Archive for the ‘Pop Culture’ Category

Year two: cotton and zombies…


2011
02.28
Zombie warning signs: convincing

Yes, that means you!

In these trying times it’s important to be prepared for every eventuality. We all need a bit of a fortress, a metaphorical Fort Klapperkop to hide in after a crappy day, a hidey-hole that protects us against the stresses and trials and tribulations of modern society. And the greatest of these three? Zombies.

Zombie voodoo dolls

Don't let the sweet little heart fool you!

Zombies aren’t known for their finesse, so it’s best to use a very straightforward way to warn them off. Red is a good colour, bold and eye-catching. Cotton is absorbent – you don’t know when things might get splattery.

It also helps to have a partner in imagination who understands exactly what’s needed to keep the brain-munching masses at bay. Hence this sign of epic geek proportions. Zombies stand slack-jawed in awe. Of course, they might try their luck by scratching at the surface a bit… Which is why there are bullet holes. And some gore. And just for in case they didn’t get the message… Toss a zombie voodoo doll into the mix!

I’m gonna go geek out a bit more now… And stick some pins in some brain-draining zombies…

PS: Kristia and Jian, they can be made to order! :-)

Share this post: Share this post with the world.
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google
  • laaik.it
  • Twitter
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Digg

Yay for bunnies!


2011
02.02

I think it’s pretty clear by now that I have a thing for bunnies. So even though I’m bummed that 2011 doesn’t mean anything particular for me – I was born in a Year of the Monkey, which figures – I’m still thrilled that The Year of the Metal Rabbit will officially start on 3 February 2011. So to celebrate, here are some pretty pics featuring my second-favourite animal (after Her Royal Highness Queen Peroni): the noble rabbit.

Artwork by Dan May

Dan May's contribution to INLE, click on pic for more info!

Artwork by Greg Simkins

A twisted take on Watership Down by Greg Simkins for INLE - click on pic for more info.

An old bunny pin-up image

Playboy Bunnies used to be way more conservative...

Ryohai Hase's Mary musth

Ever woken up and just felt like a bunny? Yep. Check out Ryohei Hase's beautiful work at www.ryoheihase.com

Dawn ng's Walter installation

There you are, walking along, when a giant rabbit catches your eye. Check out Walter's escapades at www.dawn-ng.com

antique bunny-themed nengajō from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston collection.

1915 - Bunny in bed: antique bunny-themed nengajō from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston collection.

Canadian postage stamp

Bunnies via post...

Awesome dustbunny by Andre Chasqueira

My favourite: a specially designed bunny for dustbunniesproject by good friend Andre Chasqueira. It rocks.

An image by Darla Teagarden

Fanciful bunny flights - the only way to travel. Absinthe Wonderland is one of Darla Teagarden's magical photography projects, check more out at www.darlateagarden.com

Share this post: Share this post with the world.
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google
  • laaik.it
  • Twitter
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Digg

Trying to get Die Antwoord…


2010
11.17

Die Antwoord. www.metalbox.co.za

Die Antwoord. www.metalbox.co.za

So I’m creeping up to the red robot when I suddenly realize that the usual contingent of newspaper sellers, beggars and opportunistic sunglass vendors aren’t swarming around my wide-open car window. (I refuse to cosset myself in an air-conditioned interior when it’s sunny outside.) It creates a moment of pure mental panic: have I been kidnapped by aliens? Transported to some sanitized first-world country?

I’m still not entirely sure why they all gave me such a wide berth… But I know Die Antwoord was blasting out of my pathetic little Hyundai Getz speaker, blowing the little bit of bass left over. A bad habit, listening to music that loud…

I was given the unenviable task of reviewing Die Antwoord’s $O$, simply because I wasn’t in the office to protest at the time when some bright spark offered me up to do it. With a smirk on the face, probably. The Music Nazi’s gonna love this! And if she says it’s crap, she’s the one who’s going to get trolled by the army of zef that are Die Antwoord’s fans. Yeah well, troll away…

I’m not a fan. I keep telling myself that.

Their music leaves me feeling like I’m covered in a film of filth, like my brain has an itch that needs a steel brush to sort it out. Doosdronk is the most destructive earworm in the history of mankind. I keep on looking for my dog. Which I don’t have. It’s hollow and it takes up space in my head that could have been better spent on figuring out the recipe for cupcakes.

