Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Happenings: Center Stage Artshow

WHEW! It's been a quick minute since I've updated huh? My apologies...I've been occupied with a brand spanking new job where I get to be a part of marketing some of the hippest new real estate developments on the island cheee :D Learning a whole new industry has been my primary focus for the past month, but I haven't forgotten about my beloved Native Creatives movement!

To kickoff my first August post, we have have the Center Stage Artshow!!!  Check it out at the Honolulu Design Center this Friday AND Saturday.


Not only will the two-night event feature some amazing art, but it's also gonna be the THE OFFICIAL GREEN BOTTLE WEBSITE RELAUNCH PARTY! You remember Green Bottle from back in the day...but now they're back, older and wiser and more sophisticated too! Check out the page and keep on checking for updates on some awesome news and events going on our island paradise :)

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Street Art as of Recent

My apologies for not posting anything recently. It's been a busy (yet fun) week, to say the least! So today's post comes with two goodies for you...

Ekundayo is a multi-media artist who is gaining quite the following with his surreal imagery and color palette. Recently he's painted a wall mural on the wall between Tacos Ricos and Kapahulu Auto Repair on Kapahulu Avenue. The eerily beautiful piece stems from a Hawaiian legend about the Owl aumakua (family protector). You can check out a video about Ekundayo's process via UMI Workshop here.

Image Source: Kapahulu Avenue.com

Also in local street art news, Kaimuki graffiti artist Estria and 808 Urban unveil their "Water Writes" mural at Honolulu Community College today from 4:00 to 7:00 pm. The project is actually the biggest graffiti mural in Hawaii to date and is one of 10 murals being painted internationally, speaking to the relationship between community and water. Today's event will feature a diverse mix of artists, musicians, vendor booths, food trucks, and community members, all together to celebrate this meaningful project.



Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Native Creative: Delo Dayondon

"Really awesome person" were the first words I had heard about Delo Dayondon from our mutual friend who had introduced us. And after getting to know him, I found out that "really awesome" couldn't be any further from the truth. The 28-year-old graphic-designer-slash-triathlete-slash-photographer-slash-blogger possesses a can-do attitude that seems to permeate into all of his endeavors - the most recent of which being his participation in a half-Ironman challenge a few weeks ago in Kona. Blending his loves for graphic design and athleticism, Delo even designed his training group's "Race with Passion" t-shirt, which they all wore during the 70.3 mile challenge.

Who better than an Ironman to inspire up-and-coming local graphic designers to persevere towards their dreams? Read on to find out about this talented Native Creative... 


NC: What do you do and where do you do it?

DD: I'm one of two Advertising Art Directors at PacificBasin Communications (an AIO Hawaii company) where I process and create display advertisements for our growing magazine publications. Outside of my "9 to 5", I also take on freelance design and photography projects under my own company, Delography.

NC: How'd you get to this point as a designer?

DD: Perseverance and a leap of faith. I graduated with a BBA in Marketing degree from UH and worked briefly at a large advertising agency before moving over to magazine publication. I worked both on the client services and sales side before realizing that my true passion lies in the arts. I dabbled with graphic design/photography as hobby so when a position opened up in our creative department, I jumped at the chance and got the job! Having no formal art/design training, the first few months were rough having to learn a lot of things on the job. Fortunately, I'm blessed to be surrounded by so many talented and nurturing co-workers and mentors who are responsible for helping me to become the designer that I am today.

NC: Describe a typical day in the life.

DD: Ads, ads, and more ads! PacificBasin Communications is Hawaii's largest magazine publishing company with diverse brands including a city, business, shelter, and family magazine (to name a few), so there's hardly a typical day. We basically work in cycles depending on which magazine is due to the printer next, and with just two of us processing ads for all titles, we have to work at a fast and furious pace. A typical day consists of processing ad materials that have been submitted by the clients, ads that have ran in the past, and working with our sales team to build new ads for clients that rely on our creative services.

NC: What's the best thing and worst thing about your job?

DD: The best thing about my job is being able to make a living doing what I love. Not many people can say that, and I feel very blessed to have art as a part of my daily life. It's definitely a huge part of what keeps me balanced and sane. The worst thing about my job is that it can sometimes be a thankless job. I don't think people quite understand the nature of our job and the amount of effort that we pour over our work.

NC: What's your favorite place and/or tool to create?


DD: The great thing about creativity and ideas is that it can come from the most unusual places and at the most unusual time. Any place where can clear my mind and allow me to focus on my thoughts is the most ideal. For me, it's usually when I'm out for a run or a bike ride usually somewhere along the beach or mountain like Ala Moana Beach Park or Tantalus. My favorite tool would have to be my iPhone4. It has everything I need - music to drive my mood, apps to jot down notes and ideas, and of course the Internet to do research and stay connected.

NC: What's one piece of advice you'd give to someone interested in doing graphic design here locally?

DD: Surround yourself with great mentors and learn all you can from them. These are the people that will give you honest, constructive feedback, encourage you to challenge yourself, and most importantly, believe in your skills and talent.

. . .

For more and inspiration and info on Delo, checkout his Delography website and also his One 40 Point 6 blog, which documents his journey towards the Ironman Triathlon. 

