Category Archives: PERSONAL

It’s all about the music

Source

Posted in STYLE, PHOTOGRAPHY, TECHNOLOGY, CULTURE, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

Don’t f#ck with the All Blacks!

I couldn’t be prouder to the an All Blacks supporter today. Today’s game against Australia was bigger than the finals next week where they will now play France. Being one of only a handful of NZ supporters today at Oolaa. I was very nervous if the ABs would deliver the win I’d been waiting 4 year for. With an amazing early try to Nonu. It felt like the ABs had them on the ropes for the rest of the game. I was expecting a much more competitive game by the Wallabies but they never seemed to have it or when they did ABs just wanted it that bit more and kept possession of the ball for most of the time. Either way, I’ll finally sleep well tonight and look forward to next weekend when they take the Rugby World Cup home.

A big congratulations to Richie McCaw who played his 26th Test against Australia on Sunday, setting a new All Blacks record.

News Article –

New Zealand will face France in the final of the Rugby World Cup after beating archrival Australia 20-6 in a semi-final Sunday, drawing a giant step closer to ending a 24-year quest for its second world title.

 The All Blacks relieved the anxiety of a nation starved of World Cup success since 1987 by physically dominating Australia from the moment Wallabies flyhalf Quade Cooper miscued the opening kickoff, establishing comanding advantages of possession and territory.

The New Zealanders achieved a 52 percent share of possession and 64 percent share of territory with ferocious tackling and a firm, physical authority at the breakdown. Armed with those advantages it let loose a backline, managed superbly by rookie flyhalf Aaron Cruden, in which almost every player posed an attacking threat.

When the final whistle blew, a 60,087 crowd made up almost entirely of black-clad New Zealanders let loose a deafening cheer of mixed relief and elation.

The key figures for Australia on Sunday, the dangerous but erratic flyhalf Cooper, and the openside flanker David Pocock were outplayed by their opposites and swept along in the tide of a game controlled from its outset by New Zealand. Pocock, alone and frequently penalized, couldn’t turn back that tide and nor could the Wallabies pack achieve a firm foothold in the match.

“Credit to the All Blacks, they outplayed us and they deserved to win,” Wallabies captain James Horwill said.

Cooper was held in check by a defense which allowed him few chances, except under the most suffocating pressure. Similar pressure subdued Wallabies scrumhalf Will Genia.

In contrast, All Blacks flyhalf Aaron Cruden, in only his eighth test and his first in more than a year, played with the composure of a veteran behind a dominant pack.

He cleverly marshalled an All Blacks backline in which almost every player represented a clear attacking danger but perhaps the greatest of which were the winger Cory Jane and fullback Israel Dagg.

Dagg created New Zealand’s first try for Ma’a Nonu, linking with the center after splitting the Australian defense on a long, angled run in the sixth minute. Weepu kicked two penalties and Cruden a dropped goal as New Zealand took a 14-6 lead to halftime, then added two more penalties for the only points of the second half.

Australia was seen as the greatest obstacle to New Zealand’s bid to win the World Cup for the first time since it hosted the inaugural tournament in 1987 and at the end of which it also faced France in the final. France reached the World Cup final for the third time when it beat Wales 9-8 on Saturday.

The All Blacks and Australia agreed the match might hinge on the ability of one side to establish early dominance, then to maintain intense and continuous pressure.
After a tense buildup during which the All Blacks performed the Kapa O Pango haka or challenge, Cooper drifted the kickoff out on the full, immediately putting Australia on the back foot.

Pressure finally told in the sixth minute when Dagg squeezed just inside the touchline and turned an inside pass for Nonu to score.

Weepu missed the conversion and a ninth-minute penalty but he goaled in the 11th, when Pocock infringed at a ruck, and gave the All Blacks an 8-0 lead.

Australia’s first venture into New Zealand territory almost brought its first try when the dangerous winger Digby Ioane skewed infield on a strong run, fending Mealamu and carrying Cruden and flanker Jerome Kaino almost to the line. He was finally hurled back but James O’Connor provided Australia’s first points from a penalty, cutting the lead to 8-3.

