Sunday, 28 February 2010
The Generic Man: Tokyo Glow
Thursday, 25 February 2010
Josh, Forever Number One - Hot Damn, What a Man 4.0
For some people, beauty will never fade with age: This applies to you Mr. Josh Hartnett.
You made it onto the list once again. Picture from Terry Richardson's bloggy.
Johnny Ploygon - The Riot Song
There's nothing better than a sick song accompanied by a video equally as sick. I absolutely love LOVE love Johnny Poloygon's video for 'The Riot Song'! This track is off his mixtape with DJ Green Latern and Karmaloop, Rebel without Applause (Click and download yo!). Watch, jam and enjoy:
Oh, and the Kid Cudi remix is pretty awesome too:
Tuesday, 23 February 2010
Yo, You Googled it! 1.1
I am absolutely astounded that someone googled this and landed on our blog:
"Butt Fucked"
WHAT THE HELL?! This is according to Google Analytics. I am so baffed as to why some anal loving beast landed on Leopard Print and Lace via Google. This was number 49 on the list too:
"Bouncing Boobs Catwalk"
Ahahahahhahah!! That's another funny one!
Nike "Human Chain: How Quick Are You Going To Get Up?"
Forgive me if I'm a bit late with this, I know this was released to coincide with the Vancouver Winter Olympics 2010 on the 12th February, but greatness needs to be shared and shared again. I absolutely love love love this commercial. Nike does it again; never failing with their advertisements. I recently saw a short video which summed up 2009 for Nike Sportswear at a training session which was pretty awesome, I need to find the video! I was also really impressed with Nike's commercial for the (fairly) new "True City" app for the almighty iPhone, and now this. Featuring a bunch of Nike ambassadors - sponsored athletes - from Lance Armstrong, Deron Williams to Maria Sharapova and a cute little 6 year old Chinese girl (yes, I am biased and what?) doing martial arts, they all connect in a chain of motion through what they do best: be it basketball, tennis, cycling or BMX-ing. From the sweet Chinese kid fly kicking and back flipping with a STICK (gwan there girl!) to Mike Skinner on his BMX riding, jumping then shots of his BMX spin's switching towards shots of a Rodeo spinning around on his bull. Smooth-ass transitions right there. The beginning of the video is epic, absolutly captivating for the opening scene. And the song; such a good choice. "Its not how you start, it's how you finish." - what a great message.
I now have this song on repeat, The Hours: Ali in The Jungle:
It actually stopped me listening to this Chicana Rap music (which I discovered on The Boobs) by Sleepy Loka! What a difference in types of music, so random. I was beginning to feel a bit too gangster for my own good, jeez:
Andddd I'm thinking to use "Next Level" as part of my everyday vocabulary because of the cool cats that be Die Antwoord in Zef Side "He owns a computer and he makes some next level beats" AHAHHA :
1.58 seconds...YESSSSS, the slowdown is so sick...
I think I spend too much time on Youtube. Yes, that's right I even linked Youtube, just in case.
Monday, 22 February 2010
Photobooth Is Still Fun If You Are Not A Mac Convert
I am sure looking at pictures of our random mugs on a Sunday night is not the most exciting thing to do, but it is something to do if you know...you're not doing anything exciting at this moment. ;-D.
I do love the Photobooth app on the Mac, I think I love using it more because I don't own a Mac. Team PC fo' life. It is a hella lot of fun though. But, let's be honest here, we all love Photobooth because we love to look at pictures of ourseleves, and of oursleves perfecting a pose. Oh, and the simplicity of taking a million and one pictures until we find a goodie is pretty helpful in the process too. Vanity is a bitch.
Photobooth, at the very least, keeps my friends and I busy for the the best part of 20 minutes.
