Jenna is a photographer and designer based in New York City. She co-founded the lifestyle website Local Creative with friend Nicole Steriovski.
Read MoreMeet Ally Russell
Ally moved to London from Perth, Western Australia in 2011 to study History at UCL. Since graduating, she has been working in TV journalism and PR, and drawing a 200-page comic adaptation of an '80s cult horror film.
Read MoreMeet J Wortham
on their Morning Routine by season
In summer, I wake up naturally. I love warm weather, and I can’t wait to be outside. In winter, it’s the complete opposite. I lie in bed and negotiate until I’m on my way into the day. No matter the season, I like to alkalize as soon as I wake up, with charcoal filtered water with a squeeze of lemon, lime or blood orange, whatever is in the fridge.
on becoming a writer
I’ve been reading since I was 2, the story goes, so it feels natural that I would work in words. My family is very working class, so it took me awhile to realize I could earn a living by writing, and once that happened, there was no going back.
I love having a job that allows me to investigate the human condition, and think about life, and explore alternate ways of being and doing things.
on what they’re working on now
My goal for the rest of the year is to expand my idea of myself as a creator. I am working on an art book with a friend, and teaching myself more about film and moving images. I love working with video. In five years, I hope to be as excited and invigorated as I am today to write and connect with new people.
On their personal style
I mostly shop online. Trying on clothes gives me body anxiety and so many places have free online returns, so. In general, I aim for maximum comfort and bright colors, which I get from all over. I am experimenting with more masculine styles right now because that's what is in my heart. I love ASOS and I have a few friends who sell vintage and they occasionally set pieces aside for me, which is dope.
on the perfect skin mask & their skincare routine
Raw honey is a perfect skin mask. I just buy a jar of something raw and organic and spread it on my face a few minutes and then rinse it off. I do it a few times a month, in the morning or before bed . Honey is a natural antibiotic and moisturizer. It keeps my skin clear and looking dewy and moist. It’s THE BEST!
My skin is so temperamental and hyper-reactive, so I can’t use too many things at once or too much makeup, or my face has a meltdown. I just try keep it clean and moisturized to prevent break-outs. I love Orgaid sheet masks because they have probiotics and witch hazel in them, which is incredible. I’ve been using a vitamin C serum too, which is working wonders for my summer complexion.
J's Favorite Books
The Black Book by Middleton A. Harris, Ernest Smith, Morris Levitt, Roger Furman, & Toni Morrison
This Bridge Called My Back by Cherríe Moraga and Gloria Anzaldúa
J's Favorite Places
Best Coffee: SuperCrown
Best Paletas: Tulcingo Deli
Best Juices at AP Cafe
Best Place for Cool Shows: Trans-Pecos
Best Discowoman Sets: TheLotRadio and Market Hotel
Best Acupuncture: TigerLily
Best Spot For A Date & Sushi: Momos
Best Place for a Movie: Syndicated
Meet Nicole Steriovski
Nicole is a creative director, producer, filmmaker, copywriter and co-founder of Local Creative, a collaborative lifestyle collective and studio.
Read MoreMeet Sam Giordano
Meet NYC passerby, Sam Giordano, a a fashion designer and owner of the womenswear label Dolores Haze.
Read MoreMeet Sam Tarter
Meet NYC passerby, Sam Tarter, an Assistant Designer at Coach, designing Coats and Leather Jackets all the while continuing her alternative lifestyle in her Brooklyn home with her rockstar boyfriend and 2 teenager cats.
Read MoreMeet Angie Myung
on her morning routine
Get up. Make coffee. Drink Coffee. Check email. Jump in the shower. Get dressed. Eat breakfast. Put some stuff on face. Walk the dogs, and out the door.
on starting her business
Poketo began with one single product, the artist wallets back in 2003. We had an art show and as part of the show, we made something that everyone could afford, but with art on it. It was our friend's artwork made into a form of a wallet. The wallets completely sold out the night of the art show. We had so much fun that we kept making products with more artists, including apparel, housewares, and stationery.
