Margaret Howell collaborated again with photographer Koto Bolofo to produce the images for her spring campaign. These shots were taken in Ireland and a number of them detail the specialist production of a linen weaver in County Wexford. Obvious emphasis is on the designer's use of traditional fabrics and classic styles.
Sunday, April 28, 2013
Thursday, April 25, 2013
The Izola Travel Cup
New York's Izola is a purveyor of "whimsical objects with a masculine sense of antiquity," and after you spend a few minutes browsing their online shop, you'll realize you couldn't have summed it up better. The brand's latest offering is a series of stainless steel collapsible travel cups.
Wednesday, April 24, 2013
Sherry Turkle | TED Talk: "Connected, but alone?"
Sherry Turkle, professor of psychology at MIT, focuses her research on psychoanalysis and human-technology interaction. Watch her give an amazing, sobering TED Talk in which she discusses technologies that provide "the illusion of companionship without the demands of friendship" and the ever-present new way of being, "I share therefore I am."
Stock Manufacturing Company | Denim Workshirt
Stock Manufacturing Company, based in Chicago, has some lofty goals and it aims to do things a little differently. Here's a helpful graphic:
Most notably, through its collaboration model, Stock provides a vehicle for small and emerging designers to get their products produced and into the marketplace without the exorbitant up-front costs that come with manufacturing and selling a new brand. The key element to the process is that consumers vote with their orders for the products they would like to see made. If a garment gets the requisite number of orders, it's gets produced. Stock also has its own line, which includes pieces you really want. The Denim Workshirt is one. To chip in and/or learn more, visit the Stock Manufacturing Kickstarter.Tuesday, April 23, 2013
Prada Candy L'Eau
So many reasons to love this short film that Wes Anderson and Roman Coppola made for Prada, not the least of which are Léa Seydoux and the Jules et Jim homage.
Sunday, April 7, 2013
On The Menzingers' "On the Impossible Past"
On the Impossible Past, the critically acclaimed 2012 release from punk
rockers The Menzingers, is among the very best albums of last year for its raw,
evocative, lyrical strength. It is a striking statement on the decline of the
American dream from the perspective of the youth it left behind.
That the record comes from
four musicians who, though now based in Philadelphia, are originally from
Scranton, Pennsylvania, should not come as a surprise to anyone familiar with
Northeast PA. Seventy-five years ago, the region and the city of Scranton
thrived as an epicenter of anthracite coal mining, but the industry dried up after
the Second World War with the rise of oil and natural gas. Gone was the
economic and social prosperity. Left on the languishing landscape were culm
banks, strip mines, abandoned breakers, and people hard as flint. The
Menzingers, with their storytelling prowess and flair for poetic imagery, spark
the imagination and manage to tap into the decades-old nostalgia that hangs
over that bygone corner of America like the perpetual stratus cloud cover. Furthermore,
the impressionistic songs embrace the anguish of the band’s own generation as
it grapples with inherited hopelessness.
The world of On the Impossible Past is one of diners
and drugs, cigarettes and muscle cars, recklessness and failure. It is a world
in which ennui and apathy thrive. Though it is not unique to punk rock or to Northeastern
Pennsylvania, it is as pointedly placed--and serves much the same purpose--as
Fitzgerald’s “valley of ashes” in The
Great Gatsby, a reference to the massive trash-burning dump that existed in
Queens en route to the opulence of East and West Egg on Long Island. Both
locales are the byproduct of the ever-churning engine of industrialism and
commercialism that separates the haves and the have-nots and leaves the latter
struggling to find their way among the detritus.