It annoys me that something so obviously gimmicky has become a global runaway train, a cultish recreation of South-African zef culture in the hearts and minds of Americans and Europeans and whatchamacallits… Filling their minds with an idea about South Africa and making it their reality.

On the other hand, I think Waddy Jones is a twisted genius. He’s been a creative chameleon as far back as my musical consciousness can remember. The Ziggurat. Max Normal TV. The Constructus Corporation. Max Normal Loves Animals. The Oppikoppi dassies.

So why can’t I buy into Die Antwoord? They’re not only pushing the boundaries, they’re creating new continents. The music’s uncomfortable because it addresses some complex themes… Stuff that your dark primate brain’s perfectly happy to revel in, and would do more often if you only loosened your grip a bit. I read the perfect description on WatKykJy: “it’s like tentacle porn for your ears.” Pretty much.

And I’m actually more scared of Ninja and Yo-Landi’s posturing than I am of all those American gangsta rappers. Fiddy flaunting his cash? Yo-Landi’s probably too busy to answer your call, bra

Calvinist guilt? Prudishness? A secret inferiority complex because I simply cannot be that foul-mouthed even though I sometimes want to be? (There’s this person at work, see…)

A friend says we need Die Antwoord because it’s so different, and it’s finally put SA music on the map. It’s fresh, leaves no holy cow unkicked and makes stew of the babies and the bathwater. It’s got people culting together much like in Fokof’s heyday.

But I don’t think it is different. It’s just the latest seizure of Waddy’s brain, a way to mindfuck the masses until he gets bored, takes his posse and moves on to the next random, off-the-wall incarnation. And what exactly is he leaving behind? Dodgy tattoos, haircuts and kids whose Facebook status updates compete for being the most foul-mouthed and “controversial”?

Do we really want to be tied to a construct that might implode at any moment simply due to the disinterest of its creator?
Just imagine all those newly zef American teenagers… With nothing to wear next Halloween… And what will Katy Perry tweet about?
Or maybe, just maybe, the wild success and the wads of cash will keep the Ninja train rolling on for a bit.
For the time being, though, I’m keeping it in my car radio… A rich bitch by proxy…

Share this post: Share this post with the world.
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google
  • laaik.it
  • Twitter
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Digg

Get your gore on with HorrorFest!


2010
10.07

Sonja Ruppersberg on the artwork for 2010's HorrorFest in Cape Town

Sonja aka She Devil...

It’s October, and you know what that means… Ghosties and ghoulies and Darkwing Duck and other random things that go bump in the night. ‘Cos it’s Halloween. And it’s also HorrorFest, Cape Town’s iconic celebration of all things offbeat and bloody and scary. I managed to track down Paul Blom and Sonja Ruppersberg and get them to answer some questions about their brainchild… Which they did quite thoroughly, despite being up to their elbows in last-minute preparations and dramas! Enjoy… And if you’re in Cape Town, go support!

What’s the main goal of HorrorFest?
To cater for people with odd, alternative and off-centre taste – like ourselves! And while it is not yet a South-African tradition, we want Halloween to become more prominent.

Have you got anything special planned this year?

Definitely! The Makabra Ensemble live movie soundtrack is always a highlight and is also the setting for the Halloween dress-up competition.

The short films are unique in that 99% of the 6 hrs+ worth of amazing movies from around the world won’t be seen anywhere else in South Africa.

On Wednesday, 20 October we have an exclusive pre-release screening of Robert Rodriguez’s much-anticipated Grindhouse flick Machete, starring Danny Trejo, Jessica Alba and Robert De Niro.

We’ll be showing the classic Nosferatu in its conversion as Orlok The Vampire in 3D (if the 3D glasses get here in time from the USA!) with a tongue-in-cheek approach. We’re awaiting word on filmmakers from two of the feature films flying to SA for their movies.

We’ll create another limited edition red wine with a special HorrorFest label (with Provoyeur Wines from Stellenbosch).

We’re also having our first after party/ closing event, in conjunction with the Lovecats animal charity concert at Mercury Live, featuring Terminatryx, Cold Hand Chemistry, and Witness To Wolves live on stage, plus the Black Orchids Beasties Burlesque troupe. There will be loads of prizes for audience members too!