Friday, June 24, 2011

Happenings: Feeding the Future

Okay, not directly related to design, but a good happening nonetheless - This Sunday The Hawaii Independent, in collaboration with Yelp and Whole Foods, is putting on "Feeding the Future", a panel discussion on the future of our local food system. The event is taking place at Fresh Cafe from 12 noon until 3 pm.

The panelists, representing key figures in Hawaii's food system, will discuss the challenges and opportunities facing local farms, the next generation of local restauranteurs, and specific calls to action to Hawaii’s people.


Related to design however is this lovely event flyer/infographic, which depicts what a food-focused community in Hawaii might look like. It contains among other things sidewalk cafes, food trucks, active fishponds, farms, and sidewalk fruit trees. Beautiful! The illustration was done by recent UH graphic program design graduate, Jeffrey Gress.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Native Creative: Farida Ong of Evening Invitation

February 28, 2011

Farida: I was messing around and I made this lil bag out of rabbit fur…Let me know ur thoughts :)

Me: Cute! How big is it?

Farida: It’s teeny abt 10 in width and 6 in height…

March 1, 2011

Farida: Grey wabbit

Me: I love it in grey!

March 2, 2011

Farida: I added on etsy today lol crossed fingers

Me: Ooh! Fishloaves? I’ll search for you!

Farida: Oh no I called the line Evening Invitation

And this is how I first learned of Evening Invitation – through a series of text messages over the span of three days :P

Farida Ong is just amazing like that. I won’t see the girl for a week, and in those seven days she’ll tell me she’s worked as a stylist on an ad hoc photoshoot with some of Hawaii’s most talented designers, photographers, and models…or created an entire lookbook for a friend who wanted to try a new style of dress…or as in this case, designed and crafted her very own rabbit handbag line.
Indeed the more you get to know her, the more you realize that there is a fashion mastermind behind Farida's unassuming demeanor. In her early twenties, Farida worked for many years in New York's fashion industry, at companies such as Fendi and Audemars Piguet. After moving back to Hawaii in late 2009, she opened a fashion and vintage wares boutique at Samsung Plaza called Fishloaves. When her lease was up, Farida took the shop online, where you can currently find her at www.fishloavesinc.com. And it was only a few months after establishing Fishloaves' online home when she began working on her Evening Invitation project.

I was originally going to write that "Farida's most recent endeavor is creating five new Evening Invitation handbags to be featured in Matt Bruening's upcoming Summer 2011 fashion show."  But I've recently come to find out that she's also making a variety of unisex jewelry pieces for the show, which will be added to the Evening Invitation line. (See, what'd I tell you about this girl being amazing!)

Momoko Metzker in a MB jumpsuit w/ EI "Cloak & Dagger" bag (via Farida's iPhone)

Be sure to keep up with Farida and Evening Invitation at the Matt Bruening and Andy South Summer 2011 Fashion Show, this Friday at Nextdoor. The event will also be feature Alt/Air, Clones of the Queen, and Sicktyte performing live. You can get more info and purchase tickets at the Nextdoor website.
 

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

The Box Jelly, Coworking, and Hawaii's Creative Rennaissance

As much as I fill my cubicle with personal photos, post-it doodles, and plushies, there’s still something so blah about coming to an office day in and day out. I secretly dream of the day my blog takes off, allowing me to join the ranks of all those cool people you see at Starbucks and Fresh Café, laptop in tow, working on a client’s website design or sealing a business deal via Skype.

Now Honolulu's freelancers, independent contractors, and other mobile-office types have a new workspace to call their own – The Box Jelly, Hawaii’s very first coworking space! If you’re unfamiliar with the coworking movement, the term refers to a new way of working, in which people of different companies/industries work independently, but in a shared physical space. The way it works is that a person pays an hourly, daily, or weekly rate to have use of a temporary workspace.

The Box Jelly’s soft opening was this Monday, and I was determined to pay them a visit to find out first-hand what this whole #HICoworking movement is all about. (Thanks to @johngarcia for opening my eyes!) Upon stepping into Fishcake, where the pop-up coworking space is temporary located for about a month, I was promptly greeted by Hasan, who is The Box Jelly's Community Curator and one of the five Chaminade University-graduates / entrepreneurs behind this initiative.  

After getting the grand tour of the space and hearing more about how The Box Jelly came to be, I had to ask Hasaan, “Why would people come to here do their work, as opposed to, say, a coffeeshop?” He replied that unlike a coffee shop, the Box Jelly caters to your working needs. The space comes complete with your basic office requirements, which includes four shared work tables, a printer/scanner, a whiteboard, and of course COFFEE (or tea, if you prefer).

A little bit into the evening, my friend Jennel came to join me, and not too long after that, Rechung, another one of The Box Jelly owners, dropped by too. And that’s when the magic happened. What stemmed from talking about their business venture led into all sorts of creatively stimulating discussion. We talked about inspiration, logo ideas, Seven Pounds, brain monkeys, personal projects, Talk Story Sessions...and by the time I had to leave for dinner, we culminated in agreement that YES, there is definitely a Creative Renaissance on its way here in Hawaii, and that its growth lies on the shoulders of the creative risk-takers of our generation who believe that there's something more for us out there, should we choose to seize it.