In our early days, we worked with bands like Postal Service, The Shins, Weezer, and Arcade Fire. We got together some artists, and we designed the wallets that were sold at the bands' concerts. It was so much fun, and the musicians were totally stoked on the wallets too.
on her style and aesthetic
I hardly ever go shopping. When I need something to wear, I get it from my own shop, Poketo. I think and breathe design and color for living. Poketo's aesthetic is all about colors that are bright and happy. My aesthetic in my personal life is really minimal. Our house is white with pops of color. I wear a lot of white and black, or the combination of two colors. I also don't own much. When you're surrounded by design all day long, the last thing you want to do is surround yourself with more colors and products when you come home.
on her beauty routine and recommendations
My beauty routine is pretty simple. I use what my mom buys for me, which is mostly Korean products. Since I'm Korean, I feel like it matches my skin better. In the morning, I just wash my face once. At night, I wash my face using two different products. First, with oil cleanser that takes off all my make up, and then with regular face wash. At morning and night, I use toner, lotion, and serum with sunblock, and I use Sulwhasoo Perfecting Cushion Brightening Foundation. It's like a sunblock and light foundation, but it's really light and I don't feel like I'm wearing makeup. I recommend IOPE Plant Stem Cell Skin Perfection Softener and Emulsion and IOPE Nutritious Anti-wrinkle Serum. Then I put on Laneige Eyeliner and Laneige Volume Setting Mascara.
on self-care rituals
I'm pretty lazy. I don't get my nails done and my hair is usually in a pony tail. I guess the one thing I do religiously is putting on sunblock even on a rainy day. The sun in Southern California is really strong. You need to wear sunblock even when it's cloudy.
angie's favorite books
The Buried Giant by Kazuo Ishiguro, South of the Border, West of the Sun by Haruki Murakami, Winkreative Design Stories: A Global View on Branding, Design and Publishing by Camilla Belton, Blink by Malcolm Gladwell
angie's favorite movies
When Harry Met Sally, Sweet Bean, Chungking Express, Eat Drink Man Woman
angie's favorite places
Civil Coffee is a new coffee shop and they serve really good coffee with some brunch options
Huarache Azteca in Highland Park is the best Mexican restaurant in this area
For shopping, Poketo Flagship in the Arts District, of course
─ Photography By Claire Donoghue
Meet Julia Sherman
on her morning routine
I don’t really have a morning routine since my projects and schedule are always changing and I travel so frequently for work. That said, when I am lucky enough to be at home, my days start with a strong cup of coffee and a walk to Fort Greene park with my husband and my dog Lucy. Back at home, I like to make a savory breakfast (often salad and eggs, or even brothy soup with a poached egg), and tend to my plants and my garden before opening up the computer and hitting the ground running.
on creating salad garden
When I made my Salad Garden at the Getty Museum, I discovered the original house that was built on the property way before the museum was built. It was this gem of a Mid-Century home with a swimming pool that ran from outside to the living room. It had the sweeping views that the museum is famous for, but it was wonderful to imagine this home had been the only property on the mountain top at one time. So, I found the architect, Harry Gesner, who is in his 90s and living in Malibu. I went to his house and we made a salad, and then I offered to grow his favorite plant, horseradish, at the museum garden I would go on to plant that coming winter. I invited him back to the little house he built almost 50 years ago, and we made a video wearing WWII gas masks and pureeing the root the way he used to when he was young. He is a wild character, and someone I felt so privileged to spend time with. I am not sure how that could have happened if salad hadn't been the foil for our introduction.
on becoming an artist
I have always been an artist. I grew up in my mother's art studio, so I can't think of a time where art wasn't essential to my identity. I grew up in Manhattan as well, so going to the museum was required. I was lucky enough to have people encourage my creativity from an early age and still to this day: family (my mom and both my grandmothers were artists), to incredible professors who still support my career.
