Showing posts with label fresh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fresh. Show all posts

20100910

my chest speaks louder than my face

I haven't been blogging as much, yes, but I am working on some things that aren't particularly interesting so I've been holding off on posting. The past 2 months have been crazy anyway, what with my last-minute business trip to China, especially. But costumes aside, some of you know I actually work in the fashion industry and some of my older posts were more fashion-related. I know I haven't posted about my own closet in a while--there's nothing exciting going on it--and probably won't have any exciting new additions. But, I was cleaning my really tiny closet out the other day and found a bag of old t-shirts. Remember when Threadless first debuted and only a few people were buying their shirts? And now the whole freshness of it has kinda faded? Well I bought all these Threadless shirts sometime between that period, moreso towards the beginning of their launch.

So please enjoy the most unfashionable/potentially nerd-tastic post on my blog, ever.

1. Video Games Ruined My Life. Good thing I Have 2 Extra Lives
**Yeup here I am in full nerd mode. You don't exist when I'm like this.


2. Refrigerator Running
** There is something obscenely adorable with putting innocent faces on inanimate objects. Like, toasters and trains. Also, I'm very lame sometimes.


3. Hitch-hiking Godzilla
** How can you not like this t-shirt?!!??!!


4. In the beginning
** No words. This is fucking genius.


5. Honey?
** IT'S A BEAR. TRYING TO BE A BEEEEEE!!!


6. In Case of Zombies
** This is me helping you in the event of a Zombie-pocalypse, because I care about you, and we all know a zombie-pocalypse is inevitable. Or an alien invasion. I haven't decided which is more imminent yet.



7. What Do You Mean You Can't See Him?
** Ok, you can see him (A), but this shirt was printed using solar-activated ink, and this monster you see now was previously invisible without sunlight. Then I threw this shirt into the machine wash by accident and now the ink does not work anymore. :( Let's learn from this :(


8. Moby Was a Consumer
** Greedy whale.


9. Mother Nature
** I think this was my first Threadless tee. I still like the graphic on it, sort of.


10. ALLOW ME TO EXPLAIN THROUGH INTERPRETIVE DANCE
** Uh... who DOESN'T have this shirt?


11. This isn't from Threadless but it's a Scott Pilgrim tee sporting Scott's signature awkward-teethy-smile so I just have to share it anyways. It's also bright green and matches my fabulous Nixon watch that can't really tell time. I got it from the cool folks at Meltdown Comics in LA.

So what do I do with these shirts now? I pretty much just sleep in them. I happen to be wearing the zombies one to sleep these days, so I guess if you were to be sleeping next to me during a possible zombie-pocalypse (which would have to happen in the next few days) then I think we would be able to make it to the next town with all our limbs still intact.

If you thought this was a geek-tastic post, please head on over to my new group blog, the g-spot. I didn't name the blog, but that's a pretty cool name isn't it?

20100721

Dear Bryan Lee O'Malley, Thank You For Remembering the Fashionistas

The past few days I have been anticipating and anticipating the release of the FINAL volume of the Scott Pilgrim comic. What? I read American comic books, too? I will read anything that is good! My dad has a large collection of Marvel comic books and I grew up flipping through those.

I didn't breeze through this final volume of Scott Pilgrim right away. I was working on my costume, which I won't finish by Comic-Con anyway. Sigh. Feeling a bit like a failure I decided to finish reading SP6 to make myself feel better. After all, Scott knows all about failing even if he might be in denial about certain moments of his failures... and memories.

I won't spoil anything for you Scott Pilgrim fans. And if you aren't reading Scott Pilgrim I suggest you pick it up and read it NOW. It might change your life. Just saying.

Something I really noticed in this last volume is O'Malley's attention to Envy Adams' fashion this time. I had to do a double-take on her shoes when she first enters volume 6. She's wearing Balmain booties! She's relevant! Thank you for that, Mr. O'Malley. And what's this dress? It's a bandage body-con dress w/ cut-out panels and mesh!


Left image scanned by me; Balmain booties image via net-a-porter.com


L-R: Herve Leger Fall 2010, Balmain Fall 2008; images via style.com

In her 3rd scene, she's wearing a double-breasted poncho--so difficult for any regular person to pull off without looking frumpy--while rocking OTK (over-the-knee) wedge boots with a Camilla Skovgaard-ish sole.


Left image scanned by me, Camilla Skovgaard wedges image via net-a-porter.com

And for her backstage look, she is wearing booties very, very similar to Burberry Prorsum's popular platform bootie from Fall 2009.