I had left the space feeling great, not only because I had gotten some blog-work done, but also because I was INSPIRED – inspired from meeting new people, hearing new ideas, having good conversation, and feeling that sense of camaraderie among people of different backgrounds, but all who, as Hasan put it, can “see our better selves.”

And in that lies the value of the space. Sure you can get coffee, wi-fi, and a table and chair at coffeeshop. But what a coffeeshop can’t provide you is the opportunity to find your better self through the creative energy and collaboration that The Box Jelly and the Coworking Movement seek to draw out of us.

 . . .

The Box Jelly coworking pop-up space is currently located at Fishcake (307 Kamani Street). For more information, visit their webpage, like them on Facebook, and follow them on Twitter.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Sleepy Dreamer Fashion Design Classes

Attention, aspiring fashion designers!

Word on the street (a.k.a. from hapa | hale's always-wonderful Aloha Friday Scoop) is that Rebecca Waldron (a.k.a. Sleepy Dreamer) - a local accessory, fashion, and graphic designer and blogger - will be teaching a four-week fashion design class starting this coming Wednesday, June 15. Classes will run from 6 - 9 pm at BYU-Hawaii in Laie.

According to her blog, "Students will learn the process of taking your designs from trend concept to actual design to physical product within each season. Students will choose their favorite brand (or create their own) and design a small line of clothing/accessories. In the process we will learn all the terms and other important details. We will touch on other aspects of the action sports industry including graphic design, sales, marketing and production and what steps you need to take to get jobs like these."
 
Aaaand, check out this delicious flyer for the classes! Doesn't it make you want to go EVEN MORE??
 
 
 

Monday, June 6, 2011

Interisland Terminal x Sig Zane Designs "ITO: Interisland Travelwrights" | Piano & Bubbles Event

This past Sunday I had the opportunity to checkout the ITO: Interisland Terminal exhibition/pop-up shop put on by Interisland Terminal and Sig, Nalani, and Kuha`o Zane of famed aloha wear company Sig Zane Designs. Sunday's "Piano & Bubbles" event was an opportunity for people to hear the three each talk about their creative processes and inspirations, first in the exhibition/shop space and then at Nobu where we, as Kuha`o put it, "popped bottles" of champagne, which stimulated more creative discussion ;)

Kuha`o talked about one of his most "magical" projects - designing the cover for Lorna Lim's "Polinahe" album and subsequently winning the Hoku Award for Best Graphics last year. For the graphic designer, these magical projects are ones in which there are such a strong inspiration and chemistry between him and his client or team that the product comes almost instantaneously - a process which he compared to Jay-Z's ability to listen to a track for only a few minutes before getting in the booth and spitting his amazing lyrics.

Sig shared images from his daily life that have inspired his designs, such as the hairy Kamehameha Butterfly and the Kalapana lava flow (which is actually is only two days older than Kuha`o).  He compared his creative process to a hula chant. After performing and repeating the chant for many years, its words soon enough manifest themselves in a new light. For Sig, the same thing can be said of his daily experiences, which eventually take on a new life and interpretation in his prints.

Nalani talked about the migration of the golden manta ray, which inspired her "Kai a Lupe" (Sea of Kites) installation piece, as well as about other meaningful places and family heirlooms that continue to "ground" her. She also had a brief discussion of how we can understand Hawaiian art, which will all display a "power source" in either the piko (navel or center), as in the case of a Hawaiian quilt, or the po`o (head), as in the case of a warrior helmet. If the power source is not a physical form, the artist will give it a name and/or a song. This speaks to the Hawaiian belief that all things, animate or inanimate, possess a spirit.

What I appreciated about this event is that it gave the viewer so much more than his or her own personal interpretation of the art and clothing. We really got to find out what goes behind the work that have made Sig Zane Designs the success that it is, and also got to see the intimate dynamic between the father-mother-son team. Throughout their presentations, Sig would take a jab at Kuha`o over who caught a bigger papi`o and Nalani would ask Sig for the English translation of a particular Hawaiian word and reply, "Thank you, dear." It were those tiny moments that for me were some of the best parts of the evening. 

Nalani mentioned at the end of her talk that it is their team's ability to tap into their "ancestral memory" (which manifests itself as dreams, symbols, or deja vu) that gives Sig Zane Designs its "edge". I think that edge was definitely apparent on Sunday, and I am glad to have been able to witness it live.


The limited-edition print (here in blue/black), designed for the event by Sig, Nalani, and Kuha`o

ITO: Interisland Travelwrights is on display at the Waikiki Parc Hotel from 11 am to 7 pm until Sunday, June 12, and there are a couple more events where you can listen to the Zane `Ohana talk about their work. For more information, visit the Interisland Terminal webpage here.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

In4mation Continues To Represent for Hawaii

Local streetwear brand In4mation continues to represent for Hawaii in big ways. They've recently shared on their blog two epic stories...