I am here with Sarah, Laura, and Melbournese Kayta. Stalk them on twitter Sarah_Young , Loraliscious, and KaytaHackman. And then tell Stephie-Pie and I (SuperNoodleRach) what's good via Twitter (find us, follow us)
Jam to this, just let it sooth your soul - "Honey Dove" by Lee Fields:
Then chill to this, "What Your Want" by Lupe Fiasco:
And to complete your night, Sleep to this, relax to this, "Beautiful Crazy" by Space Riders:
Saturday, 20 February 2010
Friday, 19 February 2010
An Interview With Alex Box
Today I was thinking about this interview I did last year with Make up artist Alex Box, and I wondered why I hadn't put it up yet. So I am!
Alex, who is the designer behind the Illamasqua make up brand, is actually one of the most interesting and coolest women I have ever ever met. She's also an incredible interview subject because everything she talks about is so detailed, and there was hardly anything I wanted to cut from the transcript. It was actually very hard to fit it into my 2,500 word limit. Alex has worked with people from the legendary Karl Lagerfeld (who she says is nothing like his rep) to Gareth Pugh, and is really quite an inspirational character.
Initially I wrote the interview into a profile (and a very good profile it was too) for my university paper, but I destroyed my laptop a little while ago and I only did so much backing up... so the transcript of our conversation is all I have left... sob. I know it's very text heavy but I've tried to break it through with photos of Alex's work (a lot of photos), plus her description of Karl Lagerfeld is worth sifting through the text!
So, you studied at Chelsea College of Art, what was your time there like?
Amazing, actually. It was…incredibly emotional. Because you go through the whole thing of leaving home, and then you go through embracing a new city, and discipline and Chelsea was very… it wasn’t like Goldsmiths, in the sense that they were much more savvy about making an earning out of art, whereas Chelsea still had a bit of that 60s hippy-ness, so it was very much about it coming from the heart - really embracing being an artist as a lifelong thing, and less about making money.
I really found that the whole time I was there I really explored who I was and what I was capable of, and also I started there painting and kind of left as an installation artist…I absorbed all the sectors and developed and I was really into the sculpture department, that was amazing.
I really found that the whole time I was there I really explored who I was and what I was capable of, and also I started there painting and kind of left as an installation artist…I absorbed all the sectors and developed and I was really into the sculpture department, that was amazing.
And was what your most memorable experience there?
Now and again, very rarely, they would pick three students to do a show downstairs, and I was picked. It was my first real taste of being in the spotlight for what I do... and I think that I...got…the bug! [Laughs] Got the bug for being…centre stage, definitely.
How do you feel that the Fine Art course helped with your make up?
Massively. If anything it was a complete straight line from one to what I do because it's - I mean it sounds a bit goush - but it’s just like painting on a different canvas, you know, it’s a face. If anything, I'm much more of a painter now then when I was then! Because I think you get sucked into styles a little bit and you’re aware of peers, and colleges have their own styles, but now that I'm here it’s much more like excessive painting, like abstract painting. You just pick up colours and you go with it, and you might have a form but it changes shape and it finishes where it finishes. It’s so much like painting. You go into quite a meditative state. It comes from somewhere else.
And yours is especially artistic; it’s so intricate.
Yeah, yeah it is. And the fact that it’s moving too [unlike a painting]. I mean, I love fashion shows for that, because you can do something, and it’ll walking past someone. I make masks. I’ve used lots of techniques I've learnt in my artwork and sculpture defininitly.
Did you always want to be a make up artist?
Not at all, no. It was very very natural progression, almost seamless without me even noticing. I after college I went to work for a make up brand because I needed to earn money to pay for my art work. And I was very elaborate in my own make up. I loved make up myself, and my friend who used to work in the body shop said, 'You do your make up so well, why don’t you come and work for us?', and so I did. And I thought ‘what’s the difference between this paint and paint paint?’ Cause I used to really, go into the hair…and down the back. It took me a long time before I even thought ‘yeah I'm a make up artist’. Cause I never trained in it, and it’s not really meant to happen that way. But I got more popular, and I started getting more jobs and I thought, well that’s what I do.
So, how did the whole range come about?