Screengrab from Paul Blom & Sonja Rupperberg's werewolf short for HorrorFest 2009

Sonja in the werewolf short for HorrorFest 2009...

Why horror movies? What got you into it?
No one was stepping up after decades of other countries running festivals like this, so we elected ourselves. And like our music choice, we’ve just always loved things that are out of the ordinary, and some of us have a more macabre sense of humour and find shocking screen elements invigorating. The make-up FX are fascinating and everyone has a dark and twisted side that can be exorcised by watching these movies. A fright is almost always followed by laughter of relief. We can get into psychological analysis, but it boils down to a fun 90 minutes in a dark room of strangers staring at a screen throwing scares, thrills, and gross-outs at you, while munching on popcorn (or in the case of the Labia Theatre, sipping on a drink from the licensed bar), maybe with a date, a bunch of like-minded friends or even alone, and just escape into some freaky entertainment – relieved by the fact that you’re still alive and intact when the lights come up!

Would you say there is a particular type of fan that goes in for horror?
No. Anyone who has a fascination with the macabre, or likes the adrenaline rush of getting scared can get into it. As mortals we are all aware of our fragile lives and inevitable death, so we’re drawn to it, sometimes blatantly (almost like extreme sports), other times subconsciously. We get a wide spread of fans attending the HorrorFest, from younger kids trying to sneak in, to pensioners, Metal fans, Ravers, movie buffs, totally regular folk, everything. While one would expect it, we get very few Goths attending the festival…

What’s your fave horror movie of all time?
There are several, but it’s hard to pin down one, so we’ll give 5 of our favourites each.
Paul: Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining, David Cronenberg’s Videodrome, Sam Raimi’s Evil Dead trilogy, George A. Romero’s Dawn Of The Dead, F.W. Murnau’s Nosferatu
Sonja: Bram Stoker’s Dracula, Nightmare On Elm Street franchise, The Shining, Jacob’s Ladder, Event Horizon

And your worst?
Paul: Scared Alive
Sonja: Things

Sonja Ruppersberg in werewolf short for HorrorFest 2009

Things start getting hairy...

The one scene from a movie, good or bad, that’s stuck in your head?
Paul: There are many, but the creepy twins in The Shining, and the blood gushing from the elevator in slow motion made quite an impact.
Sonja: In Salem’s Lot – the light goes out and when it comes back on the vampire is in the room with the family.

Five things you’ve learnt about survival from horror movies…
Paul: Have access to weapons; Keep your keys with you at all times; Do not investigate if something seems odd; Have a back exit; Trust no one!
Sonja: Never run up the stairs; Never say ‘who’s there?’; If the intruder/monster/alien looks like it is dead stab it a couple more times just to be sure; Close cupboard doors – leaving them slightly open will open up a porthole to another dimension; Never look under your bed…

Who’s the most iconic horror actor/actress?
Paul: Bruce Campbell - mainly because of his epic performances in The Evil Dead movies – hilarious in his serious delivery of it!
Sonja: Robert Englund – Freddy Krueger’s nasty sense of humour and flamboyant character traits (Nightmare On Elm Street)!

What are your favourite tagline(s) from a horror poster?
Paul: The original Dawn Of The Dead – ‘When there’s no more room in hell, the dead will walk the earth’
Sonja: A Nightmare On Elm Street 3 – ‘If you think you’ll get out alive, you must be dreaming’

Who’d you rather take on: vamps, zombies or werewolves, and why?
Paul: Nowadays, vampires, because they’ve become sensitive vegetarians!
Sonja: George Romero zombies, one at a time because they’re slow and easy to kill, but not in a mob! (28 Days Later-style infected are too quick)

The most bizarre moment you’ve ever had in working on HorrorFest…
It’s bizarre from start to finish!

And when are you coming to Jozi?
We’ve been gunning for that since we got started, but it’s a matter of logistics and cost.
It may be sooner than you think!

Ever wondered how much work it would take to get something like HorrorFest off the ground? Read this and weep!

Who are the people involved?
Paul Blom and Sonja Ruppersberg: founders, organizers and coordinators.

The Makabra Ensemble is the Terminatryx-driven musical project that gives classic silent horror movies a new soundtrack, performed live to the screen. The Makabra Ensemble is Paul & Sonja from Terminatryx, Simon & Sean from LARK, and violin virtuoso Matthijs Van Dijk – and it involves a wide range of instruments from electric guitar, live drums, programming and various flutes and woodwind instruments, to vocals, violin, bass, programming and keyboards.

