Quantcast
Channel: Slamxhype
Viewing all 5711 articles
Browse latest View live

H.L.N.A. Tokyo Skatepark

$
0
0
H.L.N.A. Tokyo Skatepark  

H.L.N.A SKATEPARK Vol.01 from H.L.N.A skatepark on Vimeo.

Any skater in Tokyo knows, before Miyashita Park was redeveloped it was difficult to find a decent place to skate but thanks to the good people at H.L.N.A. here is a new spot. Having just opened the H.L.N.A. Skate Park in Diver City Tokyo Plaza over the weekend the large-scale outdoor facility provides a unique experience for skaters of all levels. Take a look at skaters Junichi Arahata, Kota Ikeda, Hiroki Muraoka and Rya Sejiri testing out the obstacles and showcasing the highlights. Learn more about the H.L.N.A. Skate Park from pricing to its setup here.

Nike 1972 Quickstrike

$
0
0
Nike 1972 Quickstrike

Taking on board a more formal approach, this edition of the Nike 1972 features a mature rich leather upper atop a sole that was innovative in its day. Available in two shades of brown, the deep brown colorway features a white sole while the light brown piece features a fluro yellow sole.

Available now from Haven.

sneakerwolf “Everything Can Be Canvas” at LUMP Tokyo

$
0
0
sneakerwolf “Everything Can Be Canvas” at LUMP Tokyo

WHIZ Limited’s flagship store, LUMP Tokyo will host Tokyo artist sneakerwolf come Saturday March 27 with an exhibition entitled “Everything Can Be Canvas.” Renowned for his work with the likes of Nike, adidas, New Balance, and Mita, the body of works on show will feature several pieces of work along with a collection of items made with WHIZ Limited. Also available for exclusive pre-order is a pair of sneakers he designed for the adidas Originals x mita sneakers collaboration, and if you turn up on the first day, April 27 or the last day, May 6, you may be blessed with the artists presence.

LUMP Tokyo / 3-21-6-1F Jingumae / Shibuya-ku / Tokyo / Japan

MARTYRS YVE Presents “The Offering” Film

$
0
0
MARTYRS YVE Presents "The Offering" Film When possible we try to highlight the new breed of creatives that are looking to help shape the future of culture within their respective lanes. MARTYRS YVE is a new collective shielded by a bit of a cloak of mystery other then a strikingly beautiful short film that announces their launch. “The Offering” is an haunting story which parallels the approach of the label itself.  Really looking forward to the progress of this burgeoning label.
MARTYRS YVE is built on a simplistic principle regarding design- “The Edge of darkness before the light protrudes in”. A garments true distinction doesn’t become present until the wearer’s first journey in that particular garment, the trials and tribulations between high and low is what shapes the zeitgeist of that garment. The coalition infuses spirit into the garment preceding their immersion of minds. MARTYRS’ YVE is not about drawing attention to ones article of clothing, but about intriguing outsiders gathering them, to ones mind. A minimal approach is necessary to each individual garment to insure timeless silhouettes. The mission is to create garments for people with divine purpose…
Part I: Direction, Cinematography and Editing: Julian Tran & Cuyler Ballenger (JULES) Featuring: Ethan Bartlett, Larry Le, Andru Sisson, Sean Mackey Styling: Andru Sisson Part II: Direction, Cinematography and Editing: Julian Tran & Cuyler Ballenger (JULES) Featuring: Ethan Bartlett,

Panasonic Lumix DMC-LF1

$
0
0
Panasonic Lumix DMC-LF1 Here is another great addition to the like of Lumix camera’s from Panasonic with the DMX-LF1 unveiled. Featuring specs like a 12MP 1/1.7″ CMOS sensor, a 28-200mm equivalent F2.0-5.9 Leica lens, and an electronic viewfinder. With usability and functionality a vocal point of this camera, the exposure adjustment ring around the lens along with Wi-Fi capabilities for wireless control makes this an all round design.

COMMON Autumn/Winter 2013 Collection on T Magazine Blog

$
0
0
23common-hellqvist-slide-JI55-jumbo The New York Times’ T Magazine has published an insightful piece written by PORT‘s David Hellqvist, on COMMON – the Swedish brand that has gone from strength to strength in its young lifespan so far. Founded by designers Saif Bakir and Emma Hedlund and based in the Southern Swedish city of Malmo, COMMON’s distinct aethstic is informed as much by the bold brand names emblazoned across the chests of t-shirts in the ’90s as it is by more refined high fashion lines. Check out an extract from the article here, with a link to the full story below.

