” portion, we witnessed students attentively toiling over drinks for phantom customers in a room designed to look like one giant bar. The difference, however, is that unlike a culinary school where one might sample their own creations, students do not imbibe here. In fact, there is no alcohol to be found at this bar. Everything is in the correct bottles and the colors all match their potent potable equivalent. What was explained to us is that everything is about measurements. Students are given a recipe to follow, and provided they do it correctly, they can rest assured that it will taste exactly right in the real world. After decades of experience bartending in and managing drinking establishments, Joseph has seen a new devotion to the craft of mixology. Up-and-coming bartenders have tested innovative flavors, homemade syrups, and the “farm-to-table” use of fresh ingredients. He has taken particular pleasure in the resurgence of drinks not popular since the Prohibition era. Perhaps it is a sign that we still have a chance to relive some of the best aspects of the Roaring Twenties.