A few days ago, MTV News aired a clip of an interview with rapper Lil' Wayne talking about his latest single "How To Love". In the interview, Wayne was sporting In4mation's AYA Hi Hat, designed by Creative Director and Mililani-native Rhandy Tambio. You can pickup your own for only $32 at your nearest In4mation shop. (The dreads you'll have to figure out how to get on your own.)

Image Source
In other recent news, In4mation has teamed up with Casio's G-Shock to create the "One Love" watch, which was released in-store and online last Friday. This timepiece is actually the brand's fifth collaboration with Casio.

“In4mation is excited to continue their ongoing relationship with G-Shock by introducing a new collaborative model for Summer 2011,” said Tambio. “For our fifth watch, we introduce a new colorway revolving around the island lifestyle and reggae culture. Reggae is a big influence worldwide especially in Hawaii. It carries a striving positive movement. The colors hold a strong meaning with Red standing for the blood we shed, gold reflecting the richness of the Green land we all live upon, trying to share and spread one common goal of living in harmony, One love. Also the title of a legendary reggae song to unite the people.”

Image Source

For more In4mation information, checkout their website or Facebook page.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

CMA Hawaii x FLUX Hawaii Magazine's Talk Story Sessions

Why didn't they teach me this in school??

You know the feeling...after maxing out your credit card...after dating a loser for six months too long...after learning anything the hard way...you sit there and think, why didn't they teach me this in school??

That's the exact thing I thought to myself after attending Talk Story Sessions, put on by CMA Hawaii and FLUX Magazine Hawaii this past Saturday at the Waikiki Edition Hotel. Thankfully though, it was successful local designers, artists, musicians, and entrepreneurs sharing these important life lessons, not the School of Hard Knocks.

The purpose of the event was "to promote arts and music education in Hawai'i with Talk Story Sessions, designed to educate, evolve and inspire the local creative set through interactive dialoguing." Each time slot had two speakers who participants could elect to "talk story" with. I attended the sessions with Nella Media Group, Brandon Reid of The Manifest, and Mari Matsuda of CMA Hawaii.

Nella Media Group is a local media company that specializes in magazine publishing and design, PR, brand management and creative advertising campaigns, and is perhaps best known for publishing the Chinatown newspaper and innov8 magazine. Speaking at the session was Jason Cutinella (the "Nella" behind NMG), Valerie Sanchez (the self-proclaimed "dream crusher"), and Chance Carpenter (the stylish architect turned graphic designer). The trio had a clever way of organizing their Talk Story Session. Jason talked about Vision - his personal vision of NMG and how important it was for him to partner with others that could help him fulfill and elevate that vision. His talk led into Valerie's discussion of Production. As the "dream crusher" and "email nazi" of the team, Valerie's role is to provide structure and to create systems for the company. She stressed the importance of keeping on track with schedules, calendars, and always following up. Chance rounded out the session with a fun and aptly designed power point on Execution. He discussed the designer's role of making his team's or client's vision a tangible reality, through at many times, playing a therapist or mind-reader.

Brandon Reid of The Manifest started his Talk Story Session with asking the crowd (and perhaps himself) "Is this really happening??" The owner of the Chinatown coffee shop/bar/art gallery immediately got the audience on his side with his honest disbelief that his successes have taken him to the point where we would spend our Sunday listening to him speak. He made us feel that he was one of us, just your typical local guy from a public school education and divorced parents...but one who achieved his amazing vision of a place that would serve the Honolulu Chinatown and art communities. He made us feel that if we persevere, we can make our dreams reality too.

This sense of realness remained throughout Brandon's talk. He talked about the death of his father, being duped out of his money, and people who doubted his dream to build The Manifest, among other life tales. Yet through his hardships and despite the nay-sayers, Brandon pushed forward with his goal. "What kind of man would I be if I didn't make things better?", Brandon had thought to himself at a point in his journey. He advised that if your idea will help serve the community, people will want to see it succeed and will put their $1 down to help you see it through.

Mari Matsuda is a professor at the UH Richardson School of Law. She began her Talk Story Session with stating that many people believe that our generation is apathetic towards creating positive social change. She continued with video clips of protests by young people - Arizona high schoolers, University of Rutgers students, rappers from L.A. and London, and finally Kauai natives in protest of the Super Ferry in 2007. 

The proof was there - our generation does care about social causes and wants change. It's just a matter of putting yourself out there as a concerned individual and banding with like-minded people in order to enlist that change. Members of the audience questioned, "But how do we make a difference? How can we protest?" Mari answered simply to start small. Start with a small, obtainable goal and get a handful of friends to support you. In that success, people feel a change within themselves - that they can make a difference and that they actually like that feeling. This "something small" builds the kind of imagination and courage that leads to big social change. I think she drove the point home when she asked the group why did we all come out to the day's event...because there is a feeling our gut and we can envision that things can be better.

