Monday, August 15, 2011
Wednesday, May 25, 2011
Lux in the Eco-Age
Recently I’ve been dwelling in airport lounges. It seems in this eco-age of conservative spending and reduced carbon footprint, the luxury of travel remains one escape portal.
The need or want to go somewhere else prevails. We can scrimp and save by web hopping deal sites for good prices but we still want certain luxuries to sweeten the experience.
Our package deal includes meals or quality snacks and access to movies, music and games via our in-flight personal entertainment systems. I wonder why we kid ourselves when our personal entertainment system is merely a touch screen, the concept itself - a pacifier.
Aren’t we still in cattle class, with limited leg room in close proximity to other self-serving passengers? The fact that we can be satisfied and subdued by food, visuals and sound is sad in itself.
I can’t help but be tempted by the consumerism of airport retail. Isn’t that the whole point? There are copious amounts of things to buy, half pointless and fleeting but tempting none the less.
Maybe that is part of the romance of travel, we have saved and daydreamed about a holiday, we have been frugal in our search for a bargain and now we are here, the airport or transition room. We have money in foreign currency, how about a souvenir, giftware or chocolate bar to enjoy the experience a little more? Shame the token in itself is easily forgotten and misplaced.
For all the luxury and opulence of travel, there is the structure and procedure of security and due process. Post 9/11, the world will never be the same, for better or for worse. We still want to travel and experience the sights and sounds of different cultures despite our fears and potential threats.
The power of decoration and distraction!
The need or want to go somewhere else prevails. We can scrimp and save by web hopping deal sites for good prices but we still want certain luxuries to sweeten the experience.
Our package deal includes meals or quality snacks and access to movies, music and games via our in-flight personal entertainment systems. I wonder why we kid ourselves when our personal entertainment system is merely a touch screen, the concept itself - a pacifier.
Aren’t we still in cattle class, with limited leg room in close proximity to other self-serving passengers? The fact that we can be satisfied and subdued by food, visuals and sound is sad in itself.
I can’t help but be tempted by the consumerism of airport retail. Isn’t that the whole point? There are copious amounts of things to buy, half pointless and fleeting but tempting none the less.
Maybe that is part of the romance of travel, we have saved and daydreamed about a holiday, we have been frugal in our search for a bargain and now we are here, the airport or transition room. We have money in foreign currency, how about a souvenir, giftware or chocolate bar to enjoy the experience a little more? Shame the token in itself is easily forgotten and misplaced.
For all the luxury and opulence of travel, there is the structure and procedure of security and due process. Post 9/11, the world will never be the same, for better or for worse. We still want to travel and experience the sights and sounds of different cultures despite our fears and potential threats.
The power of decoration and distraction!
Guerrilla Design
I read magazines and absorb media in the aspiration of ideas, but this hope is rarely realised. Where has the adventure, risk and actual variety gone?
Every month, it is harder to swallow the endless showcase of the same brands - lifestyle products or design companies collaborating to increase their range or build new opulent spaces with other over-exposed designers.
Throw in sustainable resources and vintage references and the mass market seems to hungrily devour its ‘brand-new’ labelling.
It seems a waste for design media to ignore the outsider or young graduates who experiment rather than follow.
Money talks, innovation can walk.
In an over-populated world, exposure is the game even if fame is fleeting.
The web -coined as your own personal media source to showcase your wares is an extremely crowded marketplace requiring extensive advertising via social networking to grab attention.
Whatever happened to the whole ‘Act Local, think Global’ mantra?
We could re-discover the humble community noticeboard for a start. It’s hard to find these spaces in big city centres apart from the local supermarket. Posters are regulated by Bill Poster companies who own high traffic sites and therefore reduce exposure.
Now that I’m living in a smaller town, I’ve come across cork noticeboards with no glass or permission contacts to dissuade the poster of flyers, business cards or the next great design idea!
We are so bogged down with the client and brief relationship being the ultimate staple of every project. A need and its solution is how the world goes round but design doesn’t need these perimeters or methodology to exist and thrive!
One such cork board is in a suburban village shopping centre. The shops are in need of a revamp and it needs a cohesive re-branding to attract more mainstream shoppers. Putting the whole objectives, brief perimeters, client and end user considerations aside, how can this project be tackled?
