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    Entries from January 1, 2012 - January 31, 2012

    Friday
    Jan272012

    January In Pics

    Simon and Dave working on the Back2Basics exhibition2.8 Days Later media judges screeningICS PimpinShang-Ting helping out with the Back2Basics exhibition Happy chinese new year! Celebrating with a 'BBQ'Years Of Back2BasicsWe love charming things like this around the city!Great Monday meeting with some great young minds, nice food too :)Our good luck gift from Dave BeerMarket Sweeties are for winners!Despite their rubbish chargers, we can't resistDJ MAG article on best flyers ever... good timing!Billy Bad-Ass returning to form with the brandy ;)

    Wednesday
    Jan252012

    STP's Far East Feature: 2011 Men's Top 10 Trends @ Tokyo Harajuku

    Since I've been living in the East and the West for the past 6 years, it's always an hobby (and also my job) to observate the fashion between both sides. I found a survey done by Japan's street style/ trend report website Fashionsnap.com, and I thought it might be fun to show people last year's top 10 biggest trend in Tokyo's fashion central, Harajuku.

     

    Super Short Shorts

    Cotton shorts became popular in 2010, but in 2011, they are even shorter! How short is super short? The key is to be at least beyond the knees. In the spring, summer, Harajuku men were embracing men's hot pants and showing off their lean legs that would even make girls jealous.

     

    Kilt/ Tartan Skirt

    Since 2008, man's skirt trend started to appear in Harajuku. Since tartan was a popular element last year, obviously men in skirts became the much more manly, men in kilt.

     

    Side Parting

    2011's theme was "Classic", approximately 8:2 ratio side parting hair style was very popular. Maybe Harajuku was also blown by Mad Men's stylish wind?

     

    Bicycle

    More and more guys on the street of Harajuku can be seen with a bicycle. The boom happened after the big earthquake struck Japan last year and many people couldn't get home without the metro. Now people are persuing a more fashionable, environment friendly lifestyle. 

     

    Denim on Denim

    This late 80s till 90s trend has been popular amongst the girls in Harajuku since 2008, but in 2011, the men are owning this look.

     

    Platform

    Men's high heels was a big trend in 2010, in 2011, thanks to Parda's S/S men's platform shoes, Harajuku men tried many different material platforms. This kinda punk-y look was also favoured by girls.

     

    MCM

    German luxury brand Mode Creation Munich became one of the hottest brand in Harajuku last year, the reason they became trendy again was because they re-branded themselves to a more street trend brand by collaborating with some of the coolest designers and bloggers from Harajuku. A luxury brand to a street brand, good strategy.

     

    1 Time Fold Up

    To give a slim silhouette a final finish is to follow Harajuku's golden "1 Time Fold Up" rule. In the summer guys can show their ankles, in the winer, they chose a bright colour socks to give it a twist.

     

    Sweatpants

    How hard is to wear sweatpants cool? It's probably as hard as trying to make a men's brief a fashion item. But it might just be because it's a difficult challenge, it became creative Harajuku men's popular element last year. The important note is to match them with formal wear or harder material. The guys looked quite playful, don't you think?

     

    Sets

    The idea is to use flashy patterns but traditional suit wear to create a contrast and bold look. Denim on Denim can also fall in this category, but by using patterns and textiles it's even more advanced. Isn't the old man on the right the pimpest but in the same time the cutest old man you've ever seen?

    Source & images from Fashionsnap.com
    Monday
    Jan232012

    BIRTHDAY BASH @ TEMPLE WORKS

    ICS playing a special live set

    In December the rest of the Hebe team surprised me with a birthday party at Temple Works. The guys created an amazing set based on The Palace in Barcelona and everything was perfect: Rogan on the decks, a live performance from ICS and much more!

    I want to say a big "thanks" to the team for organising the bash. Shang Ting, Stacey and Simon were like ninjas in the night keeping everything away from me and it was a genuine surprise. Big love to everyone who came too, you made it an ace night!

    Check out some of the pics below. Rumor has it a video is on the way soon too ;)

    I had to get back behind the decks for the special occasion :)The original Palace in BarcelonaThe original 'Booth of Love' in BarcaThe Palace recreated in Leeds!The booth in Leeds!Big love to everyone who came!

    Thursday
    Jan052012

    Do or DIY - a new project announcement


    We are pleased to announce that York based information as material, an artists collective that includes our very own Simon Zimmerman, have been offered a month long exhibition at one of the world's most prestigious contemporary art galleries, the Whitechapel.


    The exhibition will consolidate a year long programme undertaken by information as material as the gallery's 'Writers in Residence', and will be based on an essay, entitled Do or DIY, written by information as material as the foreword to the 2011 London Art Book Fair.

    Do or DIY uncovers a hidden history of DIY publishing that begins (in the essay, at least) with Laurence Sterne (1713-68) and ending (for now, at least) with Kathy Acker (1947-97). It concludes with call-to-action that captures the ethos of the forthcoming exhibition: "Don't wait for others to validate your ideas. Do it yourself."

