Yeah , lets not forget, both maters are equally important.
Focus on Japan, killing in Libya: BY AREND VAN DAM
(via brooklynmutt)
More fun ways to help Japan:
Mario and Link lend Japan a helping hand in Hermes Arriola’s recent fan art piece. You can donate / help the cause too at Red Cross.
Related Rampage: Drunken Link
Lend a Hand by Hermes Arriola / sexykins (Tumblr) (Facebook)
Via: sexykins
(via gamefreaksnz)
Help Japan: Donate
As you probably already know Japan has been heated by a 8.9 earthquake and a 7 meter Tsunami in the north eastern coast .Since then they have had earthquake replicas very frequently and another 3m Tsunami.In consequence to this a nuclear disaster in potency may take place due to problems in the Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant.
Japan is one of the most developed countries in the world and because of that plus their highly preventive culture towards natural disasters ,they have shown a very organized society that is taking all the necessary measures to have the less negative impact that a disaster like this have already left.
But facing this magnitude of catastrophe is hard even for a country like Japan. And many economical efforts are needed to make thing done. So i urge to donate through your local Red Cross because it is an organization specialized in disaster management and emergency response, plus it is an international organization that is neutral which means it doesn’t have any agenda besides the mission of providing help specially during emergencies.
If your local Red Cross is not taking donations , you still can help without tax relief to the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent Page, just select under : i would like my contribution to go to :Japan : Earthquake and Tsunami.
Red Cross Links:
European Union Red Cross National Societies Links.
International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent

Poster by James White -Signalnoise
Hey, lots of the special editions in music, design and gaming world are only for Japan.Not fair… Magic, magical japan.
There ,now you have another reason to go to that land.
Japan only “Lost in Translation” picture disc LP. (via Jeff Staple)
Hunting books gives you the opportunity of meeting new people , they open your mind and you gets you the chance of seeing the big picture of our world and beyond.
today after work i decided to go to borders. i always enjoy going to the bookstore due to the large section of manga. i headed straight to the manga and was looking for my yaoi *-* i found a book n nosebleeded all over the place lmao.there was this guy there looking for a naruto book i wanted to talk to him sooo bad he even had naruto hair i was like biting my lip wanting to explode and talk with a fellow naruto fan but i holded back i was soo mad at myself =___= *sigh* maybe next time…i wanna talk to someone face to face about manga n anime…i have my lil sis but i want to meet other people.
Than i went to the history section and found a very interesting japanese book. its called shutting out the sun how japan created its own lost generation by michael zielenzieger. i high recommend this book you think you know japan? you think japan is about vending machines…hello kitty…rilakumma…harajuku fashion…smiling faces with peace signs…and neon lights?? you have no idea how about i post a fact from the book for you guiz every single day? yeah imma do that.
I think it’s important to understand just how far ahead the Japanese aesthetic is. In Europe and more so the US there is a feeling of reclamation back from Japan. Original ideas that are being presented as righteous or “owned” ideas by European and American brands. This is nearly always coupled with the notion of domestic manufacturing, often disguising inferior product because of the forced romance of it’s origin. The Japanese focus far more on the product, including the minor nuances of construction, quality of zips, reproduction of fabrics. They are forced to re-imagine the garments by dissecting each part and re-making the original patterns to fit the Japanese frame, I think it’s this part of the process that facilitates the knowledge and helps them produce such outstanding pieces. The current revival in heritage fashion is one that has been constant in Japan for as long as I’ve been traveling to the country.
Quite often with a little bit of digging you can find exact versions of current products being offered out side of Japan by the current crop of brands, only they did it years ago, for a better price, in better cloth. There are a few core brands in Japan that avoid the whole hype scene that have really pioneered this whole movement and rarely get the credit for it. In terms of fashion, this whole area has developed from a very non-fashion point of view. The fashion is in the passion for the details and the addiction to the heritage, not an aspiration for any sort of trend or look. Just a shear love of authenticity mixed with the desire to improve and move things along. For my own line, we look at historical pieces, imagine them sitting on a shelf in a hardware store and try and design the things that would be to the left and the right of that piece on the shelf.
Japan’s fashion’s among the hippest, little known elsewhere
Let’s learn something about Japanese Fashion!
Shall We?
By HIROKO TABUCHI, for NY TIMES
TOKYO — Japan’s trailblazers of street fashion are the envy of Western designers, spawning Web sites filled with snapshots of Tokyo youngsters in the latest distressed jeans or psychedelic stockings.
With city sidewalks as their catwalks, young Japanese flaunt carefully layered tops and thigh-high boots sporting labels like Galaxxxy, Phenomenon and Function Junction.
But most of Tokyo’s clothing designers have not figured out how to cash in on the city’s fashion sense. Only a handful of Japanese brands, like A Bathing Ape or Evisu Jeans, have gained traction beyond the nation’s shores. Chic local labels like Fur Fur and Garcia Marquez Gauche remain mostly unknown outside Japan.
Experts say that the nation’s fashion industry is too fragmented and too focused on the domestic market to make it overseas.
“For much of this decade, fashion trends have started in Japan and gone global. But Japanese brands don’t even realize that,” said Loic Bizel, a French-born fashion consultant based in Tokyo. Japan “generates trends and ideas, but it stops there,” he said. “Many brands are not even interested in going overseas.”
