Fashion Blogs

July 5th, 2010 | Posted in: books

Slowly but certainly Fashion blogs are taking over from the traditional magazines like Vogue, Harpers Bazaar and W. The hottest accessory on the front row nowadays are laptops instead of sunglasses. But then a usual problem for the internet arises: Who is who and where do I find them?

That’s why I love the book ‘Fashion Bloggers’ by Kirstin Hanssen, Felicia Nitzsche and their co-writer Elina Tozzi. This book contains interview with bloggers and covers fashion journalism, street style photography, party photography, personal style blogs and men’s fashion.

This book is an essential database for every fashion conscious person around, and for your occasional fashion marketer too.

Yours for only €22,50. Get it here.

A Travel Guide To Anywhere

June 15th, 2010 | Posted in: books

While the print industry is going through hard times, there are people keeping it alive through their creativity. One of these people is Magda Lipka Falck, a student at Stockholm’s design and art school Konstfack. Falck has created a universal travel guide, suitable for every kind of travel, whether you go halfway around the world or around the block you live in.

The guide consists of stories and advice that will take you to cool places no matter where you are. Advice like ‘Ask a stranger which is their favorite street. Go There.’ will surely get you to places otherwise unseen. And there’s plenty more of advice like that, as you can see in the gallery below. The advices are available printed on flash-cards so you can surprise yourself while navigating foreign places.

I really love this book. Regular travel guides usually take you to cliche places, places you can’t afford or simply don’t really care about. The originality is hard to find. This guide puts it back into your own hands, and gives you a personalized and truly unique trip. Just imagine where you’ll end up. Awesome work.

Through Cool Hunting.

powerHouse Books Brooklyn

April 2nd, 2010 | Posted in: books, photography

When I was was in Brooklyn the other day, I wandered into the powerHouse Arena and was amazed by the quality of their collection, the cool photo exhibiton and the great looks of this store/gallery. powerHouse are the kind of publishers laughing at the fact that the internet is killing publishing as it was. In my opinion these are the guys who have carved a niche for themselves and are thriving.

powerHouse Books is best known for a diverse publishing program — specialized in fine art, documentary, pop culture, fashion, and celebrity books. I was especially struck by the quality of their photo books.

Since the company was founded in 1995 they have built up a massive portfolio of great work. So check out their website for the entire collection, and if you are in the neighborhood head for 37 Main Street, Brooklyn, NY and see for yourself!

The End of Publishing…

March 18th, 2010 | Posted in: books, marketing

Here’s an example of smart writing… Be sure to watch it past halfway!

This movie was created by Dorling Kindersley Books for an internal sales conference, but was spread because of it’s genius. It makes me wonder though what the vision of DK actually is. Do they still believe in print and do they just see new technology as a means of promotion or have they realized that the game has changed radically? That they are in the publishing industry and that the media consumption has radically changed and they themselves also need to change in order to survive?

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls

March 18th, 2010 | Posted in: books

Pretty cool that books are getting trailers now too! Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls. This prequel to the hugely popular Jane Austen zombie spinoff novel Pride and Prejudice and Zombies now has its own bloody yet proper video teaser. The book comes out March 23. Check it out below:

Through Vulture

Gentlemen of Bacongo

December 29th, 2009 | Posted in: books, photography

Photographer Daniele Tamagni has created a must have book: Gentlemen of Bacongo. The book is an amazing document about Le Sape.

Le Sape is a movement in West-Africa in which men (and a few women) dress in flamboyant designer and handmade suits and other luxury items. Le Sape short for Société des Ambianceurs et des Personnes Élégantes, or the Society of Tastemakers and Elegant People. A club we all would like to be part of, don’t we? Le Sape combines French styles from their colonial roots and the individual’s style (which is where the flamboyancy comes in). Le Sapeurs, as these African dandies are called, wear pink suits and D&G belts while living in the slums of this coastal African region.

Through this book Tamagni has created a great insight into this fascinating world of extremes. These guys take a love for fashion to the next level, as this quote illustrates: “A Congolese sapeur is a happy man even if he does not eat, because wearing proper clothes feeds the soul and gives pleasure to the body.”

As I said, a must have! Gentlemen of Bacongo is available through Amazon for $39,99.

Redacted Book Series by Colin Ford

September 15th, 2009 | Posted in: books

redacted seriesredacted-book-series-colin-ford-1

As you might already know, I am a sucker for post-apocalyptic and dystopian stories. That’s why I was exited to find the Redacted Series, a great little project from Colin Ford. It features dystopian novels with censored areas, much like you find on old photocopied top secret documents, which totally suits the stories of the chosen books. The books he picked for the series are the classics (and some of my favorites) 1984, A Brave New World and Farenheit 451.

THEY have made a restructive book

June 17th, 2009 | Posted in: books

When people grow out of a sweater, it gets passed on to their younger brother or it gets a new life with someone
they don’t know. Glass is recycled to make new bottles. Used plastic turns up in mobile phones. Over the last
couple of years more and more companies have come up with ideas to find new purposes for written off products.

Creative agency THEY designed a book for Lingotto. The inside of the book is entirely printed on paper that’s been used for test prints. On average with every printing run 1 to 2 percent of the paper gets used for testing. So printing 100.000 sheets leaves 2000 sheets of waste paper. THEY collected different types of test paper and printed 500 books on the backside of the test pages. THEY used Japanese stab binding, by which you leave the old, ‘wrong’ side on the inside and the ‘right’ side, the side you want to read, on the outside. The cover of the book is made of misprinted packaging for juice and milk. By using different packages and printing in small numbers, the covers are all unique.

For the principle of redefining things, like buildings or paper, THEY invented a new word, made out of existing word: Restructive.

A great example of creative recycling. See below for some more pics.