Fashion x Tech: Fashion, but not where you expected it
Monday, 2 May 2016
With an average London Fashion Week show costing around £200,000 and major brands like Chanel and Christian Dior spending millions each season, it's no surprise that many designers are now looking at new, innovative ways to present their collections. This is, in part, a result of brands increasingly looking at ways to save money, without sacrificing their reach and appeal. Previously living in fear of diluting their brand, or tarnishing its status, fashion houses are now looking at new, often unorthodox ways of reaching vast audiences.
Labels:
apple,
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pornhub,
showstudio,
technology,
tom ford
Gender Fluidity in Fashion: Just the beginning
Thursday, 28 April 2016
A love letter to Whitecross Street
Sunday, 21 February 2016
Whitecross Street, Islington, is just around the corner from the Old Street roundabout and is the beautiful street on which I used to live (in, admittedly, a not-so-beautiful flat).
Having said that, I absolutely adored living there and frequently go back to visit purely for nostalgic reasons. Whitecross Street is home to some of the best street food in London, with a market which takes up the entire street from 11am to 3pm, Monday-Friday.
Labels:
coffee,
cozzo,
fix,
fix coffee,
food,
food porn,
islington,
london,
market,
park,
review,
shoreditch,
street food,
the iskele,
whitecross street
The Foodie Hotspots of Cape Town
Tuesday, 9 February 2016

I have been calling Cape Town a second home for 13 years now and I each time I visit I fall in love with it all over again. One of the many, many, reasons I love it there is the food. So much variety, such high quality, and freshness that I've not experienced elsewhere (after almost 8 years in London, I was beginning to forget what fresh food really tasted like).
There are always new places cropping up and over the past 2 years in particular there's been a huge surge in small, local businesses thriving. With markets and fairs giving students and novices alike a platform on which to be seen by locals and tourists, the outcry for something home-grown and honest is being answered. Living in a society dominated by chains and franchises, it's so inspiring to see people going it alone and creating a business, be it a coffee shop or a food stall, out of the sheer love of it.
I've recently noticed more and more people booking trips to Cape Town so I thought I'd impart some advice and give some much-deserved shout outs to my favourite places to eat and drink in and around the beautiful city.
Labels:
brunch,
cape town,
coffee,
espresso lab,
feat socks,
food porn,
foodie,
hout bay,
hout bay market,
interiors porn,
knead,
market,
neighbourgoods,
pop up,
review,
south africa,
start up,
truth coffee
10 Years of "Scissor Sisters" - An appreciation.
Wednesday, 5 February 2014
"Scissor Sisters" by Scissor Sisters
10 years ago this week saw the release of what is still my favourite album of all time.
I was 13 years old. My father went on a road trip down the east coast of the US with his best mate. Both of them moustachioed and riding Harleys (such badasses) and there I was pleading with my father to bring this album back with him for me, as it was released stateside long before it was released here in the U.K.
In my childlike naiveté I was excited to hear more from Scissor Sisters, they seemed fun, I heard their haunting cover of "Comfortably Numb" first and it was unlike anything I'd ever heard before and then I heard "Laura", the intro to which I thought sounded like the theme music to Thomas the Tank Engine, which was nice.
Beyond the children's TV similarities, the album was a sweet shop of camp and nostalgically referential treats. A blend of 70s Disco and 80s Rock some how sounded modern. It felt raw, a glittery sequin blade cutting through 90s and early 00s pop, it was like nothing else at the time. Having grown up listening to Elton John, the prospect of a modernised, more explicit, but equally as flamboyant act was too tantalising for words.
"Scissor Sisters" was the first album I ever knew every single word to. Every word of every song memorised and sang aloud. Coincidentally, it was also the very first album on which I genuinely loved every track and could listen to it from start to finish without skipping. Man, I wore that CD out in my Sony Walkman. I'm surprised it still works (the CD that is, the Walkman is sadly, long gone *longing face*)
Labels:
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ana matronic,
anniversary,
born this way,
decade,
elton john,
equal rights,
gay,
gorgeous,
it gets better,
jake shears,
lady gaga,
Music,
new york,
san francisco,
scissor sisters,
ten years,
tenth,
youtube
Adapt To Survive
Tuesday, 11 December 2012
Labels:
cardiff,
chandler,
christmas,
diary,
good advice,
graduate,
ideas,
jack murphy,
life,
living with parents,
london,
me,
misc,
money,
moving home,
relationship
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