Left image scanned by me, Burberry bootie image via style.com

Whether or not these were mere coincidences, I would like to thank Mr. O'Malley for accurately portraying Envy as the rocker babe she's supposed to be.

20100701

why katy perry would not approve of the new wonder woman

I've posted about superheroes before, and I sure as hell post a lot about costumes. I usually don't rant or complain about certain things, but I thought I just had to shed some light onto this currently very popular topic of discussion:

The "new" and "improved" look of Wonder Woman.

When I think of Wonder Woman, for some reason I also like to think of Katy Perry. I am not a huge fan of Katy's, but I WILL sing "Hot N Cold" and "I Kissed a Girl" before we get completely drunk at karaoke. AND BEFORE YOU get mad at me for linking the 2 together, I have very good reasons:

1. I wouldn't want to pick a fight w/ either of them.
2. Fluffy dark brown hair
3. Tall and fierce-looking
4. Generous rack
5. Nice legs
6. Fair skin

I think from what we've seen of Katy's ensembles, a bustier and hot pants are quite standard for Katy.


The hot pants aren't going anywhere.
L-R: Photos via celebrityphotos.sheknows.com, teamsugar.com, absoluteradio.co.uk

So now, let's take a look at this new Wonder Woman outfit, and why I believe Katy Perry would highly disagree with it.

I've juxtaposed my arguments with quotes from acclaimed writer J. Michael Stracynzki, via deadline.com.

Let's start from the top:

1. Did she kill Sailor Mars and jack her tiara? And then... glue the earring on top of the crystal to .. disguise her CRIME!!???


Poor girl.
Image via straferight.com

2. The jacket: "She can close it up to pass unnoticed...open it for the freedom to fight...lose the jacket or keep it on...it has pockets"
--Open it for the freedom to fight? So... it's like a half-costume? Is it like... Superman/Clark Kent? He has to wear his outfit underneath his suit? She can close it up to pass unnoticed? What if it's really hot outside? Leather jackets are not ... that easy to move in. Lose the jacket or keep it on? That's a lot of work. Are there only pockets in her jacket? Are there pockets in her boot-pants? Pant-boots? Whatever? Katy Perry doesn't wear jackets. I don't know where she puts anything either.

3. The bustier/bodysuit/thing: To the many female fans over the years who've asked "how does she fight in that thing..." I have some answers: a) metal boning. You can dance in those strapless dresses you wear to prom, right? b) Watch this video of Beyonce performing at the 2009 MTV Europe Awards [link - just skip to 2:30 and you'll see what I mean]. c) Last I checked, Katy Perry hasn't had a nip slip yet.

4. Her bracelets. Yay. They're still there. But what the hell, they're wrist-warmers. Those aren't bracelets. They don't match the rest of her outfit. They make her entire outfit look as though she forgot to take her crime-fighting outfit off when she went to pick up her kids after their soccer game. Katy hasn't over-accessorized to this point. Yet.

5. What the hell is this belt-thing that has a chain? So... she's trying not to be flashy (hence the leather jacket) but she'll wear a blingin' belt.. with a chain? At least when Katy blings, she's completely shiny.


MTV Video Music Awards 2009
Images via zimbio.com, aceshowbiz.com

6. Okay, I don't know where the boots start and the pants end. Boot-pants/Pant-boots are Rihanna territory.


Image via gofugyourself

7. The anklets. See #4 regarding over-accessorizing.

I think I liked it better when I questioned how certain heroines/villainesses fought in their seemingly skimpy outfits, but being that I've made some costumes (and had to figure out how to make them comfy and well-constructed), I... don't find it all that impractical now. I think we females deserve some credit for figuring out ways to wear some outrageous styles without flashing unnecessary body parts, and in the case of Wonder Woman, kick ass while rocking a unique, iconic style.

20100523

inside/out/outside/in

I was mentioning on Twitter over the weekend that I'd be rearranging the furniture in my apartment. Alright, who am I kidding, I don't really have any furniture, mostly bookshelves and a rack of costumes/clothes I made. I'm trying to make my apartment more people-friendly. My next step will probably be to finally purchase a worthy dining table so I can stop eating college-style (upside down cardboard box).

When you're re-organizing, the best part is finding "that book" you thought you lost, or finding "that pair of earrings" you forgot you had. There was a book I bought quite a while ago at Urban Outfitters (I never even buy clothes there), titled "Bears".