Well, a chap called Julian Kiniston who is head of an advertising company called Propaganda, based in Leeds saw a picture of one of my looks - a really intricate, black, body with really frantic stuff going on. And his wife said they were looking to make a make up range and they had no idea who to head it… and all they had was a motive, artistic, quite dark, gothic, burlesque make up range. And they saw that [picture] and they said, can it be you that does it, are you interested, and I totally was cause I'd been thinking about [how] there’s such a gap in the market. It was great that it both came together. Becasue I’d been thinking about it, but how on earth could you, do it, fund it, you know.
Illamasqua is very gothic and dramatic, and you said burlesque, that’s a great word to describe it. So where did the inspiration come from, is it your own personal style or was it something else?
Theirs and mine are both very similar, they’re aesthetic, he’s an old Goth and they'd done lots of research into subcultures like piercing and they felt that anything on that slant was not catered for. I mean there’s MAC, but they really didn’t feel that there was a make up range that was emotional led, brand led. It’s product led, so they know juicy tubes and touché éclat but nobody really says you know, 'Chanel really says something to me'. Without boring you with the marketing details, it's like, people like Nokia or they always buy a brand of coffee or whatever, but they don’t have 20 different coffees, from different brands, people stick to that because they like the brand. But with make up, women have an average of 13 different brands. There’s no one brand that we’re attached to.
Loyal to?
Yeah, exactly. It’s very interesting, so basically they had the concept and then got me, instead of the other way around.
I know you’ve done some catwalk shows. Which was your favourite?
Definitely Gareth [Pugh]’s. I mean, the last one was amazing. My most favourite Gareth Pugh one though was... about 4 years ago, it was no make up at all, I just did all sculptures on masks, and that really brought me back to art school. It was so completely about making sculptures and people wearing them, it was all made from whatever I wanted to do. And I loved that…so much. It was so great. It made me think of so many possibilities opened a lot of doors in my head that I’d kind of closed.
I also saw that you worked with Karl Lagerfeld. He’s got a reputation as a... big character. What is he like?
He’s amazing. He’s incredible. He’s a true original. I worked with Karl a lot; I still do work with Karl a lot. He’s such an incredibly imposing figure in fashion and in the world, and he’s quite an enigma because he never really says much about himself and with the glasses and everything, but he’s actually incredibly vivacious, kind, interesting man who’s just buzzing. He’s so young in his mind. He’s got a trunk full of iPods with everything on them, he’s got this underground bunker full of every CD you can imagine, he constantly updates it with everything new in art, and everything new in fashion. He’s just a real pioneer you know, and he really feeds his mind with everything that’s new and he's just a very inspirational, infectious character to be around. He loves dressing up, and black and white, and you know he always has the suit, the glasses.
Was he easy to work with?
Totally. One of the easiest people ever. He’s a complete contradiction because he definitely has developed a character to just get by with I suppose, because he’s actually not... you think he’d be a premaddonna but hes not. He’s actually very pleasant. Really takes care of you as well, has his chef feeding you the whole time and yeah he’s lovely. He’s so fun. And I think he’s obviously in the latter stage of his life and career and still absolutely brilliant and vivacious, but age doesn’t matter that much. Because some people are tyrannical whereas he’s like 'come on, we’ve got to go home', that kind of thing. He never takes his glasses off, even to take pictures, he kind of lowers them a bit, but behind them are the kindest eyes you’ve ever seen. So I think that’s why he wears them cause he just looks [too nice otherwise]. And people are really scared of him definitely. But him himself, he’s just so touchy feely and he’s lovely.
Whose make up, dead or alive, would you love to do?
That’s a good question…hmm. I think... I'd like to do Joan Crawford. Cause I know she mental, I’ve read so much about her, I love the routine she had. I mean those old stars weren’t natural beauties, and it was really about make up. And they worked so closely with their make up artists and had their make up artists for life. And they’d design all these weird techniques and things, and I love that period of time when it was really all about - there wasn’t so much surgery - so it was all about creating something out of the bare minimum... and they had all these weird tricks. A really old Hollywood movie star.
Are you really into old Hollywood then? You’ve got the red lips, the black eyeliner, the eyebrows…
Totally, yeah [laughs]. Absolutely. And Jane Crawford and Leigh Bowry I’d really like to do as well.