New Zealand continued to dominate, playing at pace and with skill and slick combination. At a controlled breakdown 30 meters from the goalline, Weepu passed to Cruden in the pocket and the young flyhalf slotted a dropped goal which made the led 11-3. Cooper replied with a dropped goal for Australia in the 30th minute.

Weepu added his second goal from five attempts in the 36th minute through an almost comical mixup in the Australian defense. Horwill knocked on a miscued kick from Dagg and fullback Adam Ashley-Cooper, standing 10 meters in front of him, thoughtlessly picked up the bouncing ball.

Weepu extended New Zealand’s lead to 17-6 with his third penalty just after halftime and added his fourth and final penalty nine minutes from the end. Australia’s lack of discipline told heavily in both halves.

The All Blacks’ discipline lapsed for the first time when replacement Sonny Bill Williams was sin-binned in the 76th minute for a shoulder charge on Cooper.

New Zealand has waited a long time to add a second World Cup title, almost quarter of a century punctuated alternately by high hopes and disappointment.

After winning a tournament it both conceived and hosted in 1987, it was beaten by Australia in the semifinals in 1991, by South Africa in the final in 1995, by France in the 1999 semifinals, by Australia at the semifinal stage in 2003 and by France in the quarterfinals four years ago.

With each failure, New Zealand fans have grown more impatient and more anxious and the pressure the All Blacks play under at World Cups has grown more intense. After Sunday’s win they are one step away from easing that anxiety and pressure. In a piece of historic symmetry, it will face France on the ground on which the long quest began 24 years ago.

New Zealand 20 (Ma’a Nonu try; Piri Weepu 4 penalties; Aaron Cruden dropped goal), Australia 6 (James O’Connor penalty; Quade Cooper dropped goal). HT: 14-6.

Source

Posted in STYLE, PHOTOGRAPHY, CULTURE, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

Love Lost. Love Found.

Source

Posted in ART, CULTURE, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

25 Pieces of basic sartorial knowledge

Source

Posted in STYLE, CULTURE, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

The sky is just the beginning…

Source

Posted in PHOTOGRAPHY, CULTURE, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

Double Choc Thickshakes

The Flying Pan is an American style diner, famous in Hong Kong for their 24 hour breakies. So it’s no surprise if you end up chowing on a big breakfast with pancakes as the sun comes up talking sh#t with your mates or trying to fill your stomach with something to soak up all the alcohol before you go hit the bed. I love going there in the afternoon as well for an American style chocolate thickshake while I catch up on the latest HK local magazines.

Source

Posted in DESIGN, STYLE, PHOTOGRAPHY, CULTURE, TRAVEL, PERSONAL | 1 Comment

Beers, beats and burgers at South Bay Beach Club HK

When summer time rolls around in Hong Kong the city can become quite a steamy dumpling. So there’s nothing better than getting a crew together on a Sunday afternoon and heading to the other side of the HK island to a little spot called South Bay Beach Club. It’s a cool little rooftop cafe/bar where Steve spins some nice cruisy summer beats, the BBQ’s fired up and plenty of cold beers and jugs of mojitos. The scenery is amazing looking out to sea with the beach full of people soaking up the western sun and a fan of boats off the beach. There’s no better way to recover from the night out before or just relax before the start of another busy week.

Photos by Martin Hill

Source

Posted in STYLE, PHOTOGRAPHY, FOOD, CULTURE, TRAVEL, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

HK Urban Terrain

I love riding my fixie in Australia but unfortunately Hong Kong isn’t the best town for fixies. All the hills and the roads and footpaths are so dodgy. Not to mention the 24 hour traffic of cars, trams, buses and people. So I recently took up Mountain Bike riding. There’s a huge MB community in HK but most of the spots take a bit of planning to organise a mini van or ferry to get to the tracks. That sucks for me because I never know when I’m going to have some free time, so instead I’ve taken the challenge to find some urban terrain around the city. I’m still getting my head around all the gears and weight distribution when going down stairs and off drops, but it’s f#ckin’ fun! I love any sport with an element of danger and gets the adrenaline going. Here’s a few pics burning around central.