"Bears" is by Kent Rogowski, a photography teacher at the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), who, according to a brief introduction by Diane Karp, "...Kent Rogowski turns all that inside-out (literally as well as figuratively) presenting us with the other aspect of a collection of bears that now become quirky alter egos to the ordinary cuddly things..." I spent most of my time upon purchase of this book trying to guess the actual appearances of these bears, and some of the "inside-out" versions of these bears were actually a bit freaky-looking.




As someone who makes clothing, the inside of a garment can be more important than the outside of the garment, which is why I enjoy showing the inner construction of everything on my blog.

Lanvin is a design house that also treasures the inside-as-outside idea, and if you visit any Lanvin boutique or Lanvin stockist, you can see that most of their garments have the seams along the outside.

Other designers enjoy showing their garments inside-out, and there's even one particular spread (one of my favorites) titled "inside-out", from Vogue Hommes International, styled by the fabulous Joe Zee....





L-R: Rick Owens' Lilies line is 90% knits sewn with the seams exposed (image via net-a-porter.com); Alexander Wang's corset dress from Fall 2009 has the boning sewn on the outside (image via google)


Comme des Garcons' Fall 2010 RTW collection included shapes that seemed to be body organs, sewn on the outside of each garment... (all CdG images via style.com)


L-R: Comme des Garcons Fall 2010 RTW; Juun.J Fall 2010 (image via wwd.com)

20100412

full metal? sort of...

If you've been following me on twitter, you probably read that I tweet about "FMA" a lot. Any anime geek would immediately know I'm talking about "Fullmetal Alchemist". But I don't think a lot of my readers are anime geeks, so I'll explain in one sentence: Fullmetal Alchemist is the best manga I have ever read in my life! I finally started watching the first series (only loosely based on the manga), and became hooked. Then I watched the new series (which just came out last year, more stringent on being loyal to Hiromu Arakawa's manga) "Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood", and fell in love for the 3rd time.



The story is unlike any other--dealing with the idea of alchemy, two brothers and the power of a "God". After watching the first episode, I commented "Oh my god, how cuuuuuute!!! A huge piece of armor with the voice of a 10-year-old boy!!!" I quickly discovered it was not that cute, this seemingly dark and profound story. There is a perfect balance of comic relief that keeps me gigging though.

The main character, Edward Elric, has an arm and leg made of automail (metal prosthetics), due to unfortunate circumstances. Upon seeing this, I realized it was similar to other media I've seen with characters using prosthetic limbs, or being part cyborg. FMA is different though because most media we see this type of technology is some sort of post-apocalyptic, cyberpunk environment. FMA is set in a world parallel to ours, shortly after the Industrial Revolution, in which civil wars across the country allowed for the prosthetics business to boom.

Sculpted metal parts aren't uncommon in the fashion scene either, albeit those parts aren't as practical as Edward's arm.

Although...if you were to break these parts while engaging in some sort of dangerous activity, you probably wouldn't have a cute blonde girl hurl a wrench at you.


Tetsuo from "Akira", Jax from Mortal Kombat
image via lesroquetes.com, image via fdmk.net




From Harper's Bazaar Singapore
image via fashiongonerogue.com


Barret Wallace from FFVII
image via dothack.free.fr


I can't leave out the Dior couture show from Fall 2006
detail images via style.com


Detail from Dolce & Gabbana Fall 2007, Dior Couture Fall 2006, Somarta Fall 2008
D&G, Dior images via style.com, center image via coutorture-blog.onsugar.com


I couldn't find the credited designer for this arm piece;
Dazed&Confused magazine (one of my favorite editorials of all time)

first image via trendhunter.com


Yuima Nakazato, the one and only Thierry Mugler
images via yuimanakazato.com, alifeofstyle.com



Lady GaGa's "Paparazzi" video showcases a load of Thierry, and his metal-sculpted parts.

I only included partial-cyborgs / images of metal parts, not entire robot, bionic, metal, or concealed suits. Hence you do not see Robocop, the Bionic Woman, Ghost in the Shell, Battlestar Galactica, Astroboy, Appleseed, Casshern (and so forth) in this post...

If you're interested in viewing Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood, subbed episodes are free online on hulu.com.

20100311

gold statement

I am finally back from my brief vacation in New York and San Francisco, and although I did miss sitting my lazy ass in front of a computer everyday, it was nice to explore areas outside of Los Angeles again, especially in New York, where I got to experience WINTER.

