PAPERMAG


Untitled

fightclubpullimage.jpg




Posted on 30 December 2010 @ 8:02 pm
PAPERMAG


Peter Feigenbaum, "Trainset Ghetto," Opens at Open Source Gallery

Peter Feigenbaum, architect by day and singer in Brooklyn band Dinowalrus by night, has found the time (maybe in the very early morning?) to make incredible, hyper-realistic miniature streetscapes, depicting a pre-gentrified New York in the '70s. His photos of said streetscapes are on view starting tonight at Open Source Gallery. He describes this body of work "as the physical byproduct of teenage suburban daydreams and attempts to live vicariously through an alien post-urban 1980s landscape that was in no way part of my quotidian existence -- a landscape that I caught glimpses of through car rides down the Bruckner Expressway, Henry Chalfant's graffiti photographs, and movies such as The French Connection and Style Wars."


Posted on 4 September 2010 @ 3:46 pm
PAPERMAG


Natalie Joos on Midnight Snickers Bars and Fights with Model Agents During Fashion Week

nataliejoosFW.png
If you thought designers arbitrarily chose the pretty young things who parade their pieces down the runway each season, think again. They call in the experts, one being PAPER Beautiful Person Natalie Joos, to dig through the dozens of show packages and hand-pick the girls who will walk in their shows. This might not sound like a difficult task, but the late nights, fights with model agents, and the attempt to translate the designer's vision join forces to create a mind-boggling challenge. Natalie tells us what her days are really like during Fashion Week, her late night snack of choice, and about the feeling she gets when she puts together a cast of faces that fit just right.

On average, how many runway shows do you cast each season?
I do -- maximum -- six shows. But not every season.

Do you have a favorite show to cast? Any shows you dream of casting one day?
I love Adam Lippes and Yigal Azrouel. Unfortunately I am not doing those shows this season. I am dreaming of casting Lanvin in Paris.

How many days (or hours) before the show do the castings take place? Is it an arduous process?
The casting usually takes place about five days before the show, but girls keep trickling in until the day before. Castings in themselves are fun, seeing the girls (or boys), taking their pictures, seeing them walk, and having a little chat. Not too hard.

Casting a show is sort of like putting together a puzzle. Can you explain the process?
Before the shows start, the model agencies send show packages with the girls they have in town for the season. I look through the packages and select the girls I feel fit the respective designer's vision and collection. Then we meet the girls in person, unless they are established and we know them. We narrow down the list to the amount of girls we need, keeping only the favorites and the girls who are available. These girls come in for their fittings, usually the day before the show.

What will "the look" be for the Spring 2011 season?
I think we are going back to individuality. We have had a few seasons of "perfection" and "beauty". I would like to see some "real" girls, with more character or even a few flaws. The look will still be healthy and happy, but maybe there is room for some quirkiness.

Do you have a Fashion Week "survival kit"? What are some items that we'd find in your bag at any given time during the castings and shows.
I always carry Tic Tacs, gum, and drink huge amounts of water. I always carry raw vegan bars, hand cream, deodorant, computer, my phone, and chargers.

How late do castings run? About how many hours do you work per day during Fashion Week?
Castings don't go late, but the fittings can run into the wee hours because they HAVE to be done before the show. Sometimes you are stuck until 1 or 2 a.m. I work from 8 a.m. to midnight every day.

Do you have any pre-Fashion Week rituals?
I am usually off all month of August so that is my time to recharge. After Fashion Week, which ends in Paris, I usually go home to see my parents in Belgium for a week or so. That's quite relaxing too. And I usually get a facial and a massage after.

What's the thing you look forward to most once the Fashion Weeks are over?
I always kind of fall into a gap after Fashion Week ends. All of a sudden you have nothing to do anymore. Sometimes I wish I could keep going. As much as I hate the stress, I do love to be busy and work hard.

Do you and your assistants have a favorite midnight treat to snack on during late nights?
I wish I could say something healthy but usually it ends up being something nasty like a Snickers bar.

The all-important question: flats or heels?
I mostly wear heels. Fashion Week is the perfect excuse to dress up!

What's your go-to Starbucks order?
I recently quit coffee which was a staple every morning -- venti triple soy lattes! So I will have to survive on venti soy chai (with 2 tea bags) and honey, which I drink with a straw.

What are the best and worst things about your job during Fashion Week?
The best is when you complete a casting with all the right girls in place. The worst are the fights with the model agents.

In one word, describe the feeling you get when you see the models in a show you've cast walk down the runway.
It's a thrill.


Posted on 4 September 2010 @ 2:15 am
Paper Forest
Paper Art News and Ideas

Tiny Tea Time Tutorial

It's my birthday again! Which can only mean one thing... a new paper tutorial for everyone to have fun with! Ray!

This year's lesson shares an easy technique I developed for creating the tiniest tea cups, saucers, and plates I've ever seen. These were created for an original folktale movie I'm making whose tiny little red cloth-covered mushroom cafe in the garden needed little white dishware spots on them!

I'm thinking a child finding a tea setting on a rock or flower in a real garden would fill them with the pure joy and wonder at the possibilities forever, don't you agree!?

I used plain white watercolor paper and fast-grab white glue. Here's how.

1. Just tear little squares of whatever heavy-ish paper you might have around. For the scale of mine, the wooden point in the picture is a clay tool but I imagine any simple pencil with tape to cover the lead would do the trick.

2. Smash the paper square down around your pointed tool, creasing and pressing, until it begins to conform and hold the shape a bit.