Opportunity seldom avails
itself for the characters in these mid-tempo songs. Consequently, they do what
they can to stave off pain and loneliness. In “On the Impossible Past,” friends
who futilely “always dreamt of having nice things” drink, drive, and ultimately
crash their “American muscle car into a ditch on Saw Mill Road.” “Casey” is a
recollection “on the long ride back to Philly” of the heyday of a romance with
a waitress “before all the parties grew bored.” It chronicles the
relationship’s evolution from cigarette-break courtship to every evening
“getting drunk before [doing] the dishes…getting high and listening to our boredom…’cause
it was so much easier than dealing with everything.” The narrator yearns for
the past, to search with Casey “for that old place [they] found forever ago.” In
“Gates,” drunkenness behind the Lion’s Club precedes another earnest diner
waitress love and a detached second-person voice foretells: “You’ll carve your
names into the Paupack Cliffs just to read them when you get old enough to know
that happiness is just a moment.”
One of the things that
makes On the Impossible Past a
distinctly American record for the Millennial Generation is that characters’
longing replaces active striving. The fruitlessness of that inaction can be
partly attributed to the decaying, economically depressed environment in which
it is set. As “Sun Hotel” states, the region is “the loneliest corner in the
whole world…[where] all eyes are glued on the 6:00 news for another fire, another
impending deer season.” What is not there for the voices in these songs is as
important as what is, and it sparks the idea in “The Obituaries” that “maybe I’m
not dying, I’m just living in decaying cities.” Somehow, though, in the absence
of vim and vibrancy, the eagerness and impetuosity of youth persist. If there
is sweetness or redemption to be found in The Menzingers brilliant third LP, it
is in these enduring qualities.
Saturday, April 6, 2013
Beware of Mr. Baker
Well-made trailer for a documentary about Ginger Baker entitled "Beware of Mr. Baker."
Saturday, March 30, 2013
Ignoble | Marion Tombs Backpack
At first you think the 29-liter Marion Tombs Backpack (11.5” W x 22”
H x 9” D) from Ignoble might be too big, but then again, all of your weekends
are three days long, so it’s perfect. You didn't perviously carry your own stuff, but with this bag you're into it.
With its deep and capacious primary pocket, the Marion Tombs does not try to
control you with a heavy regulatory environment. Ignoble opted for a large, dual-zippered trout mouth for top
access to the main compartment. After repeated use, you adjust to the top entry and discover
that it works pretty well.
However, just one side zipper--to allow another access point--would make
the bag perfect. You quickly
discover and grow to depend on the internal hanging pocket, but there is an
assortment of nooks and crannies for additional storage. The two side pockets are larger than you
would expect and one pocket easily holds glasses case, toothbrush, and phone charger.
The zippered front stash pocket makes it easy to access The Brothers Karamazov, Man’s
Search for Meaning, or whatever light reading you happen to be toting around. The laptop sleeve (11” W x 14” H x 4” D) holds your computer
safe and in place; although, you are starting to forget why you keep bringing
it with you.
The compression straps on both sides are useful if only to hide from
your gracious hosts the overindulgence of your packing job or the booty with
which you’ll abscond upon your departure.
The more you use the Marion Tombs Backpack, the more realize this is
the bag you have been missing. The
craftsmanship (it is entirely made in the USA) and quality of materials (fully-lined
200D nylon construction) are apparent and make a difference as you use the bag
more and more. It’s most
definitely built to last. It's lightweight (at about 1.5 lbs.), but when fully loaded it holds a significant
amount of weight very well. In
fact, those three-day weekends might as well swell to four days. You've got the room.
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Monday, March 11, 2013
Han Kjøbenhavn Spring/Summer 2013
Apparently you're late (by, like, four seasons) to the party on Danish label Han Kjøbenhavn, but for something this good, better late than never. The latest collection from designers Tim Faith Hancock and Jannik Wikkelso Davidsen features wools and fleeces in a neutral palette spiced up by dots, camo, and indigo finishes as well as hand-dyeing, bird prints, and embroidery. The lookbook is spot-on and gives a pretty clear indication of the level on which this Copenhagen-based brand is working. Casper Balslev directed the accompanying film, which is wild in its strange blend of nostalgia, violence, and debauchery. It's basically the opposite of Ordet.
Sunday, March 3, 2013
Saint James S/S 2013
Saint James never disappoints. The French clothier's offerings for Spring/Summer 2013 are as beautifully displayed as ever before beaches, cruise ships, and chateaus.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)