Tuesday, August 11, 2009

UPDATE: HK$6.7m to fix damage from Chanel logo stunt? That's surreal, artist says
















A French artist who daubed a dripping, black Chanel logo on the outer wall of Chater House above the window of a Giorgio Armani boutique disagreed with prosecutors who said that part of the facade must be replaced at a cost of HK$6.7 million. Christophe Schwarz, who goes by the name Zevs, pleaded guilty to one count of criminal damage before acting Principal Magistrate Bina Chainrai in Eastern Court yesterday. A professional cleaner hired by Giorgio Armani Hong Kong to remove the Chanel logo was unable to wash it off, prosecutors told the court. The affected facade must be replaced at an estimated cost of HK$6,746,000.
The 31-year-old graffiti artist expressed surprise at the cost and called it "surrealistic". He had taken special care to use children's water-based paint that was easy to wash off. He had painted on more delicate surfaces in other cities and been able to remove his works, he said.
The court will tomorrow hear a police officer, an appraiser and a cleaner give evidence on the damage.









Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Introducing: LITTLE LAKS

IRONLAK creating a mini army. Little Laks come in the following colours; Roarke (black), Aspen (white), Frazetta, Smurf and Flirt.We also produced a limited run of Acacia so get your hands on them before they're all gone. 100ml of goodness.

ittle Laks pictured with the standard sized Ironlak can.


It's all in the fine print.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

TI$A for Phenomenon - Summer '09 Accessories

Taz Arnold's TI$A line through Phenomenon is always "creative" to say the very least. While there are no all over prints or obnoxious colors on this set of Summer '09 accessories, I think you can still agree that it gets the point across.






Whether out of respect or out of awe, the fashion world seems to really take to Taz Arnold and his over the top style. He truly embodies the "I don't care what people think of me" and "Think outside the box" mentality. He also has a great passion for sunglasses, which is why he made this ode to 80's fabulous pair of Cazal 951's to go with another 80's style simple snap back.You can grab these, along with Taz's MCM collaborative goods right from here.

NIKE X WR GLADIATEUR MID

Nike has collaborated with Japanese women's fashion designers WR to create the Nike Gladiateur Mid.
With an obvious nod towards the Roman Gladiator style sandal (hence the name), this shoe was released on the 1st August at Colette Paris, WR stockists and their online shop for ¥11,550-

Android Homme

While we see new tee shirt and clothing lines pop up everyday more or less, it is way more rare to see a new footwear line come up. Well Android Homme is a new line out of LA that is doing some serious things with their futuristic space themed sneakers.



















Using really interesting silhouettes, sticking with mostly gray-scale, and using materials and textures to make the sneakers pop, Android does a really good job of giving the luxury footwear look that blurs the line between sneaker and shoe. The Jet Pack also features a really nice pocket on the sides of each sneaker with a zip close.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Friday, April 10, 2009

The Messenger Bag Director’s Chair


This directors chair is perfect for the upcoming summer trips, why you ask? Because it folds up and transforms into the messenger bag for easy tranporting. Weighs only 9lbs and supports 250lbs. $130

Nike SB Eugene Backpack Buzz Lightyear


Nike drops the restock of this Buzz Lightyear inspired backpack, that has more than enough pockets to carry all your goods. So cop yourS now for your next trip to infinity, and beyond! $150

BUY IT »

Rich Boy - Pacc Man (Mixtape)


Still riding the buzz from his new hit single “Drop”, Rich Boy “drops” this new mixtape.Pacc Man feautres 16 all new tracks for you to jam.

Supra Footwear x Erik Ellington Deathwish


Supra is giving away a dope collection of gear from the Erik Ellington collection which includes kicks, hat,tee.

Dolce&Gabbana Vintage Calfskin Leather Backpack


Vintaged calfskin leather updates the essential backpack, fronted by a plethora of oversized patch pockets. Long canvas strips secure the logo-plate flap, while the adjustable shoulder straps are padded for comfort. Pick one up because that superman backpack it kinda played out. $1120

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Family Guy Toys


Family guy is one of the best animated series ever! Now you can decorate your desk,room, car or whatever with these action figures. Line up includes everyome from Peter, to Death, to Stewie, to Joe and everybody in between. $7-60

Air Jordan 1 Retro


With Air Jordan 1s releasing like Dunks for 2009, the Hare editions are probably one of the hottest taking inspiration from the Hare VIIs with the light grey upper and color pattern on the tongue. The tongue also includes a Bugs Bunny tab for the old school Jordan commercials. You can pre-order them now at ShoeTrends for $120 - they won’t ship until April 17th.