Saif Bakir and Emma Hedlund, the duo behind the Swedish fashion brand Common, are buzzing on a sartorial high. After recently receiving the Scandinavian Elle Magazine’s Newcomer award — even though it’s not a women’s-wear brand — they’re now officially introducing their third collection with these exclusive images. The fall/winter 2013 season continues Common’s quest for a modern elegance while adding the uncharacteristic visual layer of repeated logos. “We looked back at our first encounter with fashion as teens; growing up in the ’90s, we were subjected to brands that took pride in emblazoning our chests with massive logos,” Bakir says. But there’s a thought process behind Common’s logo abuse: “It was both a fashion statement and a feeling of belonging to a certain group. It has come full circle to the point where we can laugh, wear it and not feel ashamed about it.”

Read the entire article here. Photography by Patrick Lindblom. Styled by Andrej Skok

Raf Simons on The Talks

$
0
0
Raf-Simons-500 Online interview magazine The Talks recently caught up with legendary Belgian fashion designer, Raf Simons, giving us a personal insight into his world, his early days as a design student and his thought processes. Simons comes across as a humble and astute creative personality, someone who, for his closeness to the fashion industry, exists almost as a parallel entity to it. Read an extract from the conversation below, with the full interview over at The Talks.

Mr. Simons, would you consider yourself someone that lives and breathes fashion?

How can I put this without being too critical? I don’t have so many things in the fashion world that interest me. It’s probably because I am so deeply into it. Often when you go very deep into something, you also discover what it’s about and you understand it better. With the art world I still have a lot of curiosity. There are a lot of things that I feel attracted to and I don’t necessarily understand them and that’s what fascinates me. In the fashion world I know a lot of the brands and the designers and you start to be more critical and you start to have a very specific point of view.

But isn’t fashion such a significant part of your life?

The fashion thing is something I do, and yes it is definitely also becoming a part of myself and my personality. It also doesn’t really feel like a job either: it’s a dream or a passion or something. I think there are things that I relate to more than fashion though, personal, private things. Like my environment, my family, my friends, you know.

I’ve read that the first fashion show you ever went to was Maison Martin Margiela. You said it was so beautiful that half the audience cried and it had a huge influence on you. Why?

Because that was the day that I understood that fashion could also be conceptual and intellectual, that it could be linked to a certain kind of social, psychological thing. That Martin Margiela show was in a really trashy area in Paris and it wasn’t in a building, it was in a playground from a black neighborhood. The parents had agreed to do the show for the Margiela company only if their children could come and see it. Everybody was expecting the children to just stay on the side and sit with the audience, but they didn’t.

What happened?

They started to play with the girls and it was a very, very different thing. Before my perception of fashion was a high-staged Americano, you know like sun tans, boys, healthy. Martin was turning it completely around; it was like they came out of a grave or something. They looked really different. I don’t have that background; my parents are very working-class and I come from a village where there is no culture.

How did you find your creativity in such a place?

One of the first things I picked up when I was very, very young out of a record store was work from Peter Saville, the early things he used to do for Factory Records. I come from a village of 6,000 people, so forget about Berlin, London, New York – what are you talking about? – I didn’t know anything. So I picked up things because of the imagery. We have to think back in time – no computers, no mobiles, no nothing – it was pure isolation in a way.

You never traveled when you were younger?

No traveling, never went on a holiday. My life was literally my street. And I picked up records because when you’re young, you’re into the bands. And what were the bands back in the day? The Cure, Anne Clarke, and all the new wave things. And then suddenly there were these things from New Order, Power, Corruption, and Lies with the flowers and the wreath. I was like, “What is that?”

Is that how you became interested in fashion?

No. I was in a college, you know, with priests teaching. We were not informed about what was possible. Until I was eighteen I did not know that you could study fashion design or art. I really didn’t know. I already had my nose in the art world, I was already looking at things, but I didn’t really get it that you could study that because my school was a very different environment. It was the kind of school where they want you to become a doctor or a lawyer and that’s not at all what my personality is.

How did you manage to get out of that?

I got this book from these people who would come to the class once or twice a year to show you what the possibilities to go and study are. In the back of the book there was a half page on architecture and a half page on industrial design. I looked at the address of the industrial design school and it wasn’t too far from my parents’ house – I could get there with a bus – so I thought I’d go and have a look. I walked through the door and I thought, “This is what I’m going to do.” I saw all these kids sitting there, with cigarettes, it looked like such a different world.