Sonja Ruppersberg in a scene from werewolf short for HorrorFest 2009

And there she goes.

The Labia Theatre has been the venue of choice since the festival’s inception in 2005. Since our 5th event (2009) we started bringing in additional assistance, as two people simply cannot manage a growing event like this! Instead of again doing the poster ourselves, we got Dr-Benway to photograph poster-girl Sonja, and artist Vernon Swart to paint the 2009 poster. Dr-Benway also assisted us this year (2010) in creating the event poster (with red devil make-up, hair and horns by Daleen Badenhorst & Clinton Smith from Cosmesis Advanced Prosthetic Studio and Masque Make-Up & FX)

Since 2009 Nerine Dorman has been running the Bloody Parchment literary chapter of HorrorFest, which includes the live author reading event at the Book Lounge (Roeland Str. on 27 Oct), and the short story competition. She may also tackle the arrangement of a Zombie Walk / Flash Mob.

Additional judges for short films include the guys from Visual Impact & HD Hub, as well as Something Wicked Magazine. I always compiled the 3 feature-length short-film collections myself, but since last year editor Leon Visser has taken that load off. Making movies ourselves, but simply not having enough time, in 2009 we did a double exercise of getting behind the camera again, and at the same time producing a HorrorFest promo clip, with the assistance of Clinton Smith and his Cosmesis team (make-up FX), Marnus Tredoux (camera), and Leon Visser (editor).  We picked up on it again this year by expanding this werewolf transformation piece (starring Sonja and directed by me) into the short film Marked – it will have its premiere at the 2010 HorrorFest.  The movie is also further transforming into a Terminatryx music video for the song Virus.

Visual Impact also helped with the supply of the Canon 5D camera.
With the festival being almost wholly independently funded by us, various sponsors and affiliates do assist in a range other ways, like Visual Impact, HD HUb, Cosmesis Advanced Prosthetic Studio, Masque Make-Up & FX, Something Wicked Magazine, New Rock Boots South Africa, Wolf Clothing, X Box, Ster Kinekor, Global Discs, SLD and Phantom Sambuca, Penguin Books, Fangoria Magazine, Mystery Ghost Bus Tour etc.

Then of course there are the moviemakers from around the world that make these crazy, fun movies we love to watch and get frightened by!


Paul and Sonja have created several off-centre film festivals & events since 2005, check them out here:

The X FEST Extreme / Underground / Cult Film Festival
CELLUDROID Sci-Fi / Anime / Fantasy Film Festival
SOUND ON SCREEN Music Film Festival
DARING DOCCIES Documentary Film Festival
CINEMANIACS Special Cinematic Events

Share this post: Share this post with the world.
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google
  • laaik.it
  • Twitter
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Digg

Pop sugar bunnies and braiiins!


2010
08.30

Bunny shaped sugar lumps

Who's been a bad bunny? You? Right...

Today had a sweetly twisted flavour to it… In fact, as I speak, I’m watching an NCIS agent carry a dead and bleeding rat by the tail up a staircase in an abandoned ship… Yes, all the crew have mysteriously disappeared. And I’m betting Ebola or some other dodgy bloody death is about to happen. One can but hope.

But I digress. Things actually started out with bunny-shaped sugar cubes. I love it when people know what makes me tick! I don’t know where I can actually buy these, but I need to find out. It could be a whole new spin on the eating-a-Caramello-bear-procedure: first dunk the ears, then the head, watch the sugary droplets melt into your tea… PC bunny death by boiling water!

And then it got better. I saw the trailer for The Walking Dead, director Frank Darabont‘s new zombie TV series adapted from the monthly comic book by Robert Kirkman and Tony Moore. It’s launching in the US on Halloween this year. And it will rock. “The sun ain’t gonna shine anymore….”

So all this day needed was a soundtrack… And okay, I admit: Amy Meredith is not the type of music that would necessarily suit a zombie apocalypse. Well, maybe an upbeat one. But this Australian band’s sheer glorious poppiness have been making me awfully happy ever since my Sydney-based friend sent me one of those magical things called care packages. And in it, a copy of their first album, Restless. I love it madly.

Amy Meredith band

Camping? Billabongs? Nah...

