So Gap teamed with Pantone to make a store that looks like American Apparel. And I gotta say, the nerd in me loves it. However, we should take a moment to evaluate the way in which they decided to package the product. here's the Gap NYC shop:
now previously Pantone had gotten together with Uniqlo (kinda like a japanese Gap?) and did the same t-shirt thing but they put them in plastic capsules and sold them from a vending machine. like this:
History of Non Fiction Film is a class I am taking this semester. I dunno if you knew that. I'm currently in the library watching this film and ima have to write a paper about it later. But before I do that I plan on going to a MICA friends house to look at her paintings. Doing this always makes me happy. Yay for friends! and paintings! really good paintings!
Night Mail is a 1936 documentary film about a London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) mail train from London to Scotland, produced by the GPO Film Unit. A poem by English poet W. H. Auden was specially written for it, used in the closing few minutes, as was music by Benjamin Britten. (The two men also collaborated on a rail-documentary on the line from London to Portsmouth, The Way to the Sea, also in 1936.) The film was directed by Harry Watt and Basil Wright, and narrated by John Grierson and Stuart Legg. The Brazilian filmmaker Alberto Cavalcanti was the sound director. It starred Royal Scot 6115 Scots Guardsman.[citation needed] As recited in the film, the poem's rhythm imitates that of the train's wheels as they clatter over the track sections, beginning slowly but picking up speed so that by the time the narration reaches the penultimate verse the narrator is speaking at a breathless pace. As the train slows toward its destination the final verse is taken at a more sedate pace.[improper synthesis?] The famous opening lines of the poem are "This is the Night Mail crossing the border / Bringing the cheque and the postal order". The poem however remains under copyright. Such is the iconic status of the film, it was used as inspiration for a famous British Rail advertisement of the 1980s, known as the "concerto ad". [1]
So, mom, you prolly dont know about art kids and their love for polaroids. But polaroid cameras are a way of life. they stopped making film for polaroid cameras. I KNOW, I DUNNO how they have survived these past few months but they (we?) dont have to worry any longer! yes, i read a website called "geeksugar"