Showing posts with label Fluevog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fluevog. Show all posts

Thursday, September 30, 2010

the beeb

Imagine my surprise when in my morning mental fog, I scroll down the BBC News front page to see this:




 That's my shoe!
 



I had to rub my eyes and make sure I wasn't imagining things while half-asleep, but sure enough, my Fluevog Mini Zazas were featured in an article about crowdsourcing— and because I had absolutely no idea this piece had been written, I nearly fell on the floor! You can read this fascinating article about the latest trend in marketing on the BBC News website.

If you've got an idea for a fabulous shoe floating around in your head, why not submit your design to Fluevog's Open Source Footwear. Who knows? Your shoe might become a reality too!

Wow, BBC News. How cool is that?

Thursday, March 25, 2010

in print


Guess whose winning Fluevog Creative ad is in this month's issues of BUST, Inked, and FILTER magazines? That's right! Many, many thanks for all your votes— we did it!

Saturday, March 6, 2010

little red, unveiled


Check out the side of the LA Fluevog store on Melrose!
That's my winning Fluevog Creative ad there on the left, right next to my friend Aurel's awesome ad. Let's hear it for the creatives of Istanbul! Once again, thank you all for your support— I couldn't have done it without you.

If you'd like to try your hand at creating an ad for John Fluevog's oh-so fabulous shoes, stop by their site and check out the open briefs. Winning means $1000 worth of shoes and your ad getting published over 250,000 times in the coolest magazines internationally!

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

victory

fluevog creative winner samantha zaza
Ladies and Gents, it's official. We have won the Fluevog Creative competition! I cannot express the joy I am feeling right now— not only did we win, but we grabbed over 63% of the vote! Thank you so very much for your votes, your encouragement and all the wonderful messages and emails I've received. It's a great feeling to win something I've wanted, but to have had the support I've gotten— wow. I feel truly honoured. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

I need to go jump up and down, then get some sleep for tomorrow, as I'm off to visit my sister Natasha in Dubai. I can't wait!

Friday, February 5, 2010

the word


Thanks to some very lovely people, the word about my Little Red Riding Hood is spreading! Christan over at I C U In Paris, has written a wonderful post about the Fluevog Creative competition I am trying so hard to win, encouraging her readers to vote for me— and to swing by our humble little Harika. Christan has also shared some artwork from my website, and to my delight, the post received the nicest comments! I am thrilled, to say the least. I C U Paris is a delicious blog dedicated to unique and independent jewellery design, and is a pleasure to click through. If you've got an ounce of magpie in you, do fly by her blog.


Kenneth Edwards, photographer extraordinaire, has been so incredibly supportive, appealing to the readers of his blog, The Urban Nomad, to vote for me. Kenneth was an enormous help in the last competition, urging friends and readers to help me win— no doubt the narrow margin by which I lost was so thin in part due to his effort. Have a look at his wonderfully rich and atmospheric photographs at Urban Nomad.

Thank you both, Christan and Kenneth, I am so grateful for your support and kind words. I'd also like to thank my family, friends and all of you— the encouragement I have been receiving is overwhelming. I feel so fortunate. We can do this!

So my friends, let's get our vote on! There are only THREE days left.
Don't forget that you can vote every day until noon Feb. 8!

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

LET'S WIN THIS TIME!


Alright my friends, my Little Red Riding Hood is a finalist in the Fluevog Creative competition! Winning means my art will get published over 250,000 times internationally. Last time we lost by a mere 1%— let's do this!

Vote every day until NOON Feb. 8th at Fluevog.com.

If you tweet, blog, or are on Facebook, please spread the word. Get your friends, family, pets and strangers to join in— I need as many votes as I can get!

Thank you so much for your support!

Thursday, January 28, 2010

if at first you don't succeed

After two weeks of hand-cramping, eye-straining, joyous inking and gouaching, I've finally finished my entries for Operation Win Fluevog Creative Phase II. You may remember how last month, I lost my first attempt at winning the Fluevog Creative ad design competition for my shoe, the Mini Zaza. It was a close battle— I lost by a mere 1%— and well, if at first you don't succeed, keep on trying.

So here we go. These are my two entries for the Hope shoe, in various stages of completion so you can check out some of the detail and effort I've scrawled into these two pieces. Both were created with labour intensive lines of India ink and gouache colour, but the heart one has a digital touch added to the background rays and doves.

Let's hope we make it to the finals!


Now where's that simitçi drawing I was working on?

Friday, January 8, 2010

good company and a good read



Yesterday I met the very hip, very cool Aurél de Saint André— winner of the first Fluevog Creative competition, who just happens to live in Istanbul. Aurél is himself a nomad, having lived in places like Afghanistan and Thailand, and is a talented designer— his site is full of yummy logos and posters I recommend checking out. We spent the early afternoon wandering around the backstreets of Beyoğlu, hopping in and out of the many, many hidden antique shops.