I was first introduced to their music when said Sydney friend passed me a link to first single Pornstar. And it only got better. They’re all catchy hooks and showy lyrics and bubbles. There’s a tiny bit of Metro Station and a pinch of The Bravery worked in there somewhere. Lying has a brilliant music video (which I was lucky enough to see before Sony Music blocked South African access to their vids. Doesn’t it just make you totally de moer in?*), Young At Heart is a killer song, Carry On gets you belting along at the top of your lungs, and Late Nights has been driving me totally insane trying to figure out which old-school track they sampled. I know it for sure and it’s on the tip of my tongue all the time, and actually SO recognizable: “nah nananananah na nananananah…” I’d appreciate it if someone could put me out of my misery and give me the name!

So all in, a good day for wonderful pop cheesiness. I’m happy.

* On a random point of misery: I would have linked to their YouTube vids, except that their official videos are now blocked. General YouTube vids are recordings of live shows and acoustic sessions, it doesn’t always give you the full idea, but you can give it a go. Check out their MySpace page to get a taste of the music. But it is incredibly annoying. And a debate I’ll probably get into on another day.

Share this post: Share this post with the world.
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google
  • laaik.it
  • Twitter
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Digg

Shutting up is hard to do…


2010
07.15

Quest for Creativity Day 14 & 15, lessons 14 & 15: I suffer from verbal diarrhea. It’s hard to shut up in a creative way.

Word counts, schmord counts… I’m not one for curbing the urge to write copious amounts of (what I consider) brilliant prose to inspire the masses aka you. So it’s a bit of a challenge to creatively shut up. Here’s my attempt. Some piccies that have pleased and (hopefully) inspired me the past two days…

Patricia Waller artwork: crocheted cat spilling its guts.

Here kitty kitty... Check out more at www.patriciawaller.com/

Patricia Waller’s artwork is nice and twisted… And she crochets it! You have to check out more here.

Pretty Jasmine-patterned dress from Modcloth.

This is why I want to spend all my money at Modcloth.

Yes, it’s a dress. I can’t help myself.

An artwork from Melissa Haslam's 2010 Botanica exhibition.

Rabbit: an artwork from Melissa Haslam's 2010 Botanica Exhibition

Check out Melissa’s stuff on her blog and exhibition site.

Owl, a print from Kirbee Lawler's Forest Friends series.

I'm planning to buy all Kirbee Lawler's stuff, so hurry if you want anything! This one is called Owl, from her Forest Friends' series.

Check out Kirbee’s stuff on her blog and Etsy site.

Tim Apter from Double Adapter rocking it out at Discotheque.

Double Adapter rocking it at Discotheque at The Assembly. Photo: Adriaan Louw

My friend Tim looks rad in this pic. Yes, I used the word rad. More pics from the evening here.

Balloon Girl, a fine-art photography image by Elle Moss

It's quirky and pretty and innocent...

This makes me want to float off. Check out Elle Moss’s stuff at her Etsy page.

An image from Steffe K's flickr photostream

Cats. We all want to be them.

Steffe K’s got a quirky touch when it comes to photography. Check out her stuff on flickr.

A white kitten in a lolcat image

I felt like this today.

No visual blog is complete without a lolcat.

Movie poster for David Fincher's Social Network

Oh yes, Mark Zuckerberg...

David Fincher’s making a new movie. You want to find out what it’s about here.

Share this post: Share this post with the world.
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google
  • laaik.it
  • Twitter
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Digg

Viva the Vargas girls!


2010
06.18

I’ve recently rediscovered the Vargas girls… Alberto Vargas‘s iconic erotic and pin-up art’s pretty much an established part of pop culture, and instantly recognisable… The girls are all gorgeous and beautifully proportioned… And, to me, a celebration of feminine beauty… And no, I’m not going to go all feminist on how they’re all pretty much perfect! Some examples below… Also check this cool YouTube tribute!

Vargas Girl.

Vargas Girl

Vargas Girl

Vargas Girl

Do yourself a favour and google these girls… Some real beauties out there!

Share this post: Share this post with the world.
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google
  • laaik.it
  • Twitter
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Digg

A softer world


2010
04.25

Webcomic from A Softer World

One of A softer world's webcomics

I love these quirky webcomics… In fact, I think I’m a fangirl of A softer world. Cheers me up immensely. Not much else to say, except that you have to check out Emily Horne and Joey Comeau’s brainchild for yourself. They’re popping cute kittens all over the place… Sometimes, it will make you cry.