I suppose that time was the most artistic phase make up went through, because it was actually painting on lips, they had to really work hard to create beauty when there wasn’t any.
It’s weird because there was surgery, people don’t realise, but not like now. It's not that 25 year old have surgery, then you’d have tapes and lifts and your wigs and camera angles and all that. They used to make things out of wax and putty and put them down the sides of their nose, it was amazing. It was a real art form.
Is there any advice you’d give to any students that want to break into the industry, how to succeed?
Um... just to... it sounds silly really... but just to don’t dream it, be it. I think that, if you do that thing of faking it to make it, you have to just put yourself in that situation and if you - no matter what people say to you - if you’ve got a vision keep knocking on that door. You know, because it's ever so easy to just go under coz its really difficult, but just keep thinking it's gonna happen because it has to. If it doesn’t what else are you gonna do? In the sense of, you’re an artist and it has to happen, you have to believe in yourself 100%. And be really tenacious and actually very brave with your beliefs in that way. It’s so incredibly easy to get knocked down, I’ve felt like that. When I used to make 20 phone calls to the same people. I used to have a list of names and I just rang them pretty much every day and even when it felt like I wasn’t doing anything, I had that to do. You have to be really disciplined.
You can’t just think you’ll fall into it.
If it does, there’s something wrong! If you do get things like that, you won’t appreciate it and you won’t work with it and it will go again. That’s the thing, it comes as it should. And I realise that know after 11 years of it, that everything has come when it should have done. If this had happened when I was 22 I probably wouldn’t have been able to cope with the pressure of it. The thing is now I think people are so much more media savvy and there is that ‘I want fame now, I want it to happen now, I deserve the best’ and you do, but you also have to work really hard because its such a microclimate in college because you have the college stars and you do well and you rise to the top think that’s how it is. And then when you come out, you have to start all over again.
Coming back to college - since our university is so well known and there are so many successful people to come out of it, do you think that going to Chelsea has helped you more then if you’d gone somewhere else?
Definitely. Especially where Chelsea was - on the Kings Road, just walking down the Kings Road, being around the centre of London, And also being in such a fashionable place, whether I liked the fashion or not, was very important, and also the teachers or lecturers there were very much about getting the active artists there who had just left college. I used to have Jason Denous be my tutor, I met Brian Eno, all these people, really fundamentally incredibly inspirational people.
I think Chelsea and Saint Martins have really got that thing where they’ve still got that glamour to them, and I think when you know that your college is doing well and it's revered it makes you proud to be there. And it’s so hard to get into. And so if you got into them you felt proud. Especially me, coming from a small town (Grimsby) we were really pushed to go to London, you know like, 'If you're gonna go for it, go for it, don’t be all [makes face...] "nahhhh". Just do it.' I was nervous and I was thinking ooh Loughborough, maybe Birmingham…and then my friend said to me, if you are gonna move away, just go for it cause you'll really resent not. Then when me and the other person I went with got into Chelsea I felt like I’d really achieved something. And also that... you just felt glamourous. It was a glamorous college, people looked good, they worked hard, and you felt it had a lot of history behind it.
I think Chelsea and Saint Martins have really got that thing where they’ve still got that glamour to them, and I think when you know that your college is doing well and it's revered it makes you proud to be there. And it’s so hard to get into. And so if you got into them you felt proud. Especially me, coming from a small town (Grimsby) we were really pushed to go to London, you know like, 'If you're gonna go for it, go for it, don’t be all [makes face...] "nahhhh". Just do it.' I was nervous and I was thinking ooh Loughborough, maybe Birmingham…and then my friend said to me, if you are gonna move away, just go for it cause you'll really resent not. Then when me and the other person I went with got into Chelsea I felt like I’d really achieved something. And also that... you just felt glamourous. It was a glamorous college, people looked good, they worked hard, and you felt it had a lot of history behind it.
Are you still proud of it now?
Yeah, totally. Because also a lot of people who went to Chelsea were sort of poser girls who were just wasting a couple of years (and you saw that straight away) but then you also saw the people that really wanted to be there and they've gone onto do things. And that’s the same as life, you know the people who are going to do things are appreciating their surroundings and take that and use it to do something for good, whereas people that haven’t…don’t. Or take it for granted. I met some great people there. I met great people through all the colleges.
