The World of 100

Super slick set of visuals by Toby Ng. If the World Were a Village of 100. Full set

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Parinto Looks Great

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Fabio is a Fantastic Man

Mag Nation have the new issue of Fantastic Man along with the debut issue of  Fantastic Man’s new magazine, The Gentlewoman. The Gentlewoman is quite good, quirky, elegant and with a uniquely modern but timeless aesthetic and point of view. That said, I was expecting more, but given that this is only their first issue, I have no problem giving them time to really hit their stride. It always takes any new magazine a number of issues to do this. Hell, here at PILOT, we’re close to deadline on our 4th issue, and we too are still developing our voice. This is one of the most rewarding things about putting a magazine together, you really do just kind of make it up as go, you get better over time, and thus the magazine evolves… Fantastic Man, for example, are now on to issue 11 and they enjoy a very strong following amongst magazine aficionados the world over. In their last few issues, Fantastic Man have started to do some really good profiles of unexpected ‘celebrities’, for example, this revealing piece on author Bret Easton Ellis from last year, and in their new issue, a surprising profile of that legendary specimen of masculinity, Fabio. After finding success as an Italian fashion model, he was discovered by the Romance novel industry. Suddenly Fabio began to appear on the cover of bodice-rippers everywhere. Fantastic Man explain that, “Fabio supercharged the Romance novel industry. He had the look of sweeping romance. He was literally the guy sweeping you off your feet. He could be a pirate, a highlander, anything… It was his bone structure. He didn’t have one particular look. He was like a prize racehorse.” Of course there was a backlash, and Fabio has long been the butt of many jokes, but after reading this profile of Fabio, I was surprised to find myself liking and respecting him. Fabio it seems, doesn’t take himself seriously at all, he comes across as decent, likable and funny. Recommended reading… Photo of Fabio below by Terry Richardson…
 


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Drop Knowledge

Fake Science is a tight new blog that uses some sweet illustrations to explain some of science’s many mysteries.

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Paper Surgery

We love this campaign for the Comme des Garçons shirt collection. The campaign is by American conceptual artist Stephen Shanabrook, and is a continuation of his paper surgery series. It’s such a smart, subversive idea, there’s a fantastic amount of tension in the image, and the themes are a perfect fit with the anti-fashion-industry vibe of Comme des Garçons as a brand…

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Becomes A Loop

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Kate Sylvester / This Charming Man

Kate Sylvester has just shown her new collection This Charming Man in Sydney at RAFW. Our friend, the ever awesome Katherine was there, she just sent us the above photos and tells us, “Just came out of Kate Sylvester. OMG! It was SO GOOD! I’m biased, but honestly, it was my favourite show so far. I would wear almost everything from that collection. The shoes were adorable. Everything was lovely. There were little lace socks on the girls, and big bows around their necks. I LOVED IT!!!” I think Katherine quite likes the collection…

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Life’s A Beach

Zippora Seven backstage at the Stolen Girlfriend’s Club show earlier this week. Photo by Katherine. Loving the Aztec-ish print on the dress, the print was featured throughout the collection, which was inspired by SGC’s Raglan roots. And surfing. If you haven’t had a root in Raglan, you haven’t really lived right? / Apparently there are a couple of storylines within the Life’s a Beach collection, described by SGC as “post-apocalyptic surf athleticism”. There’s a sporty element characterised by grey marle pieces, rolled-up gym shorts, crop tops and padded-shoulder T-shirt dresses that have a touch of the grid-iron player about them, and a feminine side, featuring the tribal print, where the focus is on dresses, flirty skirts and cute high-shouldered blouses….

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Backstage @ Zambesi

Here are some more shots by Katherine from backstage at Zambesi. Katherine says, “No eyebrows on the girls! they’ve put gluestick and foundation over them! Gluestick! The boy is Bruce Raubenheimer, he’s South African born but lived in NZ for most of his life. He now lives in Sydney. There were mesh hairnets on the girls, lots of sheer layers, and this awesome white skeleton key, glow in the dark print on grey marle t-shirts.”

