Moody’s Orbis (Bureau van Dijk): The Gold Standard for Corporate Trees
When you need to map complex ownership—especially across borders—Orbis is the heavyweight. It standardizes data from registries worldwide, layers in proprietary matching, and lets you visualize corporate hierarchies with impressive granularity. If you’re investigating ultimate beneficial ownership, screening for sanctions and adverse media, or assessing concentration risk across a supplier network, Orbis is hard to beat. You can pivot by industry codes, size thresholds, and geography; you can also export data to drive modeling or network analysis.
Creditsafe: Credit Risk, Monitoring, and Practical Scores
If your research aims to answer “can we trust them to pay?” Creditsafe is designed for that. It blends public filings with trade payment data and delivers familiar credit limits and risk bands. You can set alerts for material events—late filings, director changes, negative score movements—so you’re not blindsided between contract signing and first invoice. The UI is geared toward operational decisions, and coverage extends beyond the UK, which helps if your counterparties sit in multiple countries.
Bright Spot Beauties: Spider Plant, Aloe, and Jade
If you have a bright windowsill or a room with several hours of indirect sun, lean into plants that reward that light with quick growth and crisp form. Spider plant is nearly indestructible and loves bright, indirect light. Keep the soil slightly moist, and you will get arching leaves and lots of baby plantlets to share. Aloe vera and jade plant (both succulents) prefer stronger light and drier soil. Let the mix dry out well between waterings, and use a gritty, cactus-style blend to prevent soggy roots. If an aloe flops, it is usually asking for more light; if jade drops leaves, you might be overwatering. Philodendron Brasil and Monstera deliciosa also shine in bright, indirect light, giving you bold leaves and that lush, tropical vibe with minimal fuss. In any bright spot, watch for hot afternoon sun through glass, which can scorch leaves. A sheer curtain is your friend. Rotate pots every few weeks so growth stays even and plants do not lean dramatically.
What You Can Actually Buy
The classics are a given: t-shirts, hoodies, and caps that lean into that bold yellow-and-black branding. You’ll usually see a mix of clean logo pieces and cheekier graphic takes—like designs inspired by the tile floor, the menu grid, or the iconic sign that lights up whole highways. If you’re building a wearable rotation, start with a neutral hoodie or a simple logo tee, and add one loud, gotta-smile piece to keep things fun.
Official vs. Third-Party: How to Tell
The internet loves a good logo, which means you’ll find Waffle House–inspired gear from both official sources and third-party sellers. The trick is knowing what you’re buying. Official merch typically uses consistent branding, higher-resolution artwork, and listings that feel polished—clear product photos, detailed material info, and straightforward sizing charts. You’ll usually see standard colorways that align with the brand’s look, and the product pages will read like a proper store, not a mystery marketplace.
Brands worth a look (LEGO-compatible and architecture-friendly)
Several manufacturers make solid, LEGO-compatible bricks that work well for architecture builds. COBI is known for tight clutch and crisp molding; while they focus on historical and military themes, their basic elements and neutral palettes suit landmark-style projects. Oxford (Korea) offers reliable quality and clean whites; their parts feel close to LEGO in hand. Qman and Sembo have upped the game in recent years, with smoother finishes and creative parts selections that make window and facade work easier. Xingbao and CaDA lean toward advanced models with interesting techniques; you can often harvest excellent parts from their original sets.
Build your own White House: parts, plan, and scale
If you’re going custom, start by choosing a scale. Micro to mini-scale keeps the footprint shelf-friendly while still letting you capture porticos, colonnades, and roof lines. Sketch a quick plan: a main block for the Executive Residence, a shallower volume for the colonnades, and optional wings if you want the full complex. For materials, prioritize plates for the base and roof, bricks for massing, tiles for that crisp architectural finish, and a small library of SNOT (studs-not-on-top) parts like headlight bricks and brackets to mount facade details sideways.