Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Pierre Schlumberger was born in 1914, the son of Marcel Schlumberger, a mechanical engineer, and his wife Jeanne Laurans. [1] Marcel co-founded Schlumberger in the 1920s with his brother, Conrad, a physicist. [1] Pierre was the brothers' only male heir.
Pierre Barbe (28 March 1900 – 26 April 2004) was a French architect. Barbe became the "house architect" for the Schlumberger family. He designed Pierre Schlumberger's house on Lazy Lane in Houston, Texas. For Pierre and his first wife Claire he restored a holiday house on the Normandy coast, and designed a new house at Tourettes-sur-Loup on ...
Schlumberger brothers. Conrad Schlumberger (2 October 1878 in Gebweiler (Alsace-Lorraine) – 9 May 1936 in Stockholm) and Emile Henry Marcel Schlumberger (21 June 1884 in Gebweiler – 9 May 1953 in Val-Richer) were brothers from the region of Alsace-Lorraine, France, then a part of the German Empire. Their inventions in the area of geophysics ...
Pierre Schlumberger. . . (m. 1961; died 1986) . Children. 2. Maria " São " Schlumberger (née Maria da Conceição Diniz; 15 October 1929 – 15 August 2007), was a Portuguese-born American fashion and art patron and collector, and the second wife of Pierre Schlumberger.
When Breyana Elwell and her husband put a fan on their porch to ward off mosquitoes in the heat of New Braunfels, Texas, they had no idea it would become a wildlife magnet.
Interior designer. Known for. "World's most expensive decorator". Spouse. Aileen Guinness (1956–1965) Partner. Jean-Francois Daigre. Valerian Stux Rybar (or Stux-Rybar; 17 June 1919 – 9 June 1990) was an American interior designer, called the "world's most expensive decorator" in 1972, and known for his opulent and extravagant taste.
Updated July 14, 2016 at 6:51 PM. Though The New York Times got the first look inside New York City 's unbelievably opulent Pierre Hotel penthouse (pictured above), the $125 million listing ...
On December 1, the celebrated (and oft-imitated) interior designer opens his first-ever U.S. showroom for his furniture brand, Pierre Yovanovitch Mobilier, in New York’s Chelsea neighborhood.