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September 29, 2010 - No Comments!

It turns out there is no culture in Manchester on Mondays.

As an empolyee of TBWA\Manchester there is great scheme available where you recieve half a day off once a quarter to go and do some thing cultural. 

This is the story of my Culture Club afternoon. 

With the current quarter ending on Thursday and free slots rapidly dwindling I quickly booked mine for Monday afternoon with the intention of going to see Rafael Lozano-Hemmer's exhibition at the Manchester Art Gallery, however I arrived to find gallery is closed on Mondays.

Annoyed at my lack of preparation, I quickly hot footed it across to the Cube gallery on Portland street, as there is usually some good little exhibitions on there.  Although on Monday it just seemed to be hosting a forum on energy saving from Calor.  I did manage to snap a pictures of the seemingly only piece of work being displayed.

So after these two disasters, I made a beeline for the Cornerhouse, but alas their 3 galleries were also closed (for changeover this time).  All that was left to do was to take stock with a tasty beverage in the Cornerhouse's fine cafe/bar.  At this point I recieved a phone call from Matt Cook, who was also on his Culture Club afternoon and suffering a similar fate to myself.  After doing exactly the same route, he was now in the Northern Quarter finding the galleries closed there too. 

Do people really not visit galleries on Mondays?

Photo_sep_28_11_00_51_pm

After much deliberation (and some beer), I decided to check out a film at the Cornerhouse.  There was one film on, Enter the Void.  Its got pretty good reviews and I watched a cheeky trailer on my iPhone which looked cool.

I was warned by two separate cinema employees about the use of strobe lighting and flashing effects as well as the threat of motion sickness during the film.  This only made my anticipation of the film grow, however what I wasn't warned about was that the sickness felt by previous viewers of the film probably wasn't caused by the portions of the film shot in the first person, but was probably due to some of the the subject matter. 

Now, this is a good film.  Its shot in a pretty cool way, and uses some interesting and very stylised techniques.  Some of the cut scenes do go on for far too long however, and about halfway through it suddenly becomes the most unexpectidly (porno)graphic film I've seen.  I certainly felt "cultured" by the time I left!

I did also manage to squeeze in a walk through the set of the Hollywood blockbuster "Captain America" being filmed on my doorstep in the Northern Quarter on my way home.  Below are a few snaps taken on my iPhone, for more information, (better) photos and videos on the filming check out this great blog, captainamericafilmingmanchester.co.uk.

Here is a video of the scene where the fire damaged car in my photos is being blown up.

Conclusion.

All in all it was a great half day even if it did get off to a slow start, with the culture having to be hunted down.  So next time round and to avoid seeing a man reaching the point of climax from inside a woman, I might just do a bit more preparation.  #cultureclub

manchestergalleries.org
lozano-hemmer.com
cube.org.uk
cornerhouse.org
captainamericafilmingmanchester.co.uk
TBWA\Manchester.com

September 23, 2010 - No Comments!

BUPA Great North Run 2010

Last Sunday I took part and completed my first half marathon, The 30th BUPA Great North Run as part of a team from TBWA\Manchester.  Everyone did really well with their respective runs and as I type we have raised £1,765.00 for Henshaws, Society for Blind People.  If you still want to donate, its not too late and every penny is really appreciated.

Media_httpa1twimgcomp_oqjjl

Media_httpwwwgreatrun_kchxi

I managed to just sneak inside my target of sub 2 hours, with a time of 1 hour 58 minutes 09 seconds, finishing an overall postion of 10497 out of 54000 runners.  So only any hour behind Haile Gebrselassie!

Split times:
5k:  00:25:05
10k: 00:51:55
15k: 01:19:31
Finish: 01:58:09

http://go.nike.com/08l8h6ql

PS. Thanks to the lovely lady who gave me an ice pop at around the 11 mile mark, not sure I would have made it to the end without the sugar hit!

www.greatrun.org
www.henshaws.org.uk
www.justgiving.com/tbwa

August 20, 2010 - No Comments!

Dunny 2010 Launch – My first vinyl toys

Last night I happened to visit the Launch Party for Kid Robot's new 3 inch Dunny Series, Dunny 2010, at the Richard Goodall Gallery in Manchester.

I couldn't resist treating myself to my first two vinyl toys and as all the boxes are sealed it was pot luck what I got.  I think I did pretty well....

 

Media_httpwwwbeautifu_gafqa

richardgoodallgallery.com
kidrobot.eu
sites.kidrobot.com/ds2010
sket-one.com
@Tizieu

May 24, 2010 - No Comments!

BUPA Greater Manchester 10k

So on Sunday 16th May I took part in my first long distance run, the BUPA Great Manchester 10k.  I'd prepared pretty well with plenty of training sessions and I managed to finish bang on my target of 50 minutes.  Although I'm pleased with this result I felt as I crossed the line I could have done shaved a further minute or two off my time after pacing myself a bit too much early on, but we'll put this down to experience and I'll be faster next time!