I think the over-arching theme throughout all the sessions I attended was to make your life one that's worth living. Jason Cutinella said "At Nella Media Group, we get to create our own lifestyle." Brandon Reid asked the group "Why would we leave the things we want to do in life for someone else to experience?" And Mari Matsuda simply put it, "Just do it." I took away from these three sessions that if you have the courage to follow your gut instinct, you can indeed find that sense of personal fulfillment that we all are longing for. I hope to continually attend these Talk Story Sessions and will definitely be on the lookout for more positivity and inspiration coming out from CMA Hawaii and FLUX Magazine.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

In The News: Family Signature

A sneak peak of one of the t-shirt designs for the ITO: Interisland Travelwrights event

In today's Honolulu Star Advertiser, Style Editor Nadine Kam writes about "ITO: Interisland Travelwrights", the Interisland Terminal x Zane Family collaborative installation/pop-up shop happening from June 3 - 12 at the Waikiki Parc Hotel. The event will "highlight the unique and beloved approach that the Zane Family brings to their creative work as cultural practitioners and designers of contemporary aloha attire."

For the article in its entirety, visit the Star Advertiser webpage here, and for more information on the event itself, visit the Interisland Terminal webpage here.


Interisland Terminal’s “ITO: Travelwrights” is about to take off, with Sig Zane, Nalani Kanaka‘ole and their son Kuha‘o Zane in the pilot seat on a journey that touches on Hawaii travel, past, present and future.

Sig Zane is a Hilo-based designer known for his limited-edition prints that mix contemporary graphic elements with ideas rooted in Hawaiian culture and ideals. Kanaka‘ole is a Na Hoku Hanohano Award winner and kumu hula for the Hilo-based Halau O Kekuhi, a duty she shares with her sister Pualani Kanaka‘ole Kanahele. Both are the daughters of renowned hula practitioner Edith Kanaka‘ole, whose name graces the stadium that is home to the annual Merrie Monarch Festival hula competition.

Kuha‘o Zane gained his love of hula through his parents and is recognized for the street style he brought to The Cutlery and now to Sig Zane Designs.
The art and design event, opening June 2 at the Waikiki Parc Hotel and continuing through June 12, brings the Big Island family of visual and performing artists to Oahu in a collaborative pop-up boutique and art exhibition featuring a trio of art unveilings and talk-story sessions with each artist, as well as a “Piano & Bubbles” session that offers insight into the family’s creative dynamic.

It’s not every kid who’s willing to collaborate with Mom and Dad into adulthood, but Sig Zane said they brought Kuha‘o into their creative sessions early “and we’re lucky he still wants to eat dinner with us.”

“‘Piano and bubbles’ is a thing we do all the time. It’s how we come up with ideas,” Zane said. “It really started when Kuha‘o was a child. We’d sit down to eat dinner and we’d recap the things happening to us during the day or the week.

“As he got older, we took that one step further, continuing to meet and talk about creative ideas, hashing out what must be done to keep moving forward.”

Over the years, the family added a backdrop of soft piano music to accompany their discussions, with glasses of champagne that helped ideas flow.

It’s how “ITO: Travelwrights” came to be after the artists were invited by the arts group Interisland Terminal to show on Oahu. Interisland Terminal was founded in January 2009 by art-minded individuals as a way of helping Hawaii reach its creative potential by encouraging creative approaches to civic and social challenges.

Playing off the name and mission of Interisland Terminal, the family adopted the three-alphabet code for the Hilo International Airport, ITO, adding “Travelwrights” as a reference to savvy travelers who are able to move through the world with ease, speed and comfort.

Because their business involves frequent interisland travel, Zane said they care how they travel and what they carry with them.

“This led us to create a line of accessories that we would want to use ourselves,” he said.

This includes a range of comfortable clothing, totes, bags, computer and other cases to manage lives complicated by gadgets.

“Even a simple thing, like something to hold all your computer wires — how do you carry that? We all need these things as technology has evolved,” he said.

Linking each item is a fabric print, available in dozens of colors, featuring the imprint of each of the designers, incorporating elements applied with the ohe kapala, or bamboo stamp, on a triangular grid representing the stars that guided ancient Polynesian travelers. Within the grid are Kanaka‘ole’s stylized mantas, swimming in great numbers that would have been visible to ocean travelers; Sig Zane’s kaula, or canoe lashing; and Kuha‘o Zane’s graphic rendering of the braided rope.

In his own artwork, to be unveiled June 7, Sig Zane contemplated the position of being a “citizen of the window seat.”

“When we fly, everyone always wants that window seat, where they can see what things look like and get another perspective from the air. Taking off and being in the clouds is like being in the cloud of ideas. It gives you that time to be still, clear our minds, meditate and really see what’s out there.”

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

In The News: Project Runway's Andy South Produces New Line


Photo by Olivier Koning

In this month's issue of Honolulu Magazine, Karin Gallagher writes about local fashion designer Andy Southiphong, better known as Andy South. The article tells of the "lithe, soft spoken and unfailingly polite" 24-year-old designer's Waianae upbringings and his rise to fame during Project Runway last year. More recently, SOUTH by Andy South's Fall 2011 collection debuted in March and will be available for sale at Neiman Marcus at Ala Moana Shopping Center in August.

One particularly interesting part of the article was the mention of South's commitment to human rights in the production of his line. Last year, he made a trip to southern China to personally make sure that the facilities in which his garmets were made were all up to standard. It's that kind of ethic that makes this local boy's popularity even that much more great.