If we want to experiment, then the concept would have no direct reference to the area or community that it services.
If that was our purpose, we may as well join the mainstream, be a drone wowed by the regurgitation of the latest ‘new’ concept.
The Nucleus of the Apple comes to mind as a concept. It could lead to something different and exciting wherever it takes us. The end project could be a water park with a floating bookshop docked to one side. Think of the possibilities!
Once completed, this project without a ‘real’ client or steel brief could be presented on this humble cork noticeboard, next to the local ATM. What presentation would be complete without the tagline of a website - savethevillageshops.com
Is it worth chasing glory when it comes with a price tag?
Every month, it is harder to swallow the endless showcase of the same brands - lifestyle products or design companies collaborating to increase their range or build new opulent spaces with other over-exposed designers.
Throw in sustainable resources and vintage references and the mass market seems to hungrily devour its ‘brand-new’ labelling.
It seems a waste for design media to ignore the outsider or young graduates who experiment rather than follow.
Money talks, innovation can walk.
In an over-populated world, exposure is the game even if fame is fleeting.
The web -coined as your own personal media source to showcase your wares is an extremely crowded marketplace requiring extensive advertising via social networking to grab attention.
Whatever happened to the whole ‘Act Local, think Global’ mantra?
We could re-discover the humble community noticeboard for a start. It’s hard to find these spaces in big city centres apart from the local supermarket. Posters are regulated by Bill Poster companies who own high traffic sites and therefore reduce exposure.
Now that I’m living in a smaller town, I’ve come across cork noticeboards with no glass or permission contacts to dissuade the poster of flyers, business cards or the next great design idea!
We are so bogged down with the client and brief relationship being the ultimate staple of every project. A need and its solution is how the world goes round but design doesn’t need these perimeters or methodology to exist and thrive!
One such cork board is in a suburban village shopping centre. The shops are in need of a revamp and it needs a cohesive re-branding to attract more mainstream shoppers. Putting the whole objectives, brief perimeters, client and end user considerations aside, how can this project be tackled?
If we want to experiment, then the concept would have no direct reference to the area or community that it services.
If that was our purpose, we may as well join the mainstream, be a drone wowed by the regurgitation of the latest ‘new’ concept.
The Nucleus of the Apple comes to mind as a concept. It could lead to something different and exciting wherever it takes us. The end project could be a water park with a floating bookshop docked to one side. Think of the possibilities!
Once completed, this project without a ‘real’ client or steel brief could be presented on this humble cork noticeboard, next to the local ATM. What presentation would be complete without the tagline of a website - savethevillageshops.com
Is it worth chasing glory when it comes with a price tag?
Labels:
community,
conceptual,
convention,
design,
imagination,
magazines,
mainstream,
noticeboard
Sunday, October 3, 2010
Diary of a Times Square Thief
The best things always seem to happen when you take a chance.
I think about going somewhere and see if it works out, the lights change in time and I get there.
I remember when I saw this movie, I had just come out of work and was walking down the street past the cinema, so decided to check out the listings.
There happened to be a documentary festival on and the title sounded interesting and starting in about 10 minutes. Had to buy a ticket!
So glad I saw 'Diary of a Times Square Thief' that day. Wish I could find it on DVD.
The plot tracks the filmmaker as he tries to track the unknown author of a old diary.
He finds clues in this battered exercise book full of clippings and ramblings of a man who arrives in New York and starts working on the front desk at an old residential hotel.
It makes you think about the impressions you leave on others. When we all meet hundreds of people in our lifetime, are there many acquaintances we really remember?
It's sad and a sobering watch, so want to see it again!
I think about going somewhere and see if it works out, the lights change in time and I get there.
I remember when I saw this movie, I had just come out of work and was walking down the street past the cinema, so decided to check out the listings.
There happened to be a documentary festival on and the title sounded interesting and starting in about 10 minutes. Had to buy a ticket!
So glad I saw 'Diary of a Times Square Thief' that day. Wish I could find it on DVD.
The plot tracks the filmmaker as he tries to track the unknown author of a old diary.
He finds clues in this battered exercise book full of clippings and ramblings of a man who arrives in New York and starts working on the front desk at an old residential hotel.