So each season, Mr. Bizel takes fashion industry buyers from America and Europe — mass clothiers like Hennes & Mauritz of Sweden and Topshop of Britain — to buy up bagfuls of the latest hits. The designs are then whisked overseas to be reworked, resized, stitched together and sold under Western labels.
In that business model, there is little financial gain for Japan. In 2008, Japan’s clothing and apparel-related exports came to a mere $416 million, dwarfed by the $3.68 billion exported by American apparel companies, and a tiny fraction of China’s $113 billion.
Meanwhile, Japan’s domestic apparel industry is on the decline. It shrank 1.3 percent, to 4.37 trillion yen ($48 billion), in 2008, and is expected to post a steeper decline for 2009 as recession-weary consumers and an aging population cut back sharply on spending.
“Japanese fashion might be considered cutting-edge, but overseas markets have been largely elusive,” said Atsushi Izu, an analyst at the Nomura Research Institute in Tokyo. “Japan’s fashion industry is very fragmented, and most companies lack the resources and know-how to bring their brands to foreign markets.”
The government is trying to help. Earlier this year, the Foreign Ministry dispatched a group of suit-clad officials to Tokyo’s hip Harajuku neighborhood to survey the latest trends, part of an effort to promote Japanese fashion overseas. After interviews with shoppers and sales clerks, the ministry came up with a battle plan: to appoint three young trendsetters as “ambassadors” of Japanese chic, charged with extending the industry’s reach overseas and piquing interest in Japanese brands.
One ambassador, Misako Aoki — a model known in Tokyo for her Lolita look of frilly Rococo-inspired dresses paired with platform shoes — has been dispatched to France, Spain, Russia and Brazil, where she has attended expos and hosted fashion talk shows in her trademark floppy bow tie and frilly smock.
“I hope that Lolita fashion and Japanese fashion in general will raise your interest in Japan,” Ms. Aoki said in São Paulo, Brazil, in November after starring in a Lolita fashion show organized by the Japanese embassy. (Although Lolita style is a reference to the Vladimir Nabokov novel “Lolita,” its look is more covered-up Victorian schoolgirl than skin-baring teenage vixen.)
The trade ministry has also helped revamp the twice-yearly Tokyo Collection and started inviting foreign journalists to come on the government’s dime. For the first time this year, the collection, renamed Japan Fashion Week, sponsored a splinter fashion event in New York to showcase Japanese designers, and it has planned another runway show in New York in mid-February.
“Japanese fashion has so much global potential,” says Kenjiro Monji, director general of the Foreign Ministry’s Public Diplomacy Department, who oversees Japan’s cultural push overseas.
But the government’s efforts have won it few fans in the fashion industry. Besides Ms. Aoki, the two other fashion ambassadors chosen by the government are a woman who likes to dress up in cute high school uniforms and another who mixes and matches secondhand clothes. Promoting such niche tastes does little to help the wider fashion industry, many say.
And Japan Fashion Week remains a relative nonevent filled with relatively obscure designers like Motonari Ono and Kazuhiro Takakura. Ambitious young designers hoping to follow in the footsteps of Japanese greats like Issey Miyake, Yohji Yamamoto and Rei Kawakubo may have to do what they did: pass over Tokyo’s shows for those in Paris.
Meanwhile, local favorites like Fur Fur — a new brand that mixes airy cotton frocks with distressed trench coats — have neither the expertise nor the resources to market overseas. Despite rave reviews from industry insiders, it has only one small store in Tokyo.
“Of course, taking my brand overseas is a dream,” said Fur Fur’s designer, Aya Furuhashi. “But to be honest, that’s really beyond us right now.”
What Japan’s fashion industry needs is more concrete help in marketing and setting up shop overseas, experts say. The government could also play a larger role helping Japanese labels protect their intellectual property rights, they say.
There are some promising signs. With government support, the start-up Xavel, which runs fashion shows that let women order outfits in real time using their cellphones, has opened shows in Paris and Beijing.
Fast Retailing, which sells the Uniqlo brand, has also been flexing its muscles overseas. Uniqlo, Japan’s answer to Gap, has roots in suburban outlets and does not have the level of respect among young fashion fans that many of Japan’s hipper brands do. But with ample funds and aggressive pricing on its fleece jackets and shirts, Uniqlo has expanded, with 92 stores worldwide.
Tadashi Yanai, chief executive of Fast Retailing, has said he hopes to build it into the world’s biggest apparel company, with sales of 5 trillion yen in 2020.
“We are part of a global economy,” Mr. Yanai said at a recent forum. “We cannot look inward.”
The reason you should deep the fishy part is because most of the times in sushi the fish is raw ; and the way they season it is with the soy sauce and not with salt. In Occident we abuse of soy, making the original and pure taste of fish disappear. The predominant flavor should be fish and not soy with flavored taste of fish.
If you deep too much the ricy part of the sushi it will disintegrate in they soy saucer.
Etiquette has always a practical reason of why it started and not only snoberety.It evolves and never rest the same. So it might be useful to follow it.t
swissmiss | sushi etiquette (Editor’s note: I always flip the nigiri upside down so the fish is on the tongue first…)


