They come in different shapes and sizes , and if you have a number and an email you should probably have one. For some reason we thought putting up a website, printing t-shirts, making stickers and etc… were more important. Somehow we believed if we said Sehota 1. people would google it, 2. people knew how to spell it, 3. people cared what it was, 4. they would know what we do, 5. we thought somehow the name Sehota would stick in their head and maybe give us a call….wait do they even know what our number is. Below is a preview of the most FUNDAMENTAL thing of them all a business card.
While doing some research or lack their of Spring 2011 I came across this video on bullet proof clothing. The best part about this video is not the clothing but, the fact that every employee is shot just to make sure they can behind the product 100 percent. Bulletproof clothing is and will always be FUNDAMENTAL QUALITY.
The whole concept of a fortune cookie is FUNDAMENTAL QULITY and something I wish I thought of; (A piece a paper in cookie that makes you feel good about yourself and if your lucky a winning lottery number) unfortunately the Japanese beat me to it.
A fortune cookieis a crisp Asian cookie usually made from flour, sugar, vanilla, and oil with a “fortune” wrapped inside. A “fortune” is a piece of paper with words of faux wisdom or a vagueprophecy. In the United States and Canada (although also available in other parts of the Western world), it is usually served with Chinese food in Chinese restaurants as a dessert. The message inside may also include a list of lucky numbers (used by some as lottery numbers) and a Chinese phrase with translation. The exact provenance of fortune cookies is unclear, but various immigrant groups in California claim to have popularized them in the early 20th century, basing their recipe on a traditional Japanese cracker.[1] The cookies are mostly unknown in mainland China or Taiwan.
Some brands post what they ate for the day, but really who cares when we know they can not even make it…. Well heres a change to the streetwear norm. All ingredients cost about $12.00 and only takes about 45 min of your time, You Can find the recipe after the jump.
This documentary gives a good look at street art and its history, and it provides an explanation and excitement for those who dont quite understand rush the comes with throwing up stickers, stencils, and othe types of street art. The movie was shown at sundance with only limited release in the US, but fortunatley for us they didnt forget about us here in the south and the movie will be premiering in Atlanta on April 30th at Midtown Art. Being that im currently in New York right now I will being seeing it tonight, I will be sure to update the post with pics. You can find the show times below along with a link to buy tickets.
PS. You should probably bring someone along who doesnt quite understand that street art is an “art” and little by liitle maybe street art get will get the much needed respect it deserves.
So Im walking down the block on my lunch break ( yes I do have a day job ), only to be reminded that im walking and this guy will soon be driving this beautiful car. Some of you probably only see an old red sports car I see I see the best car I have seen in the last two years I have been here in New York. THEY JUST DONT MAKE THEM LIKE THEY USED TOO: FUNDAMENTAL QUALITY
We listen to a little bit of everything around here, but for the past 6 months, I’ve been bobbin’ my head consistently to the beat of Glen Coates. He’s an Australian DJ/Producer with some remarkably good taste, and a mixing style similar to the Mushroom Jazz series by Mark Farina. Farina and Coates, intertwining of jazz, soul, and hip-hop is phenomenal, thus explaining why I spend hours listening to them both.
Recently, Glen Coates hooked up with vocalist Kyla Sexton to form The Shelltoes. They are best described as a jazz/neo-soulful, pair which is no surprise when glancing at Coates mixtape playlists. Check em’ out by clicking the above image.