KID CUDI BRINGS YA'LL THAT CRACK MUSIC



OHIO BORN KID CUDI BRINGS YOU THAT CRACK MUSIC. FOUNDED BY KANYE WEST, HE LETS HIS SOUL DO THE SINGING. FIRST SONG RELEASED IS DAY N NIGHT. CHECK IT OUT.

DOPE LAPTOP SLEEVE


Found this dope laptop case and thought I would share. The case is made by Kansai and its 100% leather. It does retail for $450.00...

SNEAKER SWAG


via hypebeast

Following up on a pink colorway seen near the end of January, Roc Star unveils a second blue colorup in their collaboration with footwear brand Ato Matsumoto. The kicks, doneup in Ato’s signature hi-tops, feature neon accenting over a primarily black backdrop and dark grey patent leather paneling. Available now via Japan’s Big Ol’ Store with a price tag of ¥30,450 (Approx. $337 USD) a pop


-FRESH DEF!

Molotow Energy Drink!

250ml Molotow Energy Drink

TAGGER FALLS TO HIS DEATH OFF EXPRESSWAY


A man suspected of spray painting a sign on the 826 Expressway was killed early Friday morning after he fell 24-feet from the catwalk and was then struck by a truck.

FHP Lt. Pat Santangelo told CBS4 Reporter Peter D'Oench, "I think over the past week, we've had a problem with people defacing signs on roadways," adding, "there are reasons why you shouldn't do that; one of the main reasons you shouldn't do that happened today."

28-year-old Enrique Vicente Olivera of Kendall fell onto the southbound lanes of the Palmetto, near Bird Road before the driver of a Ford Ranger pickup truck hit him after midnight, police said. The driver of that truck did stop.

FHP officials say it's believed the "tagger" may have taken a step back to admire the beginnings of his work when he fell from the catwalk and was run over.

"We have reports that the victim may have been up on the catwalk. We did find a spray can next to the victim. He may have been up there tagging the sign," said FHP's Francisco Lozano.

Earlier this week, several signs on I-95 in downtown Miami and North Miami were tagged by graffiti artists and authorities had to spend the following days cleaning up the mess.

Police are not sure if the incidents are related.

THE AIR YEEZY



WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THE BIGGEST NAME IN POP CULTURE MEETS THE BIGGEST NAME IN SNEAKERS? SECRECY, RUMORS AND AN INEVITABLE DROP-DAY MASSACRE. IT’S FINALLY TIME TO MEET THE AIR YEEZY

Kanye West: MC, Producer, Hypebeast: I’ve always stressed my passion for design—and not just, “Oh, let me throw my name on this,” but to use my celebrity as an opportunity to jump into the design world—and in this case, to design my own shoe.

Mark Smith: Creative Dir. of Special Projects, Nike: I don’t really put my life in dates in a normal way. [Laughs.] So I couldn’t even say when everything went down, but one day I got a call asking me if I would work with Kanye on the project.

Kanye West: It was after the Air Force 1 “1 Night Only” event [in December 2006]. I sat there and drew countless forms of shoes, and a lot of them were inspired by Back to the Future, by the McFlys or whatever people call them—I just call them the Mags. All kinds of different ideas that stemmed from that and Robotech and all my other anime influences.

Mark Smith: What we wanted to do was really create something that was specific and unique to the two of us working together, so it wasn’t an entourage full of people on either side.

Kanye West: Nike is the No. 1 sneaker lifestyle brand, right? And I’m the No. 1 most influential cutural pop art brand: scarves, beards, plastic glasses, whatever. So you take those two things and you mesh that—it’s very exciting. I’m the Nike of culture.

Mark Smith: He showed me what he was into. I asked him about sneakers that he liked, what he was wearing and why he was wearing them; he’s very up to the minute on what he likes.

Kanye West: I grabbed all these Jordans from their archives, and I’m sitting in the office next to Tinker [Hatfield, Jordan designer] and Mark, just pulling out shit and putting it in front of him like, “I like this element.” We just vibed it out.