So you came down from Grimsby and you live in London now. What do you like best about London?
Oh god, everything. It’s really funny; I was thinking the other day, other then New York I really couldn’t see myself living anywhere else because it’s just a massive place but so small at the same time. I can sit in a coffee shop in the centre of town and see more people then I ever would back home and its kind of it feels so much like home, and its always moving, and its so vivacious, and its so charismatic. I think also because the water runs through the middle, it feels like its being renewed all the time. I travel a lot, I go away to Paris a lot, which is absolutely stunning. And I come back to London and London always feels so young, and I know it’s a cliché but it does, it rejuvenates itself. And the fashion here’s amazing. We really don’t realise it until you go away anywhere else, and you come back everybody, every kid, looks cool. They've got some look going, you know? It’s just not like that anywhere else. It really isn’t. And its different everywhere, like London is made of little villages. All stuck together. It’s really defined by that, it’s incredible. Especially now more so with everyone having some sort of adornment, you know plugs and stretching, hair colour. I absolutely love it.
And there’s no better place to be really, if you’re an artist.
London is just very much full of the people who were attractive or courageous and really wanted to leave the tows so London’s full of a nice pick of small towns. People took what they had here. My town's full of old friends and it's lovely, but it was also narrow-minded, quite prejudiced and not inspirational. Where else are you gonna go, if not London, if you’re drawn by shiny things?!
Do you go back to Grimsby a lot?
Not really, I go about twice a year. My family and my friends still live there.
I suppose it helps you stay down to earth though, grounded.
Yeah I love it, because there so extremely not like the people that I know here, or work with, who I don’t associate with [all the time] I mean I’m not hanging out with Karl Lagerfeld at night! But it’s lovely that, between that complete dichotomy of ‘shut up, you’re up yourself’, to ‘ahh Karl Lagerfeld!’
Back to the make up, obviously you had a lot of input into how it looks, the shades and everything, but how did that work?
I went back to colour wheels and Panton books actually. I initially made swatches of anything from newspapers to bits of material, of colours that I like, and wanted, and as a make up artist know that I need. Existing colours I had, but maybe wanted a bit more of this, or that, and then I had to make Panton references and I matched them as close as I could and then I went to the place in Berlin where they make them and then we just changed them until it was right. In general we’ve got about 125 eye shadows.
I had to narrow it down from 200, which was insane because nobody even owns 125 eyeshadows, let alone 200. I’m so in love with colour. So when they said you can have colour, I was like [makes excited face]. But we’ve got the most amazing blue lip gloss and luminous green lip-gloss and dark weird matte nail varnish. We’ve made it so the pencils can be used anywhere on the face, I wanted it as much like an artists palette as possible. So the pencils are eyes, lips, freckles, eyebrows, and you can use them anywhere, you can use the lip gloss on your eyes. We wanted to explode those boundaries where people said 'this has to go here', and say 'well no, this can be used anywhere.'
And for my last question… what three things would you take on a desert island?
I have thought about this actually. I would take…my boyfriend. I would take…you can’t take a limitless music catalogue can you?
Yeah you could, an iPod that had infinite memory.
Yeah, and that had a satellite link up that was constantly recharging and updating and had the biggest back catalogue in the world. And I would take a boat in case I wanted to get off the island! Well, then you can always go and come back.
Wednesday, 17 February 2010
Brit Award Recovery/Things I Have Cooked Recently
OMG today I had to cover last nights Brits (find my stuff here if you so wish) and I feel like I need a straight drink now. Cropping pictures of Lady Gaga dressed as a wedding cake has driven me slightly manic. I'd write about it more but I just can't take it.
Instead of having a drink I'll calm myself down with food.
Steak Pie
This is what the filling looks like after 2 hours on the stove and a small bottle of wine.
It's not the neatest thing I've ever made, but I'm going to say its rustic.
Apple Pie... a bit neater but maybe needed to make stiffer pastry.