on creating her blog
After finishing my MFA at Columbia University, I was exhibiting my work in galleries and museums, but I found myself pouring more willing energy into the meals I prepared for friends than I did into my art work. I think my time in the New York art world really altered my perspective on what it means to be a "professional artist," and I no longer felt like I was having the kinds of conversations I wanted to have with my peers. I was cooking all the time and my husband urged me to start a blog, given that writing and photography were my primary media already. I have never and still don't read food blogs, so the idea was hard for me to grasp. I started to document my cooking and was really challenged and inspired by food photography. It was a whole new thing for me. I started blogging three salads a day, and eventually, other artists started asking me if they could contribute their favorite recipes to the project. My artwork had always been super collaborative, more about other people than myself in some ways, so the project just evolved from there. I realized I had found the hack that would allow me to be an artist, participate in the art world, but not be beholden to it.
on her beauty routine
I don't have much of a beauty routine, though I probably should! I try and keep things pretty simple since I have the world's most sensitive skin. I suppose the only thing I am committed to is keeping my skin moisturized. I wear tons of sunblock, this Jurlique cream (which is basically a thick paste), and I use coconut oil in my hair and almond oil on my body. Every now and then I do this powdered Rare Earth Clay facial mask from the health food store, and it does wonders to exfoliate and brighten skin. Also, avocado and manuka honey whipped together makes an amazing face mask. I use Weleda Wild Rose Deodorant.
on her shopping habits
I can't say I really shop at any one place. I am more of a collector than a shopper. I like to buy clothes when I travel, things I find along the way. That said, the brand that really fits me well is Apiece Apart. I used to dress like a demented baby doll, all kinds of vintage clothes with embellishments and ruffles from head to toe, but lately I have been trying to reign it in, wear more monochromes, structured sophisticated tailored lines. I find when I wear clothing like that, I take myself more seriously and other people do as well.
on her book, salad for president
The book, Salad for President, will be published in May of 2017, and it will be a cookbook inspired by artists. I am featuring 10 artists in a similar format as I do on my blog. I shot the artists over the course of the last year, traveling to places like Japan, Mexico and California. Many of the conversations we had were about how they conceive of themselves as artists or creative thinkers, and how that extends beyond their “work” and into their everyday lives. On top of that, there are about 70 of my own recipes in the book, plant-based food and drinks that best express my love of produce, cooking and entertaining.
julia's favorite books
Our Bodies, Ourselves by Boston's Women Health Book Collective, Bauhaus Women by Ingrid Radewaldt, Sandra Kemker, and Ulrike Müller, Museum of Modern Art Artists' Cookbook, Kim Kardashian West: Selfish by Kim Kardashian West, Seeing is forgetting the name of the thing one sees by Lawrence Weschler
julia's favorite records
The Legendary Patsy Cline by Patsy Cline, Tepid Peppermint Wonderland: a Retrospective by Brian Jonestown Massacre, Imagine Our Love by Lavender Diamond, No Mas by Javelin
julia's favorite movies
The Act of Killing, The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, Sleeper, The Gleaners and I
julia's favorite places in nyc
I love to eat at restaurants where I know the chefs and they are can tell you about the food themselves. Any restaurant by chef Alex Raij (Txikito, El Quinto Pino or La Vara), is my preferred way to eat. Small plates, Spanish/Basque food and great wine. Also, Mission Chinese because Angela is a genius and conceptualizes each dish as an artist would.
photography by lanna apisukh
Meet Sarah Vinciguerra
Sarah was born in a beach town in Florida. Seeking more energy than the small towns she was accustomed to, she moved to Brooklyn with her husband two years ago to pursue a degree in Nursing as well as be closer to her friends.