After being a bit slack with raising any sort of sponsorship I am pleased to confirm that I raised £150 (+ £42.31 gift aid) in just under a week for the Alzheimers Society

Useful links:
www.alzheimers.org.uk/
twitter.com/alzheimerssoc
www.greatrun.org
www.justgiving.com/BenTopliss

May 22, 2010 - No Comments!

So, I’ve got a new job!

As of next Tuesday (1st June), I'll be starting my new job as designer at TBWA\Manchester.  I'm really excited about the opportunity and can't wait to get to work.

After a year and a half, its time to say goodbye to this...


(This an advert from the dizzy heights of 1999!  Amazing,)

and hello to...

Media_httpwwwmediabis_jlwkf

April 2, 2010 - No Comments!

The internet search for penpals…

I received this brilliant spam email today....

Hello My Dearest
how are you today i hope all are fine,my name is miss lilian i saw your contact email address today while searching for a friend that can be trusted, through the internet search directory for penpals and i decided to get intouch with you please i will like you to reply me through this email address, so that i can send my picture to you and for us to know each other better,remember color age or distance does not matter in life but love,passion,carring,understanding toward each other matters allot in life and I have something VERY IMPORTANT to tell you.
                     thanks and God bless you
                            yours in love
                                lilian

And breathe... phew!  

April 1, 2010 - No Comments!

Tim Fishlock – 50by70

Well, Ive been meaning to blog this for a good couple of months. Here it is, finally.

For Christmas I received the limited edition 50by70 book from Habitat.  The book is presented in a screen printed box, and features 20 removable large format prints sized at 50 x 70 cm, just ready to go into one of Habitats standard frames and onto your wall.  It took me a little while to decide on how I wanted to display it and which pieces I wanted up on my walls.  The good thing about this book is that it is all easily interchangeable, so I can swap the work around as and when I feel the need.

"The idea behind the book is to give people the chance to own beautiful, limited edition artwork by established and up-and-coming artists and then be able to put it straight into a 50cm x 70cm frame," explains Tim Fishlock, editor, designer and curator of the project.

"A lot of time was spent putting together a diverse and hugely talented mix of image-makers," he continues. "50by70 is as much about introducing the work of established artists to new audiences as it is show-casing the skills of the new kids on the block."

Contributing artists: Adrian Johnson, Merijn Hos, Aaron Johnson, John Offenbach, Basso & Brooke, FLAG, Sroop Sunar, Julian House, Kevin Cummins, Stephan Zirwes, Alex Trochut, Jorge Chamorro, Shepard Fairey , Patrick Hughes , Tim Fishlock, Denis Darzacq, Zeloot, :phunk, Tsang Kin-Wah, Anthony Burrill.

"In the original pitch to Habitat I used Patrick Hughes' amazing Sunshine print on the mocked-up cover. When the project got the green light I then had to nervously approach the much-celebrated Mr Hughes to see if he'd be interested in contributing. Fortunately, he said yes and allowed his image to be used on the box too. Other big names on my dream contributors list were the artist Shepard Fairey, fashion designers Basso & Brooke and photographer Denis Darzacq. They all agreed to take part as did a whole other bunch of my favourite creative types."

"The graphic/illustration pieces are printed on Challenger Offset while the photography prints are printed on Marazion - both 140gsm. Print process is litho. The book is stiched and cloth-bound with a 400gsm cover. The perforation is graduated throughout the book to ensure the prints are easy enough to remove - this was the trickiest thing to get right."

I actually went for 80x60 “Aluminus” frames (black) with a 10cm ice-white mount from Zanart.

http://50by70.com/
http://www.habitat.co.uk/fcp/product/browse/Art-poster-book-of-20-prints/964171
http://www.habitat.co.uk/fcp/product/browse/Wall-frame/978090

http://www.zanart.co.uk

February 22, 2010 - No Comments!

IOGraph / Mouse tracker

Anatoly Zenkov provides this nifty tool (Mac and PC) to track your mouse pointer. Really simple. Just start it, let it run, minimize the window, and carry on as usual. In the end, you get this image that looks something like a Pollock. Circles show areas where the pointer didn't move while the tracks show movement.

Here are two of my afternoon sessions from the end of last week.

[via feltron]
[via flowingdata]

February 12, 2010 - No Comments!

Over the past few weeks I’ve been crafting a monster spotify playlist…

Its currently over 8 hours in length and nearly 100 tracks.  Its perfect to get you through a working day or to stick on when a few friends come over.

You can give it a listen here: [nf]*

It’s a pretty mixed up selection of indie, electro, house and with a few choice rap and 80’s tunes thrown in for good measure.  So if you aren’t feeling a few tunes just skip on a bit and hopefully it will keep you rocking all day!

Enjoy,

Ben. X

ps. I’d love to know what you think, or if has anyone suggestions of anything which could be added.
pps. I've also run out of Spotify invites, sorry.  Try tapping up a friend 😉

February 8, 2010 - No Comments!