Damn you Gaga.
Steak Pie
This is what the filling looks like after 2 hours on the stove and a small bottle of wine.
It's not the neatest thing I've ever made, but I'm going to say its rustic.
Apple Pie... a bit neater but maybe needed to make stiffer pastry.
Shortbread....
Obviously I didn't make Fluff...
BUT I did make rice krispie squares using it, and they tun out all marshmallow-y and delicious. Just melt chocolate, butter and the fluff in a pan, and then add the rice krispies and put in the fridge. SO easy, Totally do it.
Lemon Tart...
Which I ate with Marscapone - YUM. And finally.... meringues:
Which I made with the leftover egg whites from my Lemon Tart and ate with whipped cream whilst watching Glee (which is AMAZING WATCHITWATCHIT).
In answer to your wonderings: Yes, I am now the size of a house.
Tuesday, 16 February 2010
Red for Luck, Red for Love
Happy Chinese New Year guys! Hope you all had a good one. If you are out and about in London on Sunday (21st), be sure to hit up Chinatown to watch the dragons dance, eat (overpriced) street food and maybe bump into a relative or two so you can receive your lucky red envelopes (...with money inside durr...)
If that isn't enough to lure you in, maybe you will bump into me looking out for my relatives ;-) and eating the overpriced satay chicken, fishballs with chilli sauce and some bland chow mein. The vibe will be unreal, because you know how the Chinese do it! They will impress, and impress you more, like we do every year.
Wear red to keep within traditions because it is lucky :-). I wore red on 14th specifically for the first day of CNY, but it just so happened that the date coincided with Valentines Day. People must have thought I was THAT sad, corny and cheesy to wear red for the day of love. *PUKE*. This is one of the only red tops I actually like and own, so I guess I will have to recycle this outfit come Sunday 21st. Oh, and its not clear in the photograph, but check out my watch ring! Its like a mini Casio. Love Love! Time keeping is a must.
*Following in the footsteps of Stephie, I have opted for right alignment of the picture over my usual center, center, center. Breaking a habit.
If that isn't enough to lure you in, maybe you will bump into me looking out for my relatives ;-) and eating the overpriced satay chicken, fishballs with chilli sauce and some bland chow mein. The vibe will be unreal, because you know how the Chinese do it! They will impress, and impress you more, like we do every year.
Wear red to keep within traditions because it is lucky :-). I wore red on 14th specifically for the first day of CNY, but it just so happened that the date coincided with Valentines Day. People must have thought I was THAT sad, corny and cheesy to wear red for the day of love. *PUKE*. This is one of the only red tops I actually like and own, so I guess I will have to recycle this outfit come Sunday 21st. Oh, and its not clear in the photograph, but check out my watch ring! Its like a mini Casio. Love Love! Time keeping is a must.
*Following in the footsteps of Stephie, I have opted for right alignment of the picture over my usual center, center, center. Breaking a habit.
Monday, 15 February 2010
A New Job and a Shameless Plug
So as of this week I start as Blog Editor of OSOYOU.com. Woo!
This morning when I was looking for stories to post I discovered some things.
Peaches Geldof (who I seem to mention a lot on here... what is up with that) is trying to start 'Cray-Cray'. As in 'crazy'. As in, 'Peaches Geldof is Cray-Cray'.
Also, Paris Hilton doesn't have a friend who will say 'Dude, your dress is totally see-through, maybe don't wear it with a thong on stage in front of a lot of people and cameras'. And also, 'Paris, you're a bit drunk, let's get you off that stage and into bed.'
And apparently Kate Middleton is stealing my dream of opening a cool bakery. Except mine will be in Covent Garden or Manhatten. To be honest though, if she becomes queen she wins hands down no matter where her shop is. Even if it's in Hackney.
This morning when I was looking for stories to post I discovered some things.
Peaches Geldof (who I seem to mention a lot on here... what is up with that) is trying to start 'Cray-Cray'. As in 'crazy'. As in, 'Peaches Geldof is Cray-Cray'.