    In addition the exhibition, which will open in London in spring 2012, has been selected by the crowdfunding platform wedidthis.org.uk as one of the nine projects it will promote throughout January, with a fundraising target of £1,500. You can donate as little or as much as you like, but for donations over £50 people will receive a signed copy of the accompanying publication with a printed credit (Thanks to...), and for donations over £500 the publication will be hand-printed - only three of these will ever be made.

    More to follow on the exhibition in February.

    Tuesday
    Jan032012

    Hebe has left the building… a BIG move for 2012!

    Happy New Year - 2012 is here, it's going to be huge and it starts with a big move for Hebe Media.

    The team at Hebe have all had a break, with two heading off to sail the high seas of the Caribbean and another doing some serious quality control on Cancun's Tequila. I was left here to hibernate (cue violins) with the help of a bottle of Hendricks, and to keep any eye on things between drinks.

    The break for Christmas came at a pretty critical time in our development as Hebe Media. We've spent the last year laying the foundations for a number of initiatives and relationships that we always saw coming to fruition early on in 2012. Our predictions were right, and we look forward to making a series of announcements on the blog, throughout January and February, starting today.

    Hebe Media has never really had a home (okay, you can put the violins away now!) The team has lived and worked all over the UK, as well as internationally. We've tended to work remotely using technology to communicate and share, and then coming together at key moments to make things happen. One of the upsides to this way of working is that it facilitates free movement of people and ideas ('work is an activity, not a destination'), and for us this has meant we've been able to collaborate with loads of interesting people and brands, in all-places. The downside to working remotely, though, is that the social side of things can fall-short (remote working can be remote). When you only see one another when activity demands it, it can be hard to foster the kinds of cultures and behaviours we have always wanted for the Hebe family; 'family' being the operative word. 

    When, in 2010, we found ourselves in the same city at the same time, for the first time since we started the company in 2003, Lee and I decided that we should take an office and we found an out-of-town space in Tadcaster. Our first office at Commer House was very good to us. However, as we grew through 2010/11 - developing more and more relationships and opportunities in Leeds city centre - we found ourselves visiting the office less and less, and reverting to our remote working way of life. It wasn't just our location, though, that had an impact on the time we spent in the office. From the very early days of being in Tadcaster, we'd started to talk about what our dream work space would be like, running a series of idea generation workshops to map out the blue-print for the ideal Hebe Media headquarters. Inevitably, it had everything that we didn't have in Tadcaster (it was a large open space that could be reorganised for different purposes; it had a photo studio; it was shared with a wide range of creative people and businesses; it had a social space so it could be used to throw parties but also had quiet spaces where you could focus on work at key times... and so on.) From very early on the blueprint was of a multi-purpose, studio environment shared with likeminded creative people. It would be a place where collaboration took place as a matter of course, and where 'the collective' made a support system and shared infrastructure possible and practical. 

    Informed by our work with Hyper Island and our own experiences attending and working with art and design schools, as well as an ongoing conversation with Imran Ali and Leeds City Council, we began to wonder whether such a space might also have an educational function and become a catalyst for innovation and action, in and for the City - what would happen if you pulled a groups of incredibly bright and brilliant creative people into a space like this, and then challenged them to think differently about a wide range of creative problems. So, we began to modify the blueprint, moving away from a studio / workspace and towards the idea of a 'deisgn institute'. I will drop a marker in the sand at this point, because an announcement about the development of that institute will be made on the blog in the not-too-distant future. 

    Midway through 2011, Lee was introduced to Laura Wellington and James Abbott-Donnelly, the duo behind the recently opened Duke Studios. When Lee reported back to the team about the plans for Duke Studios it was immediately apparent to everyone here that it matched (okay, it won't have a 1980's arcade or catwalk, but you can't have everything!), and went beyond what we had begun to map out when thinking about our ideal home. To boot, Duke Studios was in Munro House, a building whose doors we found ourselves passing though with some frequency during the latter half of 2011 to meet friends, plan projects and participate in events.

    In October 2011, following a period of correspondence with Laura and James about the fit between Duke Studios, Hebe Media and other residents who'd been considered and made it through the application process, we received an invitation to take up residence in one of the large studio spaces in Duke Studios. 

    Our studio, midway through construction. Image by Laura Wellington's iPhone

    We'll be moving into Duke Studios on 12th January 2012. We've already had the pleasure of meeting some of our new neighbours (full details here) and look forward to meeting more in the coming weeks and months - the scope for collaboration with those we've met is already clear. The video at the top of this post was circulated by Duke Studios in December, as a way to introduce the first five settlers. It also gives you an idea of the Duke environment. For the full tour, though, drop by and say hello!

    For Hebe Media, 2012 is set to be a defining year. It begins with a big move into a huge new home. Huge in terms of size, but also in terms of its potential... nine days and counting!