His journal chronicles his dreams and eventual self-destruction with the help of some serious vices.
By interviewing those mentioned in the pages, visiting the rundown establishment and its long-term residents, the filmmaker pieces together who this man was through his interaction with others and a hazy picture starts to emerge. But will we find out his true identity and what became of him?It makes you think about the impressions you leave on others. When we all meet hundreds of people in our lifetime, are there many acquaintances we really remember?
It's sad and a sobering watch, so want to see it again!
Monday, August 9, 2010
Afgans on a plate
Lately everyday product, place or event marketing seems to have a 'home-made' aesthetic.
Today I was in another cafe with an 'uber-cool' aesthetic (what can I say I like their pastries). There on the counter are some afgans, bite-size in scale and individually bagged with cafe-branded folded cardboard strip stapled over the top. Though priced at some exobant rate, it was the cynical nature of this offering which annoyed me.
Seems everywhere you go now, the 'home-spun' trend of marketing is at work. Here is nana's baking ripped from its wholesome origins of charity and metal tins and re-worked into a desirable commodity.
There seems to be such an overload of reproduced alternative culture in the mainstream, it's hard to be excited and truly inspired by the 'originality' of it. I wonder how alternative culture will counteract this attack and maintain it's underground edge?
I like going to alternative craft fairs, zine fests and flea markets, but disappointed it is so accessible and heavily promoted. I'd love to just stumble across a random event again. Starting to forget what that feels like.
Labels:
afgans,
alternative culture,
craft fairs,
mainstream,
marketing,
zine fests
Monday, December 28, 2009
Back-Blogging
After being AWOL from this blog for several months, I've been confronted by the long list of "untitled posts" still to publish.
Back-blogging is terrible blog etiquette but is incredibly tempting.
The hardest thing is trying to remember what you were thinking about three months ago. Was I consumed by world events, rude drivers, a celebrity reality show or general day-to-day life?
Time to consult the diary! Failing that due to lack of entries, there is only one thing for it - write without a seasonal reference or make it up.
Have I fallen into yet another blog faux-pas? Are blogs real-life?
It is pretty difficult to tell whether blog entries are authentic reality episodes in someone's life. Never assume is a golden rule in Journalism.
But let's be realistic, some entries are so boring they have to be real life. Reality TV is always better scripted. 'The Hills' is a prime example.
Least I have avoided the bad 'I haven't blog for a while, but will soon' -promise of delivery without delivering is shocking. Readers aren't going to hang round while you feel guilty.
Time for some time-travel.
Labels:
back-blogging,
blogging,
etiquette,
procrastination,
promises,
reality,
time-travel
Monday, September 14, 2009
Modern Life
'Sim City' was my favourite computer game back in the day. Creating a virtual city of power stations, hospitals and roads for the Sim population to inhabit.
I would always built the infrastructure but couldn't seem to attract an actual population.
Fast forward to Playstation's 'Sims 2', where the player controls Sims interactions in certain environments. I'd love to play the Playstation version but have settled for the mobile phone version.
Must say it is a pretty addictive way to spend time! Sims need your help to do everything possible but you can only control their lives inside the house.
I would always built the infrastructure but couldn't seem to attract an actual population.
Fast forward to Playstation's 'Sims 2', where the player controls Sims interactions in certain environments. I'd love to play the Playstation version but have settled for the mobile phone version.
Must say it is a pretty addictive way to spend time! Sims need your help to do everything possible but you can only control their lives inside the house.
Monday to Friday, Sims escape to work, but nothing seems to happen out there. They come home hungry, bored and unwashed.
All their interactions and networking happens in the home. Friends or strangers drop by unexpectedly or by invitation, usually after your Sim has bought a Living Room upgrade or Party Room upgrade.
Sims make friends and fall in love almost instantly after talking for only a few minutes. Next thing you know they are moving in together or married then divorced.
Most "friends" are able to get your Sim a new job. From chef to personal trainer to DJ, your Sim doesn't need a qualification to be employed just increase their skill count around the house and the job is theirs.
All their interactions and networking happens in the home. Friends or strangers drop by unexpectedly or by invitation, usually after your Sim has bought a Living Room upgrade or Party Room upgrade.