But that was industrial design, how did you end up in fashion?

Within the first months at that school I realized everything that was possible – going to an art school, going to a fashion school – and it was in that period that the Belgian designers started to shape up and I was very attracted to that. There was a Belgian fashion designer named Walter Van Beirendonck and I saw that the way he was handling fashion was not just by making clothes, he was also doing presentations and masks and furniture. I was so modest to think that I wouldn’t be welcomed in fashion because I was in design school, but I thought maybe I should just write a letter to see if he had an interest in letting me work for them and that worked out. He’s actually the one who took me to Paris to that Martin Margiela show we were talking about earlier.

It’s interesting because it feels like this combination of different but related art fields was always very present in your career and in your interests.

Yeah.

How do you deal with your star status in the fashion industry?

It’s not that much in my interest. It’s actually something that I’ve found quite complicated for a while. I’ve always kind of tried to split it up, but that is becoming more and more difficult because I’m attracted to do things that have this constant dialogue with an audience and it seems to keep growing. Which is a good feeling because that means that people want to have that dialogue with me or the things I do. So it is kind of fascinating, but the idea of fame just for fame’s sake is something that I actually hate.

Read the full article at The Talks.

A. Sauvage Autumn/Winter 2013 Collection Lookbook

$
0
0
A. Sauvage Autumn/Winter 2013 Collection Lookbook Drawing inspiration from the works of Jean-Michel Basquiat, the A. Sauvage Autumn/Winter 2013 Collection explores the designers concept of captains and natives. Combining elements of primitivism with the trappings of luxury, this is a aspirational collection that refers to the 1970′s graffiti inspiration from Basquiat’s own ‘heroic figures’ – athletes, prophets, warriors, musicians, kings, and the artist himself – as well as his personal demons.  

Keith Haring “The Political Line” Retrospective Exhibition at MAM Paris

$
0
0
Keith Haring “The Political Line” Retrospective Exhibition at MAM Paris Over the weekend Last weekend, the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris (MAM) opened a new retrospective exhibition of iconic Keith Haring’s work. Entitled The Political Line, the exhibition featured more than 250 paintings and sculptural works with a focus on the importance of Haring’s art as visual activism, highlighting the diversity of his socio-political views.

Slam City Skates East London Store

$
0
0
Slam City Skates East London Store

Here is a look at the newly opened second Slam City Skates store, located in East London this is their second store in the capital. Renowned for their involvement in the skate world not only in the city but all over the globe the new store reflects the image of the first while combining labels like Patagonia and Clarks Originals with your more conventional skate brands. Designed by Toby Shuall, the space also includes a showroom and design space downstairs for surging young label Palace Skateboards, well worth checking out the store if you are in the area.

Slam City Skates East / 136 Bethnal Green Road / London E2 6DG / United Kingdom

UNSEEN ANDY by Steve Wood

$
0
0
UNSEEN ANDY by Steve Wood Interview Magazine have published four never seen before images of the publications founder and icon Andy Warhol. Shot by renowned photographer Steve Wood, the images are clean, adding “I suppose I photograph people the way he himself would like to be photographed” clear and crisp with no evil.”

Wacko Maria x Wolf’s Head Collection

$
0
0
Wacko Maria x Wolf's Head Collection Here is a fascinating collaboration between two labels embodied in the scene in Tokyo, rock glamour inspired street brand Wacko Maria and highly regarded customiser Wolf’s Head. Consisting of two items, a Rider Jacket and a Ted’s Jacket, both embellished with various studs and detailing to create the desired effect.

Oliver Peoples x TAKAHIROMIYASHITA TheSoloist Spring/Summer 2013 Collection

$
0
0
Oliver Peoples x TAKAHIROMIYASHITA TheSoloist Spring/Summer 2013 Collection Having already taken a look at a selection of frames from the Oliver Peoples x TAKAHIROMIYASHITA TheSoloist Spring/Summer 2013 Collection, here is a closer look at some of the frames. Seen here are three different styles with two variations on a classic wayfarer along with a rounded design. Featuring acetate and alloy construction alongside icy blue lenses, bandana-patterned cleaning cloths this makes for another impressive instalment from the two.