Also, Paris Hilton doesn't have a friend who will say 'Dude, your dress is totally see-through, maybe don't wear it with a thong on stage in front of a lot of people and cameras'. And also, 'Paris, you're a bit drunk, let's get you off that stage and into bed.'
And apparently Kate Middleton is stealing my dream of opening a cool bakery. Except mine will be in Covent Garden or Manhatten. To be honest though, if she becomes queen she wins hands down no matter where her shop is. Even if it's in Hackney.
Sunday, 14 February 2010
Love
I posted this image before back in September, but it just seems appropriate to re-post for this day of lluuurrrvvvveee. Not a huge fan of Valentine's Day to be honest, it is overly corny for my liking especially if the activities of the day mean going to a restaurant with other loved up couples. Overkill.
This time last year I wrote about the release and the struggle I went through to get the Nike x Liberty dunks. Wow, I really wrote a lot for that post. Click the link above to have a flick through. They were my Valentine's Day present to myself! Ha. It is a big shame the two brands didn't come together again for this Valentines!
Anyway, to all you singletons who say "F Love", go on with your bad self. And for all you Lovers out there, do your thang. Happy Valentines day guys, and Happy Chinese New Year :-).
Insa: Valantine's Gift to Deptford
You all know I have a soft spot for tacky stuff, especially with fake double C's. If I could afford the real deal, I would be all over it, but I can't at this moment in time. Maybe in 5-10 years. Maybe if my mother is feeling particularly generous. Or rich. Maybe if I win the lottery. Maybe if someone sent me some Chanel goodies. None of this is likely to happen anytime soon, so I am happy to stick with my Chanel "inspired", big fake double interlocked C prints on oversized tees and admire the hot-tacky vintage "Chanel" earrings my sister picked up at some jewellery store in NYC. It only makes me that much closer, not far now guys, not far.
Graffiti artist Insa (y'all remember those bad ass heels that were featured on almost every blog right?) has just completed a 38tonne piece named "Heartfelt" on a train in the middle of Deptford. LOOKS FUCKING SICK! Prints of THE DOUBLE C'S, GUCCI G's and LV's on upside down hearts (aka juicy bumbums), all over a train carriage! Hot damn, I love it. From Insa, with love:
Check out Insa's blog and follow him on Twitter. Whilst you are at it follow me (Super Noodle Rach) and Stephie (Stephie Pie). Just a suggestion, you may as well seen as you are logged in anyway...
Alicia Keys Feat Beyonce - Put it in a Love Song
I feel like such a pervert after viewing these candids recently posted on Idolator from the shoot of Alicia Keys's new single, 'Put it in a Love song' featuring Beyonce. I feel more like a pervert because Beyonce's body looks banging and I can't help but stare! Jeez. Jeez. Jeez. Hardbodied! Ms. Key doesn't look half bad either. Filmed in Rio de Janeiro, these two diva's work, work, work it in their their tribal/carnival inspired gear.
Not overly keen on the song, but I'm still excited to see the video...well, any video with Beyonce featured really.
Saturday, 13 February 2010
McQueen: The King of British Fashion
I know I'm a few days late but I didn't think I could neglect to write about the tragic and shocking death of Alexander McQueen on Thursday. Even though I never met him, I felt ridiculously and probably unreasonably sad about the news. To choose to die, and in such a horrible way, really pulls on peoples hearts, and the fact that he seemed to have done it because of his beloved mothers death makes it all the more sad.
The thought of one of the most current and progressive designers becoming part of the past tense of fashion history is so strange... Lady Gaga has barely taken off his Spring 2010 Armadillo shoes, and now they'll probably be the last innovation of McQueen. I can't say I was ever a massive fan of them, but you can't deny their striking uniqueness.
It's also really funny because there are a lot of dresses I've admired over the years on the red carpet, all so different that I'd completely forgotten (or possibly not even noticed) that they were all by the same designer.
He did romantic and feminine amazingly, but was also the master of the sexy, biker chic style that's been in fashion for a while now. Who could forget the skull print scarves that every celebrity and their cousin owned? This rose covered piece from his 1996 collection is one of my favourite couture gowns ever.