We parted ways after a kebap and some çay, and I headed off to a café to start reading my first book of 2010— Fatelessness by Imre Kertész. Throughout my adventure in Budapest, I had been searching for a book by a great Hungarian writer to take home with me, and Mirco had suggested I find something by Nobel Prize winner Imre Kertész. At some point in the trip, I had run out of money, and decided to put his books on my holiday wishlist. Lucky lucky me, my mother gave me not one, but three of his books: Fatelessness, Kaddish for an Unborn Child, and Liquidation.

I could not put it down. By the time I reached the hundredth page, my coffee was ice-cold and the sun was nowhere to be found. Fatelessness is about a fourteen year old Hungarian boy who is unexpectedly picked up and sent off to Auschwitz. I felt as though I was seeing, feeling and thinking through this boy— as this boy. I've been walking around all day with the sensation of being trapped in the book, and I can't wait to get back to it.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

back to the drawing board

Sadly my friends, despite our efforts, I did not win the Fluevog Creative competition. I so badly wanted to have the opportunity to not only get published, but to do the ad for the shoes I designed. There are more briefs that I might participate in, but I did not enjoy the stress of blasting out emails and facebook messages, etc. to try and win. If I choose to compete again, I'll just toss my piece into the mix and see what happens. Anyhow, ads come and go, but the shoes, they will stay— and those shoes are Zazas. I bought myself a bright red lipstick and got back to what I do best: drawing.

Thank you all for your support and words of kindness— surely I wouldn't have gotten as close as I did without you. I appreciate it from the bottom of my heart.

Have a marvellous holiday!

Sunday, December 20, 2009

america bound

Breakfast on KLM.
My sister Natasha and I just underwent what felt like the longest journey we've taken in ages— a 5:55 am flight out of Istanbul to Amsterdam with a six hour layover, then a seven and a half hour flight to Boston, and a two and a half hour bus ride to New Hampshire. The past week has been an absolute whirlwind of work, art, travel and nerves, that I forgot to mention I was going to the States.

With the flight to Amsterdam being so early, we only had about two hours of sleep and were barely awake when we boarded our flight. When I peeked into the pocket of the seat in front of me, I caught a glimpse of that familiar yellow spine— someone had left behind a National Geographic! Having been a subscriber for about nine years, I was ecstatic. I pulled it out with the excitement of a five year old, and discovered it was in Norwegian. This made Natasha burst out laughing, for I've had this long-standing joke about finding and marrying a Norwegian polar explorer.

"It's fate." She yawned, between giggles.

The main article was about Angkor Wat— a place I've always dreamed of visiting, and oddly enough, was just discussing yesterday with a friend of mine. It's funny how life can toss in these little coincidences.

When the breakfast cart came around, I decided to order a tomato juice for the first time in my life, in hopes of understanding why people order tomato juice on flights. I've never seen anyone sipping on a glass of tomato juice in a restaurant, but time after time, I've watched flight attendants handing small plastic cups of it to passengers with hospitable smiles. Looking at the thick red liquid at six something in the morning, my stomach churned, but I drank it anyway. It wasn't bad. I still don't get it.

Flying over Amsterdam at sunrise.My sister Natasha catching some sleep in Schiphol's Starbucks.My sketch of the scene outside the airport window of planes.
Six hours in Schiphol Airport is not very exciting or interesting. We walked up and down the length of the airport for the sake of exercise and exploration, then settled down in a Starbucks for some coffee and a shared BLT. Natasha passed out and I decided to draw.

Our flight to Boston was supposed to be a Northwest flight, so I was horrified to see a Delta logo out the window as we were boarding. Delta and I have not been friends— I've never had anything but nightmarish voyages on their flights. The flight attendants were generally rude— and once, while I was sitting next to the exit door, my pant leg was mysteriously stuck to the cabin wall. Confused and suddenly freezing, I looked down at my leg to discover that the entire cabin wall beside me was covered in ice. There was a leak in the exit door seal! Seconds later, the guy sitting in front of me yelped in shock, having realised he too, was stuck to the icy wall. When everyone surrounding us grew concerned, we called over a flight attendant who told us this was normal and not her problem. Normal?! And this is just one of my Delta flight stories.

So when I sat down in my comfortable seat and found it had its own video screen and remote control— in economy— I was pleasantly surprised. When the crew were nice to me and offered my sister and I huge glasses of wine, I was shocked. The food was decent and everything was functioning properly. How was this Delta? While I was hanging out by the galley to do some stretching, I felt compelled to ask one of the flight attendants what was up.

"You've all been so nice, and this flight has been really great so far— not my usual experience with Delta."

He listened with a thoughtful expression and a sympathetic smile as I began to tell him brief versions of my collection of horror stories.