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Rosemount Australian Fashion Week

Rosemount Australian Fashion Week kicked off in Sydney today. We’re not there, we’re in Auckland where we’ve just started the design stage on PILOT issue #4. A number of Kiwis are in Sydney, most notably Zambesi, Kate Sylvester & Stolen Girlfriend’s Club who are all showing this week, as well as bloggers Isaac and Katherine. Katherine is awesome, and she just sent us this photo of PILOT issue #3 cover-model Georgia Fowler in the middle of hair & make-up for the Zambesi show which is taking place, um, right now…

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Vintage Aesthetic

Fantastic movie posters by Brandon

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Super City

Good piece in the Herald today with Otis Frizzell letting rip on Auckland City’s shambolic approach to creating a logo identity for the Supercity. Auckland’s graphic design community were appalled at the idea of crowd-sourcing the logo design, with no proper brief or process to ensure a good result.  And then the judging panel, all good people yes, but no graphic designer on the panel? Big mistake. The wining design, you’ll have seen elsewhere. It’s not exactly bad. In fact, it’s exactly what you’d expect from a 70-year old retired commercial illustrator. As Otis points out, “It’s not his fault. I can’t stress that enough, it’s not about him … but the lack of process by the Super City. So we’ve ended up with a 70-year-old man at home designing a logo that looks like Girl Guide biscuits. It’s nice. It’s all very 70s. But lined up with the great cities of the world it’s embarrassing.”

Couldn’t agree with you more Otis / The poster above is an alternative design by Otis Frizzell and Mike Weston. Prints available here

Update / Endemic World have the video of Otis and co discussing the issue on TV7

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How Fresh?

Tobe Sneakers are the situation right now . . .

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The Red Book / Carl Jung

Carl Jung founded the field of analytical psychology and, along with Sigmund Freud, was responsible for popularising the idea that a person’s interior life merited not just attention but dedicated exploration — a notion that has since propelled tens of millions of people into psychotherapy. Freud, who started as Jung’s mentor and later became his rival, generally viewed the unconscious mind as a warehouse for repressed desires, which could then be codified and pathologized and treated. Jung, over time, came to see the psyche as an inherently more spiritual and fluid place, an ocean that could be fished for enlightenment and healing. His central tenets — the existence of a collective unconscious and the power of archetypes — have seeped into the larger domain of New Age thinking while remaining more at the fringes of mainstream psychology.

Had he been a psychiatric patient, Jung might well have been told he had a nervous disorder and encouraged to ignore the circus going on in his head. But as a psychiatrist, and one with a decidedly maverick streak, he tried instead to tear down the wall between his rational self and his psyche. For about six years, Jung worked to prevent his conscious mind from blocking out what his unconscious mind wanted to show him. Between appointments with patients, after dinner with his wife and children, whenever there was a spare hour or two, Jung sat in a book-lined office on the second floor of his home and actually induced hallucinations — what he called “active imaginations.” “In order to grasp the fantasies which were stirring in me ‘underground,’ ” Jung wrote later in his book “Memories, Dreams, Reflections,” “I knew that I had to let myself plummet down into them.” He found himself in a liminal place, as full of creative abundance as it was of potential ruin, believing it to be the same borderlands traveled by both lunatics and great artists.

Jung recorded it all. First taking notes in a series of small, black journals, he then expounded upon and analyzed his fantasies, writing in a regal, prophetic tone in the big red-leather book. The book detailed an unabashedly psychedelic voyage through his own mind, a vaguely Homeric progression of encounters with strange people taking place in a curious, shifting dreamscape. Writing in German, he filled 205 oversize pages with elaborate calligraphy and with richly hued, staggeringly detailed paintings.

Full Story / New York Times

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Every Bastard Says No

I just finished reading Every Bastard Says No, the story of 42 Below vodka. It’s written by Justine Troy, the partner of Geoff Ross, who you’ll know is the man behind the brand. The book itself is a good read, it’s an honest account of exactly how hard it is to build a premium brand from the ground up. It’s especially hard to do this in New Zealand, with almost no money, when every bastard you ask for help says ‘no’. Trust us, we know that feeling. 