For more about Andy South and his work, read the article in its entirety here.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Project and Process: New Hawaiian Home

The Building Industry Association of Hawaii (BIA), the Hawaiian Electric Company (HECO), and the Department of Business Economic Development and Tourism (DBEDT) have teamed up to work on an awesome project to promote green building and living in Hawaii. Called the New Hawaiian Home, this project has gathered some of the leaders in Hawaii's building industry to design and build an energy-, water-, and resource-efficient residential home in Kaimuki, Oahu, all with the intention of educating local contractors and home owners about sustainable building. Amazingly, the home is designed to LEED Platinum and ANSI Silver National Green Building standards, and will also incorporate aquaponics and composting systems, edible/useful landscaping, and solar clothing dryers (aka Hawaiian clothes line).

A) Outdoor Dining, B) Solar Hot Water, C) Solar Photovoltaics, D) Energy Star Appliances, E) Ceiling Fans, F) Whole House Fan, G) Solar Attic Fan, H) Low Flow Water Sense Fixtures, I) Rain Water Harvesting, J) Low Voc Paints, K) Renewable Flooring, L) Low Voc Carpets and Pads, M) FSC Certified Cabinetry, N) Outdoor Covered Lanai, O) Permeable Landscape Swale. Image Source.


Landscape Master Plan | PBR HAWAII & Associates, Inc.
This past Saturday, employees from landscape architecture and land planning firm PBR HAWAII gathered at the home to execute the landscape master plan designed by Native Creatives Stan Duncan, ASLA and Micah McMillen, LEED AP of the firm. The team got down and dirty, installing the sod grass panels, flowers, herbs, and other plants, and stone walkways around the home.

"There was a wonderful spirit of kokua prevalent throughout the collaboration and implementation of the project's landscape," says McMillen. "Several local contractors put the competitive edge aside and worked together to make this happen, along with many of the PBR HAWAII family that came out for a day of fun in the dirt! Their hard work and dedication provides a wonderful opportunity to share with Hawaii's homeowners and future homeowners how their landscape can incorporate many eco-friendly strategies that play a role in creating a more sustainable Hawaii."




Photos by Grant Murakami, PBR HAWAII

The home is scheduled to be completed by June, when it will be ready for open house showings.

Industry Members Open House
Tuesday, June 7,14, 21, and 28
Thursday, June 9, 16, 23, and 30

General Public Open House
Sunday, June 12, July 10, July 17
10:00 AM - 4:00 PM

For more information, contact Karen Nakamura, BIA Executive Vice President at ktn@biahawaii.org, or visit the project's blog here.

In The News: Hale Piihonua

"Team Hawaii" - a group of students, administrators, and faculty from various disciplines at the University of Hawaii, Kapiolani Community College, and Honolulu Community College - has designed a "net-zero" home, one that generates as much energy as it consumes, to compete in the 2011 U.S. Department of Energy's Solar Decathlon this fall. The home is called Hale Piihonua, which means house connected to the land in Hawaiian. Architecture and engineering students came up with the home's design, business students are handling the marketing and fundraising, and culinary students will be preparing a meal from the aquaponics system.

For the full story on Hale Piihonua and Team Hawaii, check out the Star Advertiser article here.

Rendering of Hale Piihonua | Team Hawaii webpage

Friday, May 20, 2011

Revamped and Refreshed

If you have yet to check Owens & Co. at the corner of Nuuanu and Pauahi, right now is a great time to do so! The home decor/fashion boutique recently rearranged shop, and by the look of the sneak peeks shared on the their blog, things are looking as amazing as ever! View more pics of the newly refreshed boutique here.

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Thursday, May 19, 2011

Ginger 13 Launches New Collection

Feathers and leather and spikes, oh my!

Earlier this month, local jewelry line Ginger 13 launched its "Wild At Heart" collection. Owner/designer Cindy Yokoyama was inspired by nature, art, and music as she created this covetable collection which features semi-precious stones shaped into spikes, tusks, feathers, skulls, and chervons.

Here are some of my favorite pieces:

Crystal Quartz Spikes are oh so right!
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Olive Jasper Chevron beads - my personal fave :)
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Carved Feather Bone and Pyrite -  Loving the mismatched earrings!
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Wire-wrapped Brown Leather Hoops - now this is FIERCE!
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Purchase your favorite pieces online or at one of these fine retailers!

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Design Trends: The Groom's Cake

I admire anyone who can mix their passion with their profession, and that's exactly what Kristin Kato did with her cake making business, A Cake Life. After graduating from the University of Oregon, Kristin returned home and began work as a paralegal at an employment and labor litigation firm. In a couple years' time however, she came to realize that law wasn't the quite for her. Yet, as cool new shows like Ace of Cakes began airing on the Food Network, Kristin found a new interest in cake making and decided to take classes at a local craft store as well as at Cake Creations Dessert Haven in Manoa. From there, she studied up on cake design, sugar artistry, and starting a business...and in 2009, A Cake Life opened! Gaining inspiration from fashion as well as from her clients themselves, Kristin is able to create beautiful cake designs that have won A Cake Life numerous praises and awards.