"Hmm... I've heard this sort of thing before and I'm very sorry. But you want to know what the secret is?" He leans in close, and with a hushed voice and a grin, whispers "This is a Northwest flight in a Delta painted plane. We're the Northwest crew."

So there you have it.

Landing at Boston Logan Airport.
I'll be in New Hampshire for the next ten days— sitting by a fire, drinking tea and drawing, spending time with relatives, and stocking up on the things I can't find in Turkey. I'll be back in Istanbul in time for a fun New Year's.

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

fluevog creative


Fluevog has opened their doors to us shoe lovers to create an ad for a selection of their oh-so fabulous shoes. The lucky winners get to have their artwork, name and url printed over 250,000 times in the snazziest of magazines— oh and to top it off, $1000 worth of Fluevogs! Did I enter?
You betcha. I sent my drawing in at the last minute for my shoe, the Mini Zaza, and as fantastic luck would have it, I'm one of the finalists!
Am I hopping up and down as I type this?
Yes, yes I am.

So dear friends, if you like my ad, go to Fluevog.com and vote for me.
If you feel moved by the shoes currently involved (and I'm sure you will be), enter your own creation for a chance at shoe heaven.

Also, if you have a dream shoe kicking around in your brain and would like a chance at getting it made into a real shoe, draw it up and submit it to
Fluevog's Open Source Footwear. If your shoe is chosen, you have the glory of having a Fluevog named after you! It's a marvellous thing, I tell you.

Friday, November 13, 2009

pretty in pink


Out of the clear blue sky, I get this box wrapped in grey paper with Portuguese printed all over it. I tear it open— as I tear every package open— and wrapped inside a delicate cocoon of tissue paper, I spy something deliciously pink. I discover a button. Then I freak out.

Last Month, Fluevog asked people to vote for a new colourway for my shoe, The Zaza. The choice was between a luscious pink/pink, and a snazzy violet/orange combination— which won. Unfortunately only the winning combination could be produced, so imagine the incredible shock and joy I felt to discover that I now have a pair of the unattainable, pretty pink Zazas.
Aren't they fabulous?

Thank you Fluevog, I love you!

Submit your shoe design to Fluevog's Open Source Footwear, and you too could have your very own shoe!

Friday, July 24, 2009

haight and the de young

Well I just tried to import my photos off my camera into iPhoto (which I normally never use, but I'm on a different computer) and it crashed, deleting all the photos I took today! I have nothing to show you except sketches. I am so upset. I took tons of pictures of Golden Gate Park, Haight Street, the Conservatory. So I'll just tell you about today and show you some sketches until I go back to the park.

Armed with a fully-charged camera (sigh), I headed off in the chilly fog to Haight Street for a little shopping and some noodles. There is one thing everyone should know before visiting SF in the summer: the weather is cold. Bring warm pants, tights, a jacket and sweaters. The key to visiting and life in SF is layering. My formula was generally skirt + tights + t-shirt + sweater + jacket + scarf. This way I could adjust throughout the day in case the sun decided to shine or the fog swept in.

My most favourite shop on Haight is the Fluevog store. I have been a fan of Fluevog shoes for over a decade. They're stylish, unique, comfortable and incredibly well made. I have several pairs with paper-thin soles but the leather feels and looks brand-new. Every time I wear any of my Vogs, my feet get checked out. The other wonderful thing about Fluevog is that they also give you, yes you, the opportunity to design your own shoe if you enter a sketch into their Open Source Footwear. A few of you may already know this, but last year, Fluevog chose my design to be made into a real shoe that was named after me: The Zaza. Needless to say I was over the moon, and still am every time I put on my own pair. It really felt like winning the lottery, it was such an incredible honour. Here's a picture of my shoe, courtesy of fluevog.com:

Aren't they great? I'm a lucky, lucky girl.
* * *



After my favourite jade noodles in coconut lemongrass sauce at The Citrus Club, I walked through Golden Gate Park to the de Young museum, truly what I consider the most impressive art museum in San Francisco. I do not like the SFMOMA at all; It's an awful building and well, if you can go to a spacious large, well-lit, gorgeous wooden-floored museum with beautifully displayed pieces, wouldn't you rather go there instead? I have spent countless mornings and afternoons in the de Young's Mesoamerican, African and Oceanic art rooms. The clay figures and carved masks feel like old friends that I had to visit.


I just happened to discover at the last minute that one of my favourite movies, Harold and Maude was playing at the Red Vic Movie House on Haight— naturally R and I practically ran over to catch the 9:15 showing. Watching a movie at the Red Vic is a unique and fun experience. The theatre is tiny and has cushioned benches in the front that are quite comfortable. You get your popcorn in a bowl and tea or coffee in a mug. So much more personal and cosy than your typical movie theatre.