Hip

Kasper woont in de intercity Amsterdam-Maastricht

De ‘dakloze’ student Kasper is op zoek naar een kamer. Hij pakt dit goed aan. In sneltreinvaart verovert hij het internet met een filmpje dat de kijker doet geloven dat hij tegenwoordig in de intercity Amsterdam-Maastricht woont. In 16 uur tijd is zijn filmpje al meer dan 37000 keer bekeken.

Kasper Hoex heeft dit filmpje niet alleen gemaakt om snel aan een kamer te komen, hij wil met de video ook protesteren tegen de kamernood in onze hoofdstad. In 2015 wordt de OV-studentenkaart afgeschaft. Dat betekent dat studenten die nu heen en weer reizen in de toekomst eerder op kamers zullen gaan. En het nieuwe kabinet is niet van plan op korte termijn te investeren in extra studentenhuisvesting.

Wie woonruimte voor Kasper heeft kan mailen naar kasperzoekteenkamer@gmail.com. Ik ben heel erg benieuwd naar alle reacties die Kasper krijgt. Verbaast me niets als hij morgen bij de DWDD zit!

Isch been ain Hamburger: food4marketing.

Everyone knows the usual sum up of big country capitals or biggest cities you need to have travelled to. Just check any perfume brand packaging: London, New York, Tokio, Milan, Paris, Shanghai. It’s more difficult to be a less populous country capital like Amsterdam (No.2 on Lonely Planet hit list for 2013), Lisbon, Ottawa or Vienna. Let alone a non capital bigger city like Hamburg; but what a fantastic city it is!

Culinary City Marketing?
Hamburg, a city culinarily mocked a lot, because of a delicacy made big by the golden arches. I wonder if that was the first piece of culinary city marketing, but thinking about the Singapore Sling and Peking Duck I am not sure that’s true. It could be a very effective way to market your city and get it connected to something you can eat or drink. something many consumers are pretty passionate about. Maybe there should be a list called the 7 Culinary Wonders of the World (which – of course – is something you can Google and find, although not coupled with cities).

Don Draper meets Trent Reznor
Hamburg has succeeded in combining rawness of a big harbour city and the sleekness of the rich and famous. The first personified by the area around the Reeperbahn (the Hamburg red light district) with its rugged underground clubs and sometimes referred to as die sündige Meile (the sinful mile). The second experienced when going to clubs like 20UP and East where the Hamburg beautiful (and sometimes not so young) reside @night time. The named clubs are examples of venues you’d normally only see in some capital cities or in the likes of Sydney and Cape Town. It’s the combination of grandeur, trendiness with a hotel, restaurant, lounge and bar under one roof, in the case of East including an outside area. Thus keeping consumers in from pre dinner drinks to late at night. It truly is a total brand experience creating. Although I must say I missed the Asian style beer such as Asahi or Tiger to really complete it.

Apart from Hospitality…
… the Hamburg city brand delivers a lot of other great stuff to do and see. Some examples:
-Deichtor Hallen, for international art and fotografie.
-Speicherstadt, the largest timber-pile founded warehouse district in the world.
-Fishmarkt St. Pauli area, only open on Sunday morning from 4:30AM-9:30AM.
-Hamburger Kunsthalle, a great museum that hosts paintings from 14th century to contemporary art including Dutch and Flemish masters, but also Renoir for example.
-U-434, a Russian submarine museum, a real relic to Soviet times.
-and for those who want to smell (the scent of) an A&F store in front of which people are still standing in line (in stead of being shut down). Scent marketing still impresses me, was very hot in 2010 and is one of the strongest way of emotion adding by a brand. I honestly smelled Fierce (again!) before I noticed the store.

oh yeah: use Stay.com and download the app and a free offline city map to find your way easily

Impressive
All in all I was really impressed by Hamburg, as a brand. It has characteristics many brands – both cities and products – would be jealous of. Thus Hamburg attracts many different people, visitors, business men, tourists, consumers, tradesmen, workers. And bringing them all together in this true melting pot. Its combination of various characters is stunning because it still feels natural.

Because there aren’t many brands that are tough, stylish and sexy? Well, I know of one course? Bond, James Bond. Still going strong in Skyfall.

Roetz Recycles City Bikes

Roetzen door de stad op duurzame fiets. De kurken handvatten en het lederen zadel verraden dat een Roetz-bike niet zomaar een fiets is. Roetz tovert oude fietsen met een geschiedenis om tot stijlvolle stadsfietsen die klaar zijn voor een tweede leven.