On A Cake Life's blog, Kristin recently wrote about an emerging trend in weddings, the Groom's Cake. The blog post in its entirety can be found here.

This was a surprise grooms cake of a red Audi convertible. We handmade a replica of the couple's 2 dogs sitting in the front seat. The dogs were wearing a black top hat for the groom and a white veil for the bride. The bride asked us to integrate their special inside joke "MKT PRC" on the front license plate and their wedding date on the other. All the guests got the inside joke and the groom was stoked to see his surprise cake.

More often, couples are having two wedding cakes – the traditional cake and a groom’s cake.  As weddings often tend to be “all about the bride” a nice way to honor (or surprise) the groom is with his own personalized cake.

Accounts of the history of how the groom’s cake came-to-be often differ.  Some say the tradition dates all the way back to the 17th century where the cake was originally was a rich, dark, fruit cake made without icing.   Others say it was the top layer of the bride’s cake that was not served to guests, but rather drenched in brandy to preserve for the couple’s first anniversary.  Another story says the groom’s cake was a edible treat packaged individually in decorated boxes, often monogrammed with a couple’s initials and given to guests to take home.

While some wedding traditions have evolved (from groom’s cake to wedding favors, or celebrating the first year of marriage with the top layer of wedding cake) so has the groom’s cake.  It is usually presented at the wedding, and sliced and served just like the traditional cake.

Most often the requests we get are to create a fun “manly” cake reflecting the groom’s hobbies or interests.  They often choose a different flavor from their wedding cake ranging from Red Velvet with Cream Cheese filling to Devils Food Chocolate Cake with Cookies N Cream filling.  This offers guests a nice variety to choose from when it comes to cake.

Some of the most recent groom’s cakes we’ve created are as follows:
 
Lakers themed Basketball Cake and handmade figurines of the couple in their Lakers jerseys

New Jersey Devils Hockey Puck Grooms Cake
 
One of our brides sent us this photo which served as the inspiration for the cake to follow:
 
Michael Godard "Shoot the Wad" Print

Grooms Cake inspired by the print
 
While groom's cakes can be a bit more challenging to create, it definitely brings an air of personalization to a wedding.  People remember details like this, and that's what makes a wedding special!
 

Monday, May 16, 2011

Miemiko Atelier Launches New Website


...my very first Miemiko Atelier stationary print. It was 2008, and I happened to come across this beut' in now-long-gone Alliway boutique at Ward Warehouse. I had never seen a letterpress print before and was all, "Ooh! It's textured!" Since then, I've been happily adding more of Cari Nakanishi's Miemiko prints to my collection and eagerly waiting for something to manifest in her miemiko.com webspace.

Finally last week, my prayers were answered! A cute new site was launched with the help of web designer Kelli Harada of PinPoint and photographer Steve Czerniak of wag and snap. Find out more about Cari and her business, and shop the prints here. If you're a letterpress/paper/typography enthusiast like me, I'm sure you'll be hooked!

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Happenings: UH Manoa BFA Graphic Design Porfolio Show


Tonight! Tonight! The graduating class from UH's Graphic Design program will be showcasing their portfolios at Fresh Cafe (831 Queen Street). I like the how they used the Mac's "Command + N" (shortcut to create a "new" somthing) as their theme. Visit the website for more information about the show and the designers - including my buddy, Matt Higa.

PS: In doing this post, I came across a site that shares the background of the Mac's Command Key. Apparently in Scandinavia the mark used to indicate places of historic interest. Read more here.

Thursday, May 5, 2011

Happenings: Wall-To-Wall Studios' Nachos de Mayo


¡ARRIBA! Design studio Wall-to-Wall will be having its monthly "First Friday" party on First Thursday (today!) this month in celebration of Cinco de Mayo!

If you're unfamiliar with all the fun they have at Wall-to-Wall, you can catch a glimpse of it here at the studio's First Friday Happy Hour archives.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Happenings: Flux Magazine Summer 2011 Issue!


It's dedicated to Art & Design and hits newstands next Monday (5/9)! Exciting! Pickup an issue at one of these fine locations.

Monday, May 2, 2011

In The News: Fighting Eel to open up shop in Kailua

Pacific Business News reports that local clothing company Fighting Eel will be opening a store in Kailua, Oahu. A specific date was not given. The Kailua store will be the company's second boutique - the first being in Honolulu's Chinatown district.

My favorite look from Fighting Eel's Summer 2011 Collection

The brand's designers Rona Bennett and Lan Chung are prime examples of local designers doing it big! Not only can their simple, yet sexy dresses and tops be found in hundreds of boutiques around the US, but also are have been worn by such celebs as Paris Hilton and Eva Longoria.

Bennett and Chung
(Image borrowed from the Fighting Eel website)

Tidbit Extra: It doesn't stop there! Did you know that Chinatown t-shirt shop Tee Tee Bar is also owned and curated by this dynamic duo??!! (Not sure if this is old news for most, especially being that the two shops are right next to each other on Bethel Street, but I sure was impressed to find this out recently!)