3. Use whatever glue you like to work with (I am a huge fan of Aileene's Fast Grab white glue because it's thick enough to actually stick right away and hold on tightly.) and apply it into the folds of these little creases with the tip of a toothpick. Let set for a moment until you can remove the little cup and it will keep its shape as it dries.

4. Moving on to the saucer, I used a standard round hole punch to knock out as many little bases from the same paper for the amazing cups I wanted, crunch, crunch crunch.

5. With a sharp scissor, slice off a bunch of super thin, fairly even, paper slivers, about an inch in length, for the fancy cup handles. These can be cut to size or curled into fancy-pants shapes, depending on your dexterity and patience. But even a simple curve will make for a perfect illusion.

I used a toothpick to work the strip into a curl (those familiar with paper sculpture will recognize how it feels to break down the paper fibers so they'll hold a shape--only this is at nano scale). *one important note is that the key for the tea cup structure is to use a tweezer and crisply bend one end of your newly made handle (marked with an asterisk in #5 and 9 to demonstrate why that works so well to do.)

6. The next step is to trim the now dry cups off at their tops to even out all the little folds for a smoother rim. (The bottom of the cup shown is to the left of the scissor blades as the tops are being cut away on the right.)

7. Get a dollop of glue out nearby, load a bit onto a toothpick, touch it to one of your saucers in its middle, while holding it down with a pair of tweezers on the edge. Then take one of your now trimmed cups and smash in down onto the glue on the saucer (sorry for the dark photo, it got overcast quickly that day). Leave these assembled teacups and saucers to dry a bit.

8. Now your handles come into play. Put a bit of glue onto the bent end of the little strip and nestle it against the bottom of the cup, where it meets the saucer. Let it grab and then dry it well. (Doing a bunch at once makes the entire assembly painless because by the time you finish the last in your set, the first one is ready for the next step.)

9. The last step is to adhere the top end of the handle to the rim of your cup with a small bit of glue applied via toothpick tip. (I have been known to glue a too-long handle right inside the cup and use my tweezers to crimp the two pieces, cup and handle, into one thing, laminating them together, as it were.) Point is, there's no wrong way to finish these off. Cut the handle to length, make another curly-que at the top and then glue it down, etc. Even plain the effect will be magical.

To make the plates, cut out small, slightly larger, circles by hand and press their centers with a grommet (I had one laying around that was the correct diameter but you can use anything around, even a pen cap) to create the plate's rim shape.

If you like, you can seal and finish the set with a coating of varnish for greater durability outside, unless a fairy takes them home right away, in which case it doesn't matter. :-)

That's it! Delight all the little ones you know by afixing a few of these in your garden, where you think fairies might naturally gather for tea, and letting them find them on their own. Be sure to pretend you have no idea where they've come from! I bet they will always look very closely at nature from that day on. Better yet, why not make these for friends with sweet kidlettes too. They'd be awfully cute gift wrapped as a set in a small jewelry box!

Enjoy! I'd love to see what you do with these!


Posted on 3 September 2010 @ 4:56 pm
PAPERMAG


AO on site – New York (with Video): Barry McGee’s Graffiti Wall on East Houston and Bowery

Art Observed was on site for Barry McGee’s (aka “TWIST”) new work on the “Deitch Wall” on East Houston and Bowery. With longtime collaborator Josh Lazcano (aka “AMAZE”), Mcgee spray painted simple red tags of the names and crews of graffiti writers from both past and present generations. Watch the video above for AO’s short [...]
Posted on 4 September 2010 @ 2:12 am
Paper Source - New & Seasonal
Paper Source is the premiere seller of fine, handmade papers from around the world.

Circus Printable Party Invitations

These adorable circus party invitations are compatible with inkjet printers. An old fashioned circus ... read more
Posted on 3 September 2010 @ 4:00 am
Paper Forest
Paper Art News and Ideas

Tear Off Advertisements

CROOKEDBRAINS is a wunderkammer of ideas and inspirations. See the yesterday chapter
about 20 tear off ads (click the title).

Posted on 12 June 2010 @ 11:28 pm
The Mekentosj Newsroom
News from Mekentosj.com

Matias Piipari joins Mekentosj

We couldn’t be more happy with Matias Piipari joining Mekentosj Inc. to take the iOS versions of our apps to a whole new level.

Back in February last year we launched Papers for iPhone, allowing you to take your personal library of science wherever you go. We were already super excited with its success and the reactions from its users, but compared to that the recent launch of the iPad version has just blown us away. We worked really hard to get Papers for iPad ready at launch day, and to see how much users are loving the app is absolutely phenomenal. We’re sure that especially for those users it will be great to hear that Matias will take this momentum and do his best to bring our iOS apps to the next level! He already has a ton of ideas and we can’t wait to ship them to you in a next version of Papers for iPhone, iPod touch and iPad. Check out Matias’ profile page and wish him luck!


Posted on 21 June 2010 @ 2:27 pm
OPPapers.com RSS Feed
Tons of papers added daily.

Case

[pic] XVIII PGDM (2010-2012) CLASS SCHEDULE First Term / Week-07 |SECTION-A {Venue: Nestle Classroom} | |Day / Date |Session-1 |Session-2 |Session-3 |Session-4 | | |0830-1000 hrs |1015-1145 hrs |1200-1330 hrs |1430-1600 hrs | |Monday | |MM-I-13 |BM-11 | | |02 August ...
Posted on 6 August 2010 @ 1:57 am
Powered by Tags for Joomla