Read MoreMeet Arpana Rayamajhi
Born and raised in Kathmandu, Nepal. She received her BFA from The Cooper Union School of Art, focusing primarily on Painting and Sculpture. She founded her jewelry brand in 2014, where she brings her Nepali heritage and craftsmanship to each of her pieces whilst drawing inspiration from tribal/ethnic, pop cultures, Rock & Roll and Death. In addition she is also the co-founder of DISPOSE, an online magazine collection of disposable photographs that narrate the day of an individual.
Read More
Meet Lauren Nostro
♫ LISTEN TO Lauren'S PLAYLIST | ⌨ LAST GOOGLE SEARCH
STREETSTYLE DETAILS: Jersey, joefreshgoods
Photography by Xenia Alexandra
RECOMMENDATIONS
✓ I love this old school Italian spot in Carroll Gardens called Red Rose —go on Thursdays for the stuffed artichokes.
✓ Soft Spot for drinks.
✓ Three Kings for tattoos.
FAVORITE MOVIES
Meet Sue Williamson
Born in a small town outside of Memphis, Tennessee, Sue moved to New York over seven years ago to study Fashion Design and Art History at Pratt, interning for stylists and at places like NYLON and Refinery29 along the way. She is the digital editor at W, where she writes about fashion, beauty, and culture. In her free time she loves taking pictures with a cheap old film camera, drawing, watching tons of movies, and hanging out with her dog Owen.
Read MoreMeet Pamela Garavano-Coolbaugh
Meet NYC passerby, Pamela Garavano-Coolbaugh, Head Project Manager at Captured tracks, where she oversees albums from beginning to end on all fronts.
Read MoreMeet Emma Orlow
on her morning routine
My morning routine is usually making awkward eye contact with my neighbors across the way who have seen me eat snacks in my underwear, have sex, and cry way too many times because for no reason I refuse to get blinds. After that’s over, I usually put on music and try to remind myself to hydrate.
on her interest in confessional art
Confessional art as a genre intends to reveal a truth that is inherently shameful. I guess I like that because I don’t go to therapy and am an only child, so it’s the way that I deal with things on my own. Plus I like turning gross, rotten memories into the silliest, most colorful looking objects to cherish. Although I suppose you can argue that all art intends to reveal something autobiographical, even a paired down abstract painting. I like making work that most people probably think is embarrassing, like anything about the time my laundry bag opened in the elevator and this guy handed me back my period stained underwear seems like relevant fodder, even though period art for the most part is pretty done at this point.
on the beginning of her art series
My best friend in high school and I started [The Do Not Enter Diaries]. Part of it came from the fact that we were obsessed with the art direction that went into the bedrooms in some of our favorite films and how it was, in a lot of cases, the crux of the characters’ development. We knew how much we had worked to make our own bedrooms these special havens and how much we hoped it said about us and our friends. We wanted to showcase how something as simple as the way you decorate is a form of storytelling. The other part was we felt like we didn’t have the outlet for all of our weird ideas in our claustrophobic high school atmosphere and wanted a space of our own to work on. It was very low-tech—we only had a crappy camera and didn’t know much about web development but it was such a fun and important learning experience. It was incredible that we got the kind of press we did. The fact that MTV and Amazon’s E-book office invited us to their office at one point was insane. But I am honestly glad none of that came into fruition at that point in my life.
on moving on to other projects
[We didn't continue The Do Not Enter Series because] we were at first limited to our friends and friends of friends and those who emailed us, which didn’t make the project nearly as diverse as we wanted it to be. If we had a bigger network it would’ve been different. But eventually we started getting correspondents from as far as Slovakia and Shanghai, which was great. I think it had a lot of potential, but there are still so many other issues I would’ve loved to touch upon and it was hard to keep the film style consistent when the correspondents were sending us the footage. We realized that having your own bedroom itself was such a privileged concept and we wanted to explore more subjects who were engaging with the teenage bedroom in nonconventional ways. Had we had better resources—funding, even just a better camera-- I would’ve loved to delve in even deeper. But in the end, we both went off to college and got involved in other projects and being obsessed with archiving the teenage bedroom sadly seemed less pertinent all of a sudden.