While in New York, I ended up going to the Barneys Warehouse Sale with Deanne of Dream Sequins, and though it was the last day of the sale, I was super fortunate to score something that has been on my list for a while--gold Givenchy cowboy boots. I don't know if anybody even remembers this boots, but they were from the Spring 2009 Resort collection.


images via style.com



Worn with Helmut Lang blazer, Zara sleeveless shirt, vintage hat, H&M leggings

I have to admit they are a little gawdy, very costume-y, and unfortunately none of my costumes this year include a gold Cowboy boot. Walking around in these boots in San Francisco, my friend rolled her eyes as every other person stared at my boots and asked where I got them. For a while I felt like I was a superhero who forgot to take off my boots as I headed off to run my errands for the day--like a superhero in a really flashy getup.


L-R: The Flash, rocking yellow boots, image via collider.com,
Wonder Woman, in her shiny red boots, image via allmovieposters.com



Sailor Moon (center) and Sailor Mercury (left of center) in color-coordinated boots
image via zianet.com



L-R: Thor, image via forbiddenplanet.co.uk,
Givenchy RTW Fall 2007, Gucci RTW Spring 2010


Givenchy Haute Couture Spring 2008
(all runway images via style.com)


L-R: Storm (new), image via desktopnexus.com,
intricately carved white boots from Magna Carta 2

Speaking of superheroes and fashion, who can forget that May 2008 Vogue shoot w/ Coco Rocha in custom Superhero-inspired getups? Here's one by Rick Owens, inspired by Batman...


image via stylefrizz.com

And also, when it comes to "gold", I can't help but think of that hilarious Monex skit from SNL with the ever-so-hilarious Kristen Wiig... now if only the video existed on the internet...

20100222

halloween came early

New York Fashion Week has concluded.

I did not go.

But, I did spend a few hours on style.com and catching up by reading a few friends' blogs!

Generally I don't remember too many details after looking at every single show, though it all eventually comes back to me and resonates with me later, I can't help but think that bondage and goth will forever spot the runways.

I'd like to point out one particular collection--Altuzarra's.

A few have praised Altuzarra's collection, featuring "Frankenstein" stitches and numerous buckles, similar to a straitjacket. I couldn't help but think of Altuzarra's collection echoing the influences of The Matrix, Edward Scissorhands and Death Note.

You may argue that the same might be said of Gareth Pugh's look, then, because he consistently shows a goth influence throughout his collections, but I think Pugh takes his designs a couple notches beyond his obvious influences, and his clothes are more theatrical and costume-like than Altuzarra's.


Altuzarra F/w 2010
images via style.com


L-R: Carrie-Anne Moss in the Matrix,
Johnny Depp in Edward Scissorhands, Ryuk from Death Note
(Matrix image via fanpop.com, Edward image via ithaca.edu, Death Note image via deathgod.org)



L-R: "Frankenstein" stitching a la Michelle Pfeiffer's Catwoman,
on Altuzarra's F/W 2010 runway, "staples" on the Viktor & Rolf F/W 2008 runway
(Catwoman image via premiere.com, runway details via elle.com)


Expensive Halloween costumes, anyone?

20100211

me, and alexander mcqueen

Like all of you, I could not believe the news this morning either, that Alexander McQueen, fashion's bad boy and mischievous genius designer, committed suicide. I honestly thought he would end his life when Isabella Blow took hers 3 years ago.

Suicide in the fashion industry is not uncommon; I obviously don't know what McQueen was thinking when he ended his own life, but as a creative individual, I suppose I can try to understand...

I'm not a hugely successful designer like McQueen was. In fact, I'm a nobody. And when you're a nobody, with huge ideas, you're constantly criticized for being on a different wavelength as the general public. I can tell you that one of my exes asked me, "why can't you just be normal???" (that's why he's my ex and by the way, what does that mean, to be 'normal'? It's a matter of perception...) Moreover, it is difficult for creative types with wild imaginations and ambitions to succeed without monetary and/or emotional support. So though McQueen was deemed a "bad boy" in the fashion realm because of how provocative his ideas usually were, his ideas inspired many of us fledgling designers, and gave us fuel to push ourselves more and want the impossible even more. Every season, his show was the one I looked forward to the most. My closest friends can attest to the number of times I've raved about McQueen. McQueen and his work only helped to reinforce that anything was possible in fashion. He helped set a precedent--much like Lady Gaga : it's ok to be yourself, in fact, be yourself to the fullest.