Mark Smith: He started just dumping stuff out, and I did the same thing. We did it in the Innovation Kitchen—Nike’s underground innovation center where tomorrow’s technologies are kind of getting bubbled up, so he actually was seeing a bunch of stuff that nobody else would see.

Kanye West: The types of shit Nike can do? I say, “Hey, use this sole,” and they have it? The possibilities are just endless.

Mark Smith: I always try to look at things through an athlete’s eyes—if you look at a basketball player, his or her performance is on-court in the middle of a game. The equivalent for Kanye would be to get onstage and rock it for a couple of hours. And he goes through a pretty athletic show, so we wanted to make sure these were super-comfortable performance shoes.

Kanye West: Every guy drew Nikes in fourth grade, so to really do it is a dream come true.

Kanye West: I’m aesthetics-first on anything. Even when I make music, I think about the aesthetics: Where will you be when you’re listening to this? Visuals first. I wanted to take the concept of the future pop colors and all this ’80s influence and make it wearable.

Mark Smith: I remember him saying originally that he wanted to create something that looked and felt like it had come from the past. I thought, That’s actually really cool, because back then it was very, very simple. There weren’t a lot of extras on the older stuff. So that kind of pushed that edge a little bit; instead of adding a whole bunch of today’s stuff onto it and super-technology or anything like that, it was more about keeping things simple. And if you look at it at a glance, it might look like it was a little retro.

Kanye West: We developed our own soles for the shoe also, which is the hardest thing and takes the longest—so long that there was a point in the design [process] where I just had to pick a sole that they already had. That was one of the days my heart got broken. [Laughs.]

Mark Smith: We never looked at one shoe and said, “You gotta take the toe from this and the heel from that and the bottom from this and slam it all together.”

Kanye West: The original shoes were battery-operated, and they lit up. I have a version of the first shoe that has a push-button on the side, and it lights up and stays lit.

Mark Smith: We had a very futuristic-looking product for a long time. Then Kanye said, “Can we use something that’s recognizable?” So I think the elephant tooling, which was directly pulled from the Jordan 3, really rooted the shoe in that time period.

Kanye West: A lot of that patent stuff Mark came up with, like the strap—that’s when I was happy to be able to work with an O.G. designer like that.
Mark Smith: You have to make sure the lines, the materials, the direction are all intact—and then once you get those broad strokes in, then you really start applying the storytelling, the textures and the unique aspects that make it something for Kanye specifically.

Mark Smith: If we did our job right, we could take this shoe and put it in the line or a catalog from back in the day, and it would just feel like it was part of the lineup. But when you bring that shoe forward into today, it should also feel a little timeless; it’s yesterday and today slammed together.

Kanye West: Conceptually, it was made for a person that was walking on another planet. So it’s like almost a shoe-like space boot.

Mark Smith: There was never a design brief or a color brief; it was very fluid. He had some really great ideas coming into it with neutral browns and tans and keeping it a very monotone color and then letting the interior have a little bit more pop to it.

Kanye West: I wanted to give the Yeezys their own colorway. You wouldn’t have a whole fuchsia wall in your house, but you might have a little Jeff Koons piece of art that’s fuchsia and small. So I do it small, on the inside of the tongue.

Mark Smith: Throughout the process we probably did a couple hundred color studies, and I think we only showed him a couple; it was more like he was giving us his insights into color and then we’d play with it. Like, “What if this black was a suede,” or “What if this black was patent leather?”

Kanye West: I got like 12 different colors at my house, just colorway samples we were trying. I’ve worn them at certain events—the all-black ones I wore at the Grammys.

Mark Smith: I think we really started hitting our stride when we had real samples to look at.

Kanye West: It expresses my sensibility of design: what I want to do with clothing, with hotels eventually. The type of colors that I live in.

Mark Smith: We agreed that any time we wanted to add something to the product, we had to take something else away so that it wasn’t just adding, adding, adding—it was just one of those things where it can get down to as little as possible but make it as functional and comfortable and cool as possible.

Kanye West: We had a lot of conversations like, “We wanna just put it on eBay,” and I’m like, “No! People need to be able to get this shoe!” At first they were only gonna do 3,000 pairs. Now they’re doing 9,000, which is still limited. It’s not like it’s 200,000.

Mark Smith: We’re real happy with the result.

Kanye West: Oh my god, they’re gonna be out of there! Toot! [Laughs.] They’re not even gonna hit the ground. The boxes from the truck will literally not hit the ground.