Source

Posted in STYLE, PHOTOGRAPHY, CULTURE, TRAVEL, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

Street Dreams

When I was a teenager, I lived and breathed Skateboarding. ‘Study time’ after school for me was spent skateboarding on the front driveway and every weekend. Especially Friday nights were some of the most memorable times for me meeting up with all my skater buddies in the city to explore the city terrain like a pack of rats. Sometimes we’d have a crew 30 of us take over the streets bombing hills and weaving in and out of traffic. It was the natural high it gave me and the fact it didn’t matter if you were a private school or public school kid, 9 to 5 paper pusher or living off government hand outs. We all shared a love for skateboarding and it taught us all a lot about appreciating different cultures.

I stupidly gave up skateboarding after I finished school and only continued to surf on the weekends, but after moving to Hong Kong I don’t have the luxury of beaches on my doorstep anymore so a friend has motivated me to get back into skateboarding as a form of exercise and to re-channel that love of the sport and help it inspire my creative work. I obviously no where near as good as I was before (which is so frustrating) but I’m loving it and it’s a great way to explore a new city. On the way home from this session I bumped into a few of the local boys – Francis and Paul. Who run some of HK’s top clubs and bars Fly, Volar.

Source

Posted in ART, STYLE, PHOTOGRAPHY, CULTURE, TRAVEL, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

Tokyo Drift

I may not live in Tokyo anymore after Japan was sadly hit by a natural disaster early this year. But after relocating to Hong Kong it’s great to still be able to jump on a plane and be in Tokyo in 3.5 hours. While I was in Tokyo late last week and over the weekend I caught up with one of my best mates Ume for a few Umeshu’s and some great local food. He showed me a couple of new haunts around Azabu and a mate of his who works at the fish markets took as for a private tour around the markets riding on the back of a fork-lift. Ha! Good times!

Source

Posted in STYLE, PHOTOGRAPHY, FOOD, CULTURE, TRAVEL, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

My Mobile Office in Tokyo

I’m back in Tokyo wooo!!! hoooo!!! I’m in back in town to extend my visa, catch up with a few peeps and of course check out the creative scene I miss so much. As great as it is to be back in my favourite city in the world. Work doesn’t doesn’t stop and after presenting some store front designs to a new client in Hong Kong they have now asked me to the do the brand identity for the job as well and of course they need it yesterday. I’m becoming the master of mobile offices whether it’s a cafe, apartment, hotel lobby or in this case the great guys at my hotel in Tokyo have set me up a pop-up office with an additional computer, printer, free wifi and even given me a key to use it 24hours! I love Japanese hospitality. We could all learn a thing about service from them.

My posting may be a little low over the next couple of days so bear with me and I’ll have a heap of new stuff when I get back.

Source

Posted in PHOTOGRAPHY, TECHNOLOGY, CULTURE, TRAVEL, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

Bedtime reading thanks to Tsutaya

Tokyo has one of the best book and magazine stores in the world called TSUTAYA in Roppongi Hills. I always do a few trips there when I’m in town and when I was living in Tokyo conveniently picked an apartment almost across the road from it. One of the best magazine selections I’ve ever seen. I popped down there this evening to grab a few magazines and ended up coming out with a pile of everything from fashion, japanese illustrators, interiors, a surf dvd, skateboarding, and hat&cap magazines. Can’t wait to find time to look through them all. The only problem is they weigh a tone, so I’m not sure how I’m going to get these all back Hong Kong yet.

TSUTAYA  6-11-1, Roppongi Hills Roppongi Keyakizaka as Roppongi, Minato-ku, Tokyo

Source

Posted in DESIGN, ART, ARCHITECTURE, PHOTOGRAPHY, CULTURE, TRAVEL, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

Food for thought

This is an area of design I’ve never really thought of, but imagine if you got the opportunity to create your own candy bar. There’s quite a lot of elements that you’d have to consider to it. How big would it be? What ingredients would you use? What shape would it be? How would you package it? What would you name it? It’s an interesting thought and has got me thinking outside the box and an area I’d like to investigate more. Sorry if this has made you hungry.

Source

Posted in DESIGN, ART, PHOTOGRAPHY, FOOD, CULTURE, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

Hulk Baby

I stumbled across this fantastic foot high Hulk Baby figurine by Ron English while mountain biking through Hong Kong yesterday. The gallery wasn’t open where it was on display in the window, so I’m going to get back there this week to have a better look at the detail and maybe buy it if it’s not too expensive. Sorry for the ratty photo. I’ll take some better pics when I’m at the gallery again.