Share this post: Share this post with the world.
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google
  • laaik.it
  • Twitter
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Digg

Die lafenis van trane


2010
04.11
Rikku Latti performing during the 2010 KKNK in Oudtshoorn

Riku Latti in die Neelsie aan't sing.

As jy my sien huil in die voorste gestoeltes (of die derdes, as it may be), moenie my vra of ek okay is nie.
Ek is, ek belowe.
Maar as jy my gaan vra, gaan ek beheer verloor oor my styfgespanne kaakspiere, my onderlip gaan begin bewe en die traantjies wat so oor my wange biggel, gaan verander in Niagra Falls. Dit kan ek jou waarborg.
Sit ek toe en wonder of my traankliere verhuis het tot binne-in my hart tydens Laurinda Hofmeyr en Riku Latti se laaste vertoning van Met jou hier op die maan by die Neelsie teater op Oudtshoorn.
Want dis allesbehalwe hartseer of traumaties, maar ek huil al sedert die eerste akkoorde deur die lug klank. Het lankal ook nie meer tissues nie… Snuif maar hard elke keer as die gehoor hande klap om dit uit te sort.
En so snotteer ek voort totda Riku se temaliedjie vir die komende fliek Die ongelooflike avonture van Hanna Hoekom my kaakspiere laat uitspring.
Die musiek is net vir my sy mooi. Ek kry nie hoendervleis nie, ek raak betraand. Dis embarrassing.
Ek huil al heelweek. Vir een sinnetjie in Nico Luwes se resensie van Dood van ‘n verkoopsman: “Daai oom wat voor my gesit het met die groen blokkieshemp vat sy vrou met die pers top so halfpad deur die stuk om die skouer en trek haar nader. Teen die einde van die stuk hoor ek hom so half skorrerig in sy vrou se oor se: ‘Ai, Jirre, Mamma… Ons moet goed wees vir mekaar…”
Sien, daar huil ek alweer. Dinsdae by Morrie het my ook gevang. En die pragtige foto van Mathys Roets gesilhouetteer teen ‘n venster. En toe ek vir die eerste keer daai laventelsjokolade van Rococo proe, toe skiet my oge ook vol trane. En Bob Marley se Redemption Song een aand op die rekenaarspeaker. En natuurlik ‘n kollega se papegaaigrappies – maar daai was huil want jy kon letterlik nie meer lag nie.
Miskien is ek net oormoeg. Dis nie speletjies om ‘n feeskoerant elke dag aan mekaar te sit nie.
Of dalk is dit net die skielike oorvloed van Afrikaanse kultuur en passie wat my omring. Ons Johannesburgertjies is mos maar nie altyd in touch met wat aan die gebeur is in die kunste nie – te besig om die spitsverkeer en taxi’s te probeer oorleef.
En nou’s die laaste Krit ook op straat: en ‘n span vreemdelinge-nou-vriende spat weer uitmekaar na die uithoeke om hulle alledaagse dinge op te tel en daarmee aan te gaan. Dis maar ‘n bietjie surreal. En sad.
Ek gaan huis toe, en ek’s moer happy, want homesick wees is nie pret nie. Maar ek los ‘n stukkie van my hart sommer net hier.
Right.
Ek huil alweer.
Bring tissues na die Krit-kantoor, Suid-Kaap-kollege, Adderleystraat…

*  Written for Krit, official KKNK festival newspaper, April 2010.

Share this post: Share this post with the world.
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google
  • laaik.it
  • Twitter
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Digg

Discover Miss Moss


2010
04.09
Vinage photo from Miss Moss website

One of the vintage gems Miss Moss has collected on her site.

Go check out www.missmoss.co.za – a truly awesome local site filled with quirky, beautiful images, artwork, spots to shop and things to dream about… It’s run by Diana, a local graphic design artist, with a clear eye for the unusual and the enchanting! You can spend hours browsing her site, and following her collection of links. Yummy way to spend the time on a rainy day! Thanks Michelle for the link! :-)

Share this post: Share this post with the world.
  • Facebook
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google
  • laaik.it
  • Twitter
  • Reddit
  • LinkedIn
  • Digg