If you remember back about 8 years, when 42 Below listed on the NZ Stock Exchange, the word around the Auckland party set was that if you had some spare cash, 42 Below was a good investment. I didn’t have access to any investment funds myself, but my father fancied himself as a part-time canny player of the stocks so I had a quiet word in his ear. He took great pleasure in lecturing me about the foolishness of youth and my naviety to think that this could possibly be a smart idea. In fact the financial market establishment in NZ sailed this same line the whole way through, and they tried to effectively block 42 Below from even listing. Four or so years later, when the 42 Below brand was sold, those early investors saw a pretty outstanding return on their investment, and even my Dad acknowledges that he got that one hopelessly wrong. Oh well.

The irony is that we’re now in the position of trying to grow a new brand ourselves. The product is right – a spankingly good, award winning new magazine title that people have really responded to. It celebrates the best creative thinking and creative talent and really, we like to think that if Geoff Ross was still driving the brand – PILOT is exactly where he’d see value in showcasing the 42 Below brand. But do 42 Below today (now owned by Bacardi) rate PILOT? Hard to say. We can barely get a phone call returned. I’m not sure if it’s irony or just the nature of brand cycles, but where once 42 Below was the new guy, the nimble brand with a quality product, a never say die attitude and some serious marketing street-cred – no longer. Today 42 Below are just another bastard who say no…

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Kick Ass

Haven’t seen this film yet, but Kick Ass looks like a total blast. Man. Rave review from Empire who give it 5/5, while Roger Ebert on the other hand, gives it 1/5. Ebert has a problem with the casual nature of the film’s ultra-violence and general lack of a moral centre. Harry Knowles at Ain’t It Cool News loved the film, and rebuts Roger Ebert here.

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This Is Happening

James Murphy’s LCD Soundsystem is about to release their much anticipated 3rd album and in a naive optimistic attempt to stop fans from leaking advance copies of the album, you can listen to a stream of the whole album here. After a solid listen through it’s obvious that Murphy has outdone himself again, This Is Happening is a stunning collection of art-pop-rock-dance with a genuine sense of emotional depth. Highlight at this stage is the rousing ‘All I Want’, a surging groove monster that owes a large debt to Bowie’s ‘Heroes’. From us, that is about the highest compliment one can give…

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twentysevennames

Wellington label twenty-seven names are growing stronger with every collection. Their upcoming Summer range Twelve was previewed last night at Showroom 22. The collection imagery includes portraits of 12 individual models shot by Guy Coombes. Designers Rachel Easting and Anjali Stewart are inspired by contemporary art and say: “Our summer 2010 collection, Twelve, draws on contemporary female artists who discuss the ferocious optimism of that 60s and recognise that while the battle isn’t over, it hasn’t been lost. Like protesters half a century ago, artists like Jenny Holzer state that even today, words tend to be inadequate. Using delicate fabrics, considered detail, and masculine cuts, this summer’s collection insists that the ethos of the 60s, where power through protest was an everyday expectation, should not be forgotten.”

To see all Twelve Twelve portraits go to Isaac

http://twentysevennames.co.nz/

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PILOT issue #4 is coming…

We’ve been working really hard all year on PILOT issue #4 and it’s just starting to come together now. We’ve been quite ambitious with this issue, which has caused a few moments of stress, self-doubt, worry and all the usual emotions that come out of the creative process – but we’ve now broken through to the other side confident that issue #4 will be easily the strongest issue of PILOT so far. This issue will have what we think is some very strong content indeed. We’ve worked hard to try and create a magazine unlike any other, and this issue will start to show this. It won’t be out until June, so we’d best keep quiet on most of the content, as we feel that the element of surprise and discovery adds a lot to the magazine experience. We are happy to tell you that we now have most of the issue’s fashion editorials and like the rest of this issue, they are looking quite ferociously strong! PILOT issue #4 will include stunning editorials starring a great cast of models shot by the following photographers:

Derek HendersonCarlo Van de Roer, Mackenzie Duncan, Karen Inderbitzen WallerCharles Howells, Stephen Tilley  & Guy Coombes… it’s going to be the hotness . . .

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Get Maximalist

Art by James Roper from PILOT Magazine issue #3

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