Sims make friends and fall in love almost instantly after talking for only a few minutes. Next thing you know they are moving in together or married then divorced.
Most "friends" are able to get your Sim a new job. From chef to personal trainer to DJ, your Sim doesn't need a qualification to be employed just increase their skill count around the house and the job is theirs.
Keeping up their energy levels, communication, food intake, washing and toilet requirements is one thing, but they also like to have fun.
To rescue them from boredom there are plenty of at-home toys such as a guitar, arcade game machine, TV or stereo.
We do live in a material world but I wonder if this is an accurate depiction of modern life?
Is the home becoming the centre of existence or are we still relying on real-life interactions out in the community or city to balance our lives?
Labels:
big city,
home life,
interactions,
mobile games,
modern life,
playstation,
population,
sim city,
sims 2,
virtual games
Tuesday, September 1, 2009
Plot summary
Another movie, another plot.
To save me from watching countless bad movies, I like to limit trash to only 50% of my time, I consult the trusty IMDb site.
If you're lucky there are some super spoilers in the synopsis summaries- basically the entire plot.
Came across the 2007 'I Really Hate My Job' and am hooked by this anonymously written plot summary.
It's half profound if it wasn't so dramatic by likening career paths to a car crash.
'Every day is another day closer to the day I'll never have to do this again.'
'Every day is another day closer to the day I'll never have to do this again.'
"Five women, one restaurant, one night, one birthday, one breakdown. Then the phone rings. A famous actor is coming for dinner.
'I Really Hate My Job' is the story of an evening in a café in London's Soho. As in so many jobs, nothing much happens - except laughter, song, rage, collapse, intrigue, cooking, lying, nudity, conversation, secrets, love, friendship, ageing, hatred, rat-infestation and the arrival of a movie star.
I Really Hate My Job. Who hasn't said it? A career. It's what happens when you lose control of a car on a wet road and it slams into a brick wall. You might assume they're just three waitresses, one cook and one dishwasher but they see themselves as an artist, an actor, a lover, an author and a philosopher."
Labels:
career,
city life,
dvds,
I really hate my job,
IMDb,
plot summaries
Friday, August 28, 2009
P.S
"P.S I'm going to the beach on Monday."
Found this line written in an old greeting card sandwiched between used books at tonight's Red Cross Bookfair.
Found this line written in an old greeting card sandwiched between used books at tonight's Red Cross Bookfair.
It was a faded, spotted with age Mother's Day card signed 'Love Antony'. Must have been a bookmark displaced from its final resting place.
I wondered what the significance of the post script was, maybe a bach at the beach or old family home?
It made me sad that maybe this was all the communication between mother and son in a year.
Strange to catch glimpses of other people's lives in a greeting card at a bookfair of all places.
After shuffling around tables perusing book spines and walking around others fixed to their spot rather than give way, I stopped by the 'Children/Young Adults' section.
Several years ago, I gave away my large (150) collection of a particular young adults paperback series. I had written my name rather largely in the first page of each book.
I spied some of these titles on this table and couldn't help checking if they were mine. Instead each was printed with 'Corrine Brunt '84' inside.
Wonder if they'll ever resurface? Reminds me of how 'Love in the Time of Cholera' was used in the rather corny movie "Serendipity'.
My final haul from this year's bookfair included paperbacks: 'Valley of the Dolls', 'Once in a House on Fire' and 'Dreams of Leaving', couple of 'Your Home and Garden' magazines and a 'Pretty In Pink' movie soundtrack.
Hopefully will actually get around to reading them rather than becoming my latest decorative dust collectors before the next book fair.
Thursday, August 20, 2009
Photo Blog
While drinking coffee last Friday, I caught this shot of the drink fridge with my mobile. The bottle is actually leaning against the glass.
We left the bottle like that, wondering whether it could be saved by the next door opener or if it was past the point of no return.
Next time we went it was gone and the fridge's stock had shrunk considerably.
Lately I've been capturing particularly random shots of life with this camera, only trick is to keep it still enough. I've come across random signs, pacifiers in toilets and daisies so have snapped a shot.
My friend and I already share a film review blog, why not a photo blog?
Its still in the planning stage, e.g. name/design but I can't wait to get it up and running.