Also from working at The Nod I developed an obsession with looking at his tailoring on Net-a-Porter - he started out on Savile Row, and was said to be one of the best tailors in the world. Though I've never been lucky enough to get close enough to one of his gowns to even touch it, let alone try it on, people said the same applied to his dresses - the Editor in Chief of Elle said "So beautiful are his sharply cut dresses that they slip over every curve. This man understands women, you'd think, as you zipped up the sexiest of black dresses."
The world really has lost an incredible talent, but at least he will always be remembered through his designs and his legacy. After all, if we'd never had Lee McQueen, we wouldn't have low rise jeans.
The thought of one of the most current and progressive designers becoming part of the past tense of fashion history is so strange... Lady Gaga has barely taken off his Spring 2010 Armadillo shoes, and now they'll probably be the last innovation of McQueen. I can't say I was ever a massive fan of them, but you can't deny their striking uniqueness.
It's also really funny because there are a lot of dresses I've admired over the years on the red carpet, all so different that I'd completely forgotten (or possibly not even noticed) that they were all by the same designer.
He did romantic and feminine amazingly, but was also the master of the sexy, biker chic style that's been in fashion for a while now. Who could forget the skull print scarves that every celebrity and their cousin owned? This rose covered piece from his 1996 collection is one of my favourite couture gowns ever.
Also from working at The Nod I developed an obsession with looking at his tailoring on Net-a-Porter - he started out on Savile Row, and was said to be one of the best tailors in the world. Though I've never been lucky enough to get close enough to one of his gowns to even touch it, let alone try it on, people said the same applied to his dresses - the Editor in Chief of Elle said "So beautiful are his sharply cut dresses that they slip over every curve. This man understands women, you'd think, as you zipped up the sexiest of black dresses."
The world really has lost an incredible talent, but at least he will always be remembered through his designs and his legacy. After all, if we'd never had Lee McQueen, we wouldn't have low rise jeans.
Fafi x Adidas Originals SS10
Next month will see the release of yet another awesome Fafi x Adidas Originals collaboration. The apparel in this collection are very much folk and Mexican inspired, a bit different to previous collections for Adidas originals. Fafi had a lot more input and say into what went down with her SS10 goodies for Adidas, which has resulted in a more personal collection, “Unlike lasts collaborations with Adidas, I really wanted to be involved in graphic design as well as styling, all the pieces are inspired by my own closet, stuff I found in vintage stores or during my trips.”

The illustration inside this leather beauty is fucking sick. And check those big, round gold buttons...hot!!
The kicks feature her iconic sexy mamacita cartoons, as per usual; it wouldn’t be the same without them. My sister and I have been a fan of Fafi for years now! It is so nice to see so many collaborations with big brands Fafi has had over the last few years.
Fafi has also included this sick suitcase for the collection! Don’t know where or if I would ever use it, but for collection sake, and just because it is damn pretty, I want one.
Adidas Original collaborations are really bringing the goods lately; everything has pretty much impressed me! However, Jeremy Scott x Adidas will own my heart forever. Between my sister and I, we have four pieces of JS for Adidas...cannot wait to add more :-P
*Images from Fafi Blog and Nitrolicious
Friday, 12 February 2010
Jimmy Choo Sneakers: Luxury Sneakers?
These are three of the eight pairs of Luxury sneakers set to be released around May time from Jimmy Choo's pre-fall 2010 collection. A bit of a contrast alongside all the other sky-high heeled goodies in the collection! A step in the right direction? These are definitely not targeted towards the sneaker heads of the world, they will however allow for women to appreciate the comfort and look of wearing sneakers, especially those who wouldn't usually be caught dead in them! I can actually see these as the chill-out shoe for the fashion editors of the world. The idea of luxury sneakers are not my cup of tea, but who am I to criticise, each to their own eh! I think I'll stick with my Nikes. They remind of Supra's, you know those sneakers that Weezy killed?
Tuesday, 9 February 2010
I have never seen The Rachel Zoe Project...
But if it is anything like this, I am totally missing out.
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