Source

Posted in DESIGN, ART, CULTURE, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

The art of design

A key to a good designer is the ability to multi-task. A lot of design work is charged out on ‘billable time’. Meaning each hour we are sitting in front of the computer is time we are working on a job and is allocated to a current project. This may seem straight forward but when you spend the majority of your time concepting and coming up with ideas. Some projects ie. a logo design can come to you in a day. And other times it can take weeks! So time is of the essence. What I try to do is take a brief or project idea and plant that seed in my mind and let it grow. A good example of this is when you start looking a buying a car and you like the colour red. You notice you start to see a lot of red cars on the road. This is the same with ‘brief seeds’. You plant the idea and you start to become aware of visuals that relate to the brief. This way you are always concepting. I have found it very effective for me. I am currently working on two interior design jobs at the moment. One retail the other residential. I decided to leave my computer at home over the weekend and pick up a new pile of interior design books to thumb through.

Source

Posted in DESIGN, ART, ARCHITECTURE, PHOTOGRAPHY, CULTURE, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

Clocking off for the day

The days are faster and the nights even longer in Hong Kong. It’s not unusual to finish the average day until around 10pm. That’s what’s great about this city is the fact the city never sleeps so even when you have a late one working there’s still plenty of people out and plenty of restaurants open to eat. My head is swimming at the moment with four major projects on, so it’s nice to finish the day with a great Japanese dinner at SUSHI SASE which specialise in Kaiseki cuisine accompanied by a bottle of sake and a few Sapporos.

Source

Posted in ART, STYLE, PHOTOGRAPHY, FOOD, CULTURE, TRAVEL, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

Morning Engergiser

Living in Hong Kong reminds me a lot of when I lived in New York. Everything is in walking distance or at worst a short CHEAP taxi fare away. I’m lucky that my apartment is so central in Hong Kong which means I’m spoilt for choice of restaurants, bars, clubs, shops and most of my friends all live in the same area, so it becomes like one big neighbourhood. Lately I’ve got in the habit every morning of going to my local juice bar (literally next door to my apartment block) to get a ‘Morning Energiser’ which is Orange, Apple, Carrot and Ginger while I check my daily emails.

Source

Posted in STYLE, PHOTOGRAPHY, FOOD, CULTURE, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

District Ltd.

One of my best mates back in Australia and a fellow designer Lachie Goldsworthy is about to launch his new site District Ltd. Lachie and I have been working together on many projects for more than five years now. We both share a lot of common interests like skateboarding, fixies, surfing, good music and producing quality creative work. He just sent me this shot of his new business cards. Love ya work Lach! Expect to see some collaborations in the coming months.

Source

Posted in DESIGN, ART, STYLE, PHOTOGRAPHY, CULTURE, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

Alley Cats

Everyday I walk home from work, I’m bound to see at least three stray cats cruising the back streets in their playground that is Hong Kong. There is no shortage of stray cats here, especially around Soho. This city is the perfect playground for them. They even have a place called Cat Alley where you sometimes feel like you’re being stalked by a pack of ten cats. I love animals and every time I see one it reminds me of my cat back in Australia called Sake. Unfortunately, these aren’t really cats you should pick up. I saw this very friendly one on my way home from work the other day.

Source

Posted in ART, STYLE, PHOTOGRAPHY, CULTURE, PERSONAL | Leave a comment

Nothing beats a Sunday of R ‘n’ R before you start the week…

In Hong Kong, sometimes it’s hard to find timeout. Work days are longer and the weekends tend to be taken up with drinks, dinners and late afternoon breakfasts. So when you get a few hours free on a sunny day, there’s nothing better than getting poolside. The weather over the past few days has been perfect, so instead of having a big saturday night and a sunday recovering in bed. I caught up on some work last night and spent the day sitting by the pool at Four Seasons reading magazines, sketching in my pad and chatting to friends back in Australia. Now I’m ready to start the week!

Source

Posted in PHOTOGRAPHY, PERSONAL | Leave a comment