More features:
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Parks
On first sight Lodz looks frighteningly similar to the upturned contents of a rubbish bin. Her aesthetic glories are not obvious, however, they’re certainly there to anyone daring enough to look under her skirt....
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Daniel Libeskind
Whilst most of us abandoned our architectural aspirations the moment the Lego set was mangled by the dog Daniel Libeskind has gone on to become one of the world’s most eminent architects and one of Łódź’s proudest exports....
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Fountain of Love
Standing in the shadow of the Kościuszko statue on pl. Wolnośći (right in front of Café Wiedeńska) is Łódź’s favourite fountain....
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Lodz In Your Pocket in iPaper
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Karl Dominik
Lodz, as you’ll learn rattling through this guide, is a city of the cinema, a star of the silver screen....
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Łódź: The top five likes and dislikes of city residents
During June 2011 Poland’s Gazeta Wyborcza newspaper invited 21 journalism students from City University London to visit the country’s largest cities to assess whether they were ready to host the upcoming Euro 2012 football tournament....
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Rivers of Łódź
One question you might ask in a moment of rare contemplation is where the name Łódź came from....
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Eugeniusz Bodo
One chap you’re unlikely to have heard of is Eugeniusz Bodo, the veteran of thirty films, and director of two....
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In pursuit of Jacob Bronowski
Best known as the presenter of the BBC’s genuinely groundbreaking 1973 documentary series The Ascent of Man (and the best-selling book which accompanied the series), Jacob Bronowski’s central belief was that the pursuit of knowledge, the production of art for art’s sake were what fundamentally made human beings human....
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The industrialists
‘Łódź was waking up, the first yelling factory whistle pierced the quiet of the early morning, then in all parts of the city others began to spring up ever more raucously and bawled in hoarse voices like a choir of monstrous roosters crowing their metal throats the call to work....
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Krzysztof Kieślowski
The late Polish filmmaker Krzysztof Kieślowski (1941- 1996) is known and respected the world over as a maker of great feature films....
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Wall Fresco
If you’re walking in the area of Piotrkowska 71 you probably won’t be the first person to get nailed to the floor bya zooming rickshaw....
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Marcel Szytenchelm
While much of Łódź looks like it’s ready to keel over the main drag, Piotrkowska, is something of a feast for the eyes; scrubbed, beveled and back to its best this art nouveau masterpiece is, for many, the whole reason for visiting....
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Łódź trivia
Poland’s full of ‘well I never’ facts, and there’s no better way to impress a hot date than by telling them about Europe’s largest desert (close to Katowice), or the street in Warsaw named after Winnie the Poo....
Max Factor

Max Faktor (or Faktorowicz), born in Łódź in 1877, has come to be regarded as the father of modern day cosmetics. As one of ten children he was forced to take an apprenticeship at the age of eight so as to help make ends meet. Working under the stewardship of doctors and pharmacists he soon showed a fascination with mixing various substances and as he grew older he opened his own shop in Moscow selling wigs, creams and fragrances. His cosmetics and techniques, used by Russian ballet groups, so impressed the Russian Royal family that he was appointed their official cosmetic consultant. Seeking to broaden his horizons he emigrated to the United States in 1904 where he adopted the surname Factor. He eventually settled in Los Angeles in 1908, founding the company bearing his name the following year.
Factor began creating cosmetic products for the film industry and developed a new type of greasepaint especially for use on-screen under lights. Within years his products were being used by the Hollywood stars of the day with the likes of Bette Davis and Jean Harlow regular clients at his beauty salon where Factor would create individual looks for each of them using the skills he had learned and the products he had developed. Lauded by the A-list celebs Factor’s cosmetics became known as ‘the make-up used by the make-up artists’. He died in 1938, but the business continued to grow and was passed through 2 generations until the 1970s when it left the control of the family. The brand still lives on today and is owned by the Proctor & Gamble group