There were many times that I even considered ending my own life (not so much now, but when I was younger). I thought this was normal, but apparently, talking to a lot of my friends, it isn't. Sometimes I just felt alone and completely rejected by society, and no matter what I did, I could never feel accomplished or proud of any of my work. Even among my "close" friends, I didn't feel that they really understood or supported me, but at least they let me be myself and make my own way. Some of them told me (and still tell me) to be more "logical" and "safe", -- asking me how could I continue living life if I didn't know exactly how I was going to arrive at my next goal? Some creative people have an acute business sense. It is these words I put in quotations that discourage creative people from flourishing. As an individual, I'm fairly strong, but to keep throwing stones of that type at me, you'll eventually wear me down. Maybe one day I decide that I don't want to get back up again.

I'm fortunate these days to have at least one person by my side to support me and listen to all my ramblings and fantastical ideas. My parents, especially my dad being a furniture designer, were generally supportive of my decisions and pursuits. They didn't want me to live a life I would not enjoy living. But society treated me differently, and I used to worry about "fitting in", as a child; now I've just given up. I don't care to be "understood" anymore, and trying to be "normal" is something I still can't grasp the meaning of.

If I were to lose those important people, I don't know what would happen. I guess the best way I could put it is: taking care of the runt in the litter; loving it and supporting it, believing that it will grow up to be even better than its brothers and sisters, even if it will take time and extra attention, none of which anybody else will provide. The runt grows to be strong, but carries with it everyday your firm belief that it can be greater than the others. One day, you're gone. This is a weird analogy and probably a horrible one, but I think, despite all the praise and fans McQueen had, he was still a human being, and when Isabella Blow passed, it had a profound emotional impact on him. I would too, if the important people in my life suddenly disappeared. I would feel alone again. And coupled with a perpetual unhappiness despite goals being accomplished, why would one have any reason to live? Perhaps it was a combination of the two for McQueen.

And then McQueen's mother was gone. Her death and his suicide might be completely unrelated, or very well be related. I know my parents genuinely care about me, and support me in all I do. They don't tell me that often, but I know they'll always be there for me, even during my darkest hour. But if I were to lose either one of them, in addition to those I hold close to me, my world would crash. It would be the equivalent of starting from zero, standing back up again, trying to make people comprehend my ideas, and not degrade them. Society today is much more accommodating of creative types, a great thing, but there is not one day I don't think about that jerk who told me to be more "normal".

I will never know who McQueen was. But once I heard he committed suicide, I tried to understand it the best I could, given the context of who he was, and stepping back, looking at my own self, considering all the times I wanted to end my own life. A friend mentioned that "suicide is a plague in the fashion industry", but it's not a plague. There are so few of us in the fashion industry, sometimes we forget how small our world is when compared to the actual scope of things. I'm fortunate to have met some passionate individuals, through the blogosphere, but ultimately, 215 out of my 230 Facebook friends could care less about fashion. That's the reality of it. No matter how much praise or recognition any one of us may receive within the industry, the reality isn't kind to us at all. In reality, people don't think we contribute. Maybe we don't help the healthcare reform issue, or even limit the amount of terrorist attacks that occur, but fashion does breathe life into imagination, tapping into the part of the brain people use less and less of now. Our lives would be dull without entertainment (movies, books, musicals...) all created by the imagination. Fashion is merely another arm of that, a less popular one, due to the bad press usually given to it, but to me is the most important (costume design in movies, for one).

Going back to who McQueen was--I found him to be a genius. To get to the point where he was, he must have beat himself up quite a bit. Especially since each collection he creates, trumps the previous one. And to be so largely successful, he must have made many sacrifices. I myself have given up many things since entering design school. I could take the "easy route" too, get a business degree and work for someone else for the rest of my life. But I wouldn't be able to live with myself. Everyday is a struggle, a balance. Putting everything of yourself into something that other people may never understand or care about. Ultimately it is your own opinion that should matter, but as I mentioned at the beginning of this seemingly long post, those stones will beat me up, eventually.

I have since learned to distance myself from those people, and simply stay in my apartment and work on multiple projects I believe in. I don't feel so alone anymore.

But for McQueen, constantly in the eye of the nasty media, despite his close supporters, maybe he felt alone all this time.

An excellent timeline on McQueen can be found on this blog: http://royboticsteez.blogspot.com/2009/05/alexander-mcqueen-timeline-1994-2009.html

(more photos than my post; I can't find good photos of anything before 2001!)

Below, some of my favorite McQueen looks from 2000-2010