Het totale fietsenpark in Nederland bestaat uit 18 miljoen fietsen en van de inwoners in Nederland bezit ruim 85% minstens één fiets. Een ander leuk weetje is dat de gemiddelde levensduur van een fiets circa 13 jaar bedraagt en dat de Nederlandse vervangingsmarkt daardoor dus goed is voor meer dan één miljoen fietsen per jaar. Dat veroorzaakt een hoop afval.

Roetz-Bikes speelt hier heel handig op in met een concept dat is ontstaan uit liefde voor de fiets en het milieu. Afgedankte Nederlandse kwaliteitsfietsen krijgen een nieuw leven in de werkplaats van Roetz-Bikes. Het bedrijf stript sinds 2011 oude fietswrakken, voornamelijk afkomstig van fietsdepots, en hergebruikt zoveel mogelijk materialen om er hippe, stijlvolle fietsen van te maken.

Roetz is een jong fietsenmerk met een missie. Het hergebruiken van de fietsmaterialen was voor het bedrijf een logische oplossing voor de stijgende materiaalprijzen. Met een robuuste fiets probeert Roetz verspilling van materiaal tegen te gaan en daarnaast de markt te motiveren tot duurzame productie. Nu hopen dat Roetz alle producten kan aansporen tot een optimale duurzame oplossing in fietsenland.

Website Roetz
Roetz op Facebook

Wearable Instagram Photos

Many devouring photographers don’t really think about printing their work and let content live on their phones, external hard drives, and social networks. A new textile printing method could change that mindset.

The Lumi Process is a revolutionary photographic print process for textiles and natural materials. They believe photographs shouldn’t be limited to a page or a frame. They’re meant to be lived with, cared for, and last forever. Lumi allows you to print your Instagram photo’s on natural fibers to create photography you can touch.

The process is simple, requiring only that you spread your dye of choice on a material, then place anything that casts a shadow on top of it. Inkodyes are light sensitive dyes which are “developed” by the sun.  A short video on Lumi’s site explains how the process works. First, pick your favorite photo and print out a negative on transparent film. Lumi has developed a great app called Lumityper which lets iPhone users quickly turn their phone images into black and white negatives. Then, apply a layer of Inkodye across a natural fabric of your choice, pin the negative to the fabric above the dye, and leave it out in the sun, where the print develops. Finally, wash the print with Lumi’s textile detergent to make sure the image stops developing. The result is a high quality photographic image permanently affixed to a cotton t-shirt or leather bag, without the hassle of screens or expensive equipment.

Preorder now to reserve your kit here. It’s a $35 kit that includes most of the components of The Lumi Process: three bottles of dye in red, orange, and blue, a stencil, a test negative, and instructions. Don’t forget to buy the textile detergent to rinse out unexposed dye.

Printstagram
Something else I found surfing the web is Printstagram. They make your Instagram photos physical, with wonderful products that match the quality and magic of the app itself. Check out their posters, minibooks, miniprints ,t-shirts en stickers. It’s worth a visit.

ZITY ZOO: Vintage, Art & Music

Zity Zoo

The Boekhorststraat in The Hague; A small street, where a lot of things happen. It’s the little creative centre of town, where entrepeneurs and shop owners create events and concepts that feed the art crowd. Zity Zoo is one of those shops.

Zity Zoo
At Zity Zoo, young artists can display and sell their creations (for more information contact the shop). And aside from that, the shop is home to vintage clothing, shoes, bags, accessoires & retro furniture. From this his thursday on, the art works by the American artist Ren Phillips and the Dutch artist Marie-claire van der Heijden will be shown for some weeks.

Art, Music & Drinks
To celebrate the new exhibition and to kick off the summer sale, Zity Zoo will celebrate this thursday, the 19th of july, with a free event that will include music performances by Bart van Overbeek and a poetry reading by Tony. So are you up for some drinks, nice people, music and art?

Be there this thursday. Enjoy a little ‘tour du Zity Zoo‘ to get an impression of the shop, that is located at Boekhorststraat 43, Den Haag:

 

 

More awesome shops
This street is home to more awesome stores and concepts, like ‘Cute But Wrong’, a vintage shop where I wrote about for the (dutch) website modernehippies.nl. Check out the post here. Creative Warehouse Hoop and pop-up store Just Another Yard Sale (where Grazia wrote about) are shops worth visiting as well!