Patrik Ervell Spring/Summer 2013 Collection Lookbook

$
0
0
Patrik Ervell Spring/Summer 2013 Collection Lookbook Simplicity done well, this easily sums up Patrik Ervell’s work and the designers spring/summer 2013 collection. Providing a mature look to “a California mindset” defines the season while the use of innovative materials are used to great extend to provide the traditional cuts with an edgier finish.

Air Jordan V “Grape”

$
0
0
Air Jordan V "Grape" The Air Jordan V “Grape” is a shoe and a colourway that needs no introduction. Set to make a release in June, all of those who have worn their last retro edition to death can reinvest.

Steve Olson by Patrick Pearse for Desillusion Magazine

$
0
0
Steve Olson by Patrick Pearse for Desillusion Magazine Steve Olson lives the life. He gets to skate pools, work on his Harley and puff fat biftas all day. I mean, you could do all that too if you were unemployed but it probably wouldn’t have the same resonance if you weren’t a legendary pro skater hanging out in sunny California. Set to a great jazz soundtrack, Patrick Pearse shares this video portrait of Olson in his latest piece for Desillusion Magazine. Press play.

Richard Prince Cleared of Illegal Use of Photographs by Appeals Court

$
0
0
26PRINCE-articleLarge A polarising legal case of artistic appropriation has been settled this week – in court, anyhow. In a case that has been ongoing since 2011, Richard Prince was cleared of plaigiarism and copyright charges by the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit on Thursday, who decided largely in favor of the artist, found by a federal court two years ago to have illegally used photographs from Yes Rasta, a book on Rastafarians in Jamaica, by Patrick Cariou. Prince used the photographs to make a series of collages and paintings entitled Canal Zone, that exhibited at the Gagosian Gallery in 2008. To cut a long story short, the appeals court came to their decision based on the fact that Prince’s work manifested “an entirely different aesthetic” from Mr. Cariou’s pictures. Canal Zone is of a decidedly dystopian nature. “Where Cariou’s serene and deliberately composed portraits and landscape photographs depict the natural beauty of the Rastafarians and their surrounding environs,” the decision stated, “Prince’s crude and jarring works, on the other hand, are hectic and provocative.” While the case has apparently found closure in court, it doesn’t end the debate on fair use or appropriation in art. In the initial case, where Prince was found guilty, the judge wrote that for fair use to apply, a new work of art must be transformative — that it must, “in some way comment on, relate to the historical context of, or critically refer back to the original work.” So of course, now we are left to ponder just how a piece of art becomes “transformative” enough to legally pass under the eye of the law. (via)

“Vertical Horizon” by Romain Jacquet-Lagreze

$
0
0
vertical-horizon-of-hong-kong-by-romain-jacquet-lagreze-5 French photographer and graphic designer, Romain Jacquet-Lagreze, shot these mind-bending photos of Hong Kong’s cityscapes, focusing on the high rise environment that makes the metropolis unique. Starting at the bottom, literally, Jacquet-Lagreze shoots with his lens pointed skyward, creating a tunnel vision of sorts between the surrounding skyscrapers. The photographs have been collectively published as Vertical Horizon, a hard-cover book containing hundreds of these images. To coincide with the book’s launch, an exhibition of Jacquet-Lagreze’s work is currently on display at AVA, inside Hong Kong’s Panorama Hotel. Vertical Horizon is available to order here.

13th Witness ‘The Classified Portrait’ Series

$
0
0
1 Photographer, videographer, and all-around creative 13th Witness debuts his apparel and art collection with his new series entitled ‘The Classified Portrait.’ 13th’s work regularly explores spaces and structures and now launches into a new medium of print portraits and apparel. The series carries the artist’s signature aesthetic into three different hues of color, ice and black/white on numbered t-shirts and prints. The Classified Portrait Series debuts at Shop13thWitness.com starting today.

Gizmobies x DENIM by VANQUISH & FRAGMENT Collection

$
0
0
Gizmobies x DENIM by VANQUISH & FRAGMENT Collection Here is an impressive instalment from the DENIM by VANQUISH & FRAGMENT, who have incorporated Gizmobies to great effect. Consisting of three designs for the iPhone 5 with a denim and border stripe design, a navy/red plaid, and a white/black blocked design each completed with the speech bubble logo. The Gizmobies x DENIM by VANQUISH & FRAGMENT Collection is available online along with a sticker that is designed to be placed over the Apple logo on your MacBook.
Viewing all 5711 articles
Browse latest View live