on her beauty routine
I don’t wear much makeup, but when I do it's usually a little bit of the Bare Essentials bronzer, Glossier Boy Brow, and maybe some sort of black eyeliner or red lipstick, depending on the occasion. I also recommend Glossier Priming Moisturizer, St. John's Shield Light Regenerative Bath & Body Oils, DKNY Be Delicious Eau de Parfum Spray, and C.O.Bigelow Rose Salve.
My dad is a dermatologist so I think I’ve grown up being really skeptical of most beauty products that say they can rock my world. I am still totally attracted to makeup with really groovy packaging or anything that smells like a Jamba Juice smoothie. I still think simple stuff like Dove soap really gets the job done best. I am wary of complicated ingredients.
on her shopping habits and style
Most of my wardrobe is vintage, junky thrift-shops, and random online places I follow on Instagram. I love 10 Ft. Single Stella Dallas, Amarcord Vintage, 9th Street Haberdashery, Coming Soon, and Georgia Vintage. I just want my wardrobe to look like a lava lamp sort of spilled all over an episode of Lizzie McGuire.
emma's favorite books
How Should A Person Be by Sheila Heti, Chelsea Girls by Eileen Myles, The Diary of Frida Kahlo by Carlos Fuentes, A Coney Island of the Mind by Lawrence Ferlinghetti, I Want to Scratch 'n Sniff You by Emma Orlow
emma's favorite movies
The Doom Generation, Coffee and Cigarettes, Reality Bites, Romy and Michelle's High School Reunion
emma's favorite places in nyc
Lowkey brunch spot: B&H Deli
Favorite sandwich: Cheeky Sandwiches
Best bookstore: Mast Books
Photography by Audrey Cotton
Meet Nadia Bedzhanova
Meet NYC passerby, Nadia Bedzhanova, Russian native now pursuing film directing.
Read MoreMeet Sunny Shokrae
Born in Tehran, raised in So-Cal, Sunny went to UCSC to study Politics & Sociology. After college, she worked in LA for 3 years in various fields. Unfulfilled with the post-college 9 to 5 life, Sunny uprooted and moved to NYC to pursue her passion in photography and attend ICP. Today, she is an acclaimed photographer with a wide variety of clients like Barneys, Oyster, Nylon, & Levi's. Right now she is very stoked to be working on a long term book project with Brooks Headley of Superiority Burger.
Read MoreMeet Dana Drori
Originally from Montreal, Canada, Dana is a model, actress, and non-fiction editor living in Brooklyn. As a model, she has worked with top photographers, brands, and magazines, including Bruce Weber, Ellen Von Unwerth, Michelangelo di Batista, Greg Kadel, Clarins, Garnier, L’Oreal, Marie Claire, Elle, Cosmopolitan, among others. In 2014, she started Aftertastes, a non-fiction literary website that focuses on food stories. She has a few tiny scenes in some movies coming out next year, of which she is really proud. She still likes going nuts to Led Zeppelin.
Read MoreMeet Charlotte Doherty
Meet NYC passerby, Charlotte Doherty. She went to college for writing in NC and moved here to further that pursuit, but ended up transitioning into the fashion industry. Currently, she is the general manager of Courtshop Denim and does art on the side.
Read MoreMeet Peisin Yang Lazo
Meet NYC passerby, Peisin Yang Lazo. Half Ecuadorian, half Taiwanese, Peisin grew up in Ecuador as well as Nicaragua, before moving to the States by herself to go to Boston University and study Film/TV. Now she’s a producer at ad agency Johannes Leonardo.
Read MoreMeet Leslie Hamilton
Meet NYC passerby, Leslie Hamilton, a freelance design assistant working for independent designers while also working for American Two Shot.
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