In the meantime, I'll illustrate some posts with my random shots!
We left the bottle like that, wondering whether it could be saved by the next door opener or if it was past the point of no return.
Next time we went it was gone and the fridge's stock had shrunk considerably.
Lately I've been capturing particularly random shots of life with this camera, only trick is to keep it still enough. I've come across random signs, pacifiers in toilets and daisies so have snapped a shot.
My friend and I already share a film review blog, why not a photo blog?
Its still in the planning stage, e.g. name/design but I can't wait to get it up and running.
In the meantime, I'll illustrate some posts with my random shots!
Labels:
adventures,
city life,
coffee,
mobile pics,
photo blog,
photos,
picture of the day,
random
Alleyways and Tunnels
Change is as good as a rest, so they say.
I feel like I've been revamping my blog for a while, but just starting to see changes.
Behind the scenes, I've been adding more photos to older posts, designing a new header and generally pottering about. I should have been adding new blog posts at the same time, but there is always a price for creativity!
Anyway welcome any new readers I've picked up, thanks for visiting!
My blog is about being a city dweller- things that I've seen and my random experiences. I always find myself in alleyways and tunnels, hence the name.
My new header was shot when exploring an underground World War 2 gun emplacement above Karori in Wellington, N.Z. If I'm without my camera, I try remember the atmosphere and small details, it could end up as a collaged perspective!
I can draw with a ruler, so rely on collage to fill in the details. Any snippets I use I try to disguise their origins with colouring pencils, ink or by photocopying to fade the details.
For my efforts, I have many blunt coloured pencils and several overflowing shoe boxes of cuttings. Photoshop is the icing on the cake as it makes the image cleaner and stronger in contrast.
When I'm not being creative, I write articles, do fact research, bit of retail, blog and study lighting. What a crazy year 2009 has been so far!
I feel like I've been revamping my blog for a while, but just starting to see changes.
Behind the scenes, I've been adding more photos to older posts, designing a new header and generally pottering about. I should have been adding new blog posts at the same time, but there is always a price for creativity!
Anyway welcome any new readers I've picked up, thanks for visiting!
My blog is about being a city dweller- things that I've seen and my random experiences. I always find myself in alleyways and tunnels, hence the name.
My new header was shot when exploring an underground World War 2 gun emplacement above Karori in Wellington, N.Z. If I'm without my camera, I try remember the atmosphere and small details, it could end up as a collaged perspective!
I can draw with a ruler, so rely on collage to fill in the details. Any snippets I use I try to disguise their origins with colouring pencils, ink or by photocopying to fade the details.
For my efforts, I have many blunt coloured pencils and several overflowing shoe boxes of cuttings. Photoshop is the icing on the cake as it makes the image cleaner and stronger in contrast.
When I'm not being creative, I write articles, do fact research, bit of retail, blog and study lighting. What a crazy year 2009 has been so far!
Labels:
alleyways and tunnels,
blogs,
city life,
collage,
creativity,
exploring,
identity
Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Weebly Update
I mentioned Weebly, a free website host a while ago and have been meaning to post an update.
I'd nearly given up on it because it wasn't sitting right but today it finally came together, strange how these things happen.
Wintec's Spark International Arts Festival was on in Hamilton last week so I went to a few talks and events.
I loved working there as a PR intern last year as there was a never-ending buffet of goodies on offer, so to speak.
This year was no different but restricted myself to three events, which is a feat in itself.
I saw Helen Baxter- who writes the MsBehaviour files on The Big Idea website - all about utilising new media tools. Not surprising that her talk was about 'How-to-become-a-new-media-mogul'.
It was great, we know there is a world of possibilities out there, but its still inspiring to hear all about it.
A key point was the creation and maintenance of an online identity. I think the difficulty is keeping that identity cohesive. I've been alternating between citydweller1 and my full name for some time, but I'm trying to pull them together on all these social networking sites.
That's what is quite good about Weebly, you can start to pool your flickr pics, youtube videos and twitter in one place at least. My options are limited on a free account, but its still an actual site not just a blog.
Back to my progress report- still not published but oh so close!