Friday, April 29, 2011

Project and Process: Pua Foundation Seaview Property

It's interesting how certain projects seem to grow with you. In this post, I will be sharing one of my own projects - working with a volunteer group of young land planners and architects to design a conceptual site plan for a local non-profit organization's Manoa headquarters/scholar dormitory. When I first jumped on-board with this initiative in 2008, my intentions were mainly to find out more about land planning as a potential career. Now two and a half years later, this project has evolved to become more architectural in nature, and although I don't intend to become a planner or an architect, I still find myself learning so much, as concepts taken from the design process of this project are applicable to any type of design field.

OUR PROJECT

Since 2008, a volunteer group from PBR HAWAII & Associates, Inc. has been providing pro bono land planning services to local non-profit organization Pua Foundation. Within the past year, the group's task has evolved and been more clearly defined to
generate site plan renderings for a new facility, located on Seaview Avenue in Manoa, which will serve as the Foundation's headquarters, as well as provide rental units for visiting scholars to the nearby University of Hawaii; these renderings will ultimately be used as part of marketing materials as the Foundation seeks funding to build this facility.  

The challenge for the team is to design a dual-functioning building on a limited space that will also align with the Foundation's mission and deep Hawaiian values. The team will also have to take into account various zoning and topographic restrictions of the site. 

OUR DESIGN TEAM

Since the start of the partnership between PBR HAWAII and Pua Foundation, a few more designers have joined the team. Currently the design team consists of the following volunteers:

Tara DePonte, Planner and Landscape Designer at Helber Hastert & Fee Planners
Stevie-Lyn Kim, Administrative Assistant at PBR HAWAII & Associates, Inc.
Merrick Patten, D.Arch candidate at University of Hawaii at Manoa
Michael Shibata, Planner at PBR HAWAII & Associates, Inc.
Luke Lopaka Williams, Designer and Cultural Architect at RIM Architects
Melanie Wong, Planner at PBR HAWAII & Associates, Inc.

OUR CLIENT - PUA FOUNDATION

The Pua Foundation is a Manoa-based non-profit organization created in 1996 as part of the apology, redress, and reconciliation initiatives of the United Church of Christ and the Hawaiian people for the Church’s complicity in the 1893 overthrow. The mission of the Foundation is to facilitate opportunities for a deeper and clearer understanding of various impacts of the overthrow by engaging community dialogue and encouraging public discourse about reconciling Hawaii's past to its present to build a better future for Hawaii.

One part of Church's redress package was a 8,563 square foot parcel of land located just off University Avenue. The existing building on top that land was once a small church and now serves as the Foundation's headquarters. In 2009, the Foundation decided it would re-build the property and also add rental units for visiting scholars to the nearby University of Hawaii.

OUR PROCESS 

Values-Generating Activity with the Foundation Board Members. Before the design team even put pen to paper, we sought to get a clearer understanding of the Foundation's mission and the other important values that would be incorporated into the design of the facility. The team met with the Foundation Board Members to facilitate discussion that would draw out these important values. The outcome of the session were three Hawaiian values of Kipuka (sense of place), Kau hale (community connection), and Puu honua (retreat). Two other non-Hawaiian values would need to also be considered in designing the building - sustainability and economics.

Design Charette with Other Volunteer Designers. To help our team generate creative design ideas for the site, we invited ten (other) designers to a design charette in which each participant was given one hour to draw a site plan, elevations/sections, and vignette(s) of his/her overall concept for the Seaview property. Each plan had to take into account not only the five values that the Board decided on in the previous activity, but also the site's physical, programmatic, and zoning constraints. After the drawing session was complete, each designer had three minutes to present his/her plan to the group and the Board.



In a separate meeting, the design team was able to extract common design elements (such as entryways and views to the outside, site line through building, transitions between/separation of private, semi-private, and public spaces, garden/outdoor areas) that will at a later point be pieced together to form the refined plans.

"What's Their Story?" Future-User Profiling Activity with Foundation Board Members. While the design charette provided more quantitative design information, they now sought to unlock the more qualitative information - the touchy-feely stuff - that would make this facility special and unique to the Foundation and the other future facility "users". Each Board Member Participant was assigned a future-user of the facility (Foundation Staff, Foundation Visitor, Resident Visiting Scholar, "Wild Card" Visitor/Passer-Byer) and using all five senses, was tasked with creating a "day in the life" story of that individual. We wanted to know how the Board ideally envisioned each user to interact with the facility, as well as the other users there.

The outcome of this activity was the drawing out of different design concepts that will be incorporated into the final site plan. Common themes among all four future-users were a feeling of home, calming, openness, food & fellowship,  and methods for transformation of the heart. These themes may translate into such design elements as a large entrance and flourier, windows with views to the outside/nature, a larger communal kitchen, etc.

NEXT STEPS

With all the great qualitative and quantitative information collected from these sessions, the design team plans to meet internally to brainstorm and draw various development scenarios for the facility. In approximately one month's time, we will have three alternative site plans for the Foundation Board to review and critique. (During this period, we may also decide to hold a community meeting to present these plans to the Foundation's neighbors in order to hear their comments.) Following that meeting, we will refine the preferred site plan and finalize it for use in the Foundation's marketing materials.