Labels:
flickr,
helen baxter,
identity,
new media,
new media tools,
self-published,
social media,
spark festival,
twitter,
weebly,
youtube
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
Disco Underworld
The latest issue of Disco Underworld is out! For those of you who haven't checked out this creative online monthly magazine, it is definitely worth a look! Don't blame me if you soon need your monthly fix.
I started writing for Disco in April and have become a regular contributor. The video that I previously posted on this site was an illustration of an idea I had for reader contributions.
We interview people from all world with such unique viewpoints, its great to make an article out of their words.
In the August issue, I wrote about Amanda Ratcliffe, a Hamilton music photographer/album reviewer/radio DJ. It was really fun to do, her photos are fantastic and she loved the article!
She has also promoted it left, right and centre on her Myspace page, which has been an experience in itself! Hope it helps her profile.
Next issue here we come!
Labels:
Amanda Ratcliffe,
arts,
contributor,
disco underworld,
magazines,
monthly,
myspace,
online,
reader submissions
Friday, July 31, 2009
Gaslight
Saw 'Gaslight' at the local film club this week finishing off our yearly three film pass.
Reading its synopsis, I was easily hooked by references to atmospheric foggy London street scenes and there were plenty of them.
The basic plot focuses on a traumatised woman who moves back to the house where her aunt was murdered when she was young.
Ingrid Bergman does well in the lead role as she starts seeing and hearing things in the rather sinister house.
Her new husband convinces her she is going crazy and a young Angela Lansbury (Murder She Wrote) as the overly-confident housekeeper slowly dissolves her confidence. Who can save her now?
Though it was predictable, it built tension till the final scene. Would definitely watch it again.
Reading its synopsis, I was easily hooked by references to atmospheric foggy London street scenes and there were plenty of them.
The basic plot focuses on a traumatised woman who moves back to the house where her aunt was murdered when she was young.
Ingrid Bergman does well in the lead role as she starts seeing and hearing things in the rather sinister house.
Her new husband convinces her she is going crazy and a young Angela Lansbury (Murder She Wrote) as the overly-confident housekeeper slowly dissolves her confidence. Who can save her now?
Though it was predictable, it built tension till the final scene. Would definitely watch it again.
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Flat shopping
Been shopping for a flat to rent via Trademe recently. Not actually moving till there is a proper job offer, but it doesn't hurt to see what is out there.
Started off in selected areas and now roam the country with my mouse in the $250 weekly price range. One photo of the property doesn't really cut it, three or more is my minimum to even click on the ad. Then I can get a better idea of the whole flat.
Some don't know how to download big enough photos or how to rotate them! Have to turn 90 degrees to see the flat, I know I'm dedicated.
If they list the address and I'm tempted, I'll look at it virtually on Google Earth and size up the neighbourhood.
Unfortunately the majority look so grotty, they would have to pay me to move in! Or the wording of the summary is strange and unsettling.
One I looked at specified a male tenant as there wasn't enough room for excess female items, charming!
Still I'm addicted, the perfect flat is out there- just a matter of finding it.
Started off in selected areas and now roam the country with my mouse in the $250 weekly price range. One photo of the property doesn't really cut it, three or more is my minimum to even click on the ad. Then I can get a better idea of the whole flat.
Photos can be shots of just the outside, carpet, doors or windows, but not the actual room. A picture says a thousand words, if you look closely at the fittings and finishes they indicate the age and condition of the property.
Some don't know how to download big enough photos or how to rotate them! Have to turn 90 degrees to see the flat, I know I'm dedicated.
If they list the address and I'm tempted, I'll look at it virtually on Google Earth and size up the neighbourhood.
Most flats are vacant during their glamorous photo shoot but some are still occupied, giving a hint of the tenants' personality and culture. The more stuff in the shot, the bigger indication that there is little to no storage space.
Some vendors are cunning and have an alluring picture but rather disappointing summary. In the summary, it becomes more obvious that it's either a boarding house or a bedsit, studio or cupboard with toilets available at the local shops.Unfortunately the majority look so grotty, they would have to pay me to move in! Or the wording of the summary is strange and unsettling.
One I looked at specified a male tenant as there wasn't enough room for excess female items, charming!
Still I'm addicted, the perfect flat is out there- just a matter of finding it.
Labels:
flats,
google earth,
online ads,
photos,
renting,
shopping,
trademe
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