Ooh… I have only gone and re-designed my website…

Over the past couple of months I’ve been working on re-designing my website.  Whatever I have had up before has either been a bit of a bodge job or rushed up in time for something happening.  The result was a bit of a mess, and a nightmare to update.

So with this new site should hopefully fix all the issues with the old one, and hopefully my work is now portrayed in an easy and accessible way, with a smooth flow around the site and between sections.  And hopefully it looks ok too…  but I suppose that is for everyone else to decide.

A few further site updates will be coming at a later date.

Anyway, I’d love to know what you think.

Ben. x

bentopliss.com

ps. try refreshing the page a couple of times too.

November 11, 2009 - No Comments!

CTRL Clothes – The Spreadshirt interview!

I thought I would post up the interview I did with Spreadshirt about the little digital t-shirt shop I run (www.ctrl-clothes.com).  The site itself has been going for a few years now, but it ended up getting rather neglected and I gave the whole thing a bit of a facelift a while back after deciding to use Spreadshirt's store interface instead of my own custom flash to paypal one.

Below you can read the full interview with Spreadshirt about what ctrl-clothes.com is all about (it has also been translated into German, which I think is rather exciting. You can read it here: http://tinyurl.com/ydq9crs).

CTRL Clothes – Modern, Abstract Patterns Make Their Way onto Shirts

Patterns and forms can be found just about anywhere. Take a look around the room and I bet you can find a number of examples of natural and man-made patterns. They often get ignored. Not at ctrl-clothes.com where these modern, abstract forms are front and centre. The triangles, squares, lines and shapes are certainly fresh and original, and remind me a little bit of a mix between my geometry class and class trip to the modern art museum. Give the Tunnel? shirt a good long look and you might get lost therein: certainly works brilliantly as an eye-catcher. But, shirts aren’t the only things greeting you at ctrl-clothes: you are presented with quite the innovative, interactive store front (based on a Manchester street – see below). Here’s the interview with Ben, the man behind ctrl:

Where are you from and where do you live now? What’s the weather like there?

I live in the Northern Quarter, Manchester. It’s currently nice and sunny, although it usually rains!

What do you do, other than t-shirts?

I’m web/graphic designer, but I do a bit of DJing in my spare time.

What’s the story behind ctrl-clothes?

ctrl-clothes.com was originally setup in 2005 when I graduated from university. It started off as a little project which I could use to increase my own portfolio, as well showcase the work of myself and a few friends/up and coming designers and illustrators. The idea was only ever to have a few designs on sale at a time, with a limited number of each item to be produced and sold before being removed and updated with a new design. This way the store would constantly be evolving, with each item being a limited edition. This would mean that you would be extremely unlikely to bump into someone else wearing the same tee. I hate it when this happens, going to university in a small(er) city (than Manchester), where there were only 2 or 3 cool shops to buy clothes from, it was always fairly likely that you will see at least one person in the same top as you. With ctrl-clothes.com I wanted to change this, at the very least I wanted to make items I want to wear.

Your store front is a real street in Manchester (Houldsworth Street – Google Street View) What is the concept behind your “store front”? Did you create it yourself?

Yes I created the storefront myself. There are thousands/millions of t-shirt sites across the web now, which all tend to look very similar. I wanted mine to stand out from all the others.

With the storefront, I wanted something which showed off the products in simple, clear and interesting way, which also showed off the t-shirts and the designs roots in Manchester. The site is meant to be a bit of fun, I want people to play with site, and through the user interaction to potentially introduce a product they may not usually look at.

How would you describe your shirts in 5 words or less?

Abstract, modern, fresh, personal and ctrl’d.

What is your shop’s target group and how do you market your shop to them?

The target shopper for my shop are those people who are fed up of buying t-shrts from the high street, where the majority of people in every town and city shop, buying the same tees from the same stores. Ctrl-clothes.com is for those people who want something a bit different, something which is almost bespoke just for a select number of lucky customers.

I currently don’t do too much to promote the shop, and what I do do is mostly through social networking sites such as twitter (twitter.com/ctrlclothes or you can follow me at twitter.com/bentopliss) and Facebook. Although I am currently considering some new forms of promotion.

How did you come across Spreadshirt?

I came across the site about a year and a half ago I think, I can’t quite remember. I remember being impressed by the simplicity of setting up your own store, and the benefits which go along with having a spreadshirt store.

What do you like about Spreadshirt and what could we do better?

I love the whole efficiency of the Spreadshirt service, the whole experience is great from initial product setup through to the handling of shipping and billing. I used to get all the t-shirts printed up myself, manage invoicing and organise the shipping. This was a real pain, and just took up too much time. Spreadshirt makes it easy. I just send you my artwork, and create the products and then you handle everything else. It has freed up a lot of my time, which I can use to update the website, design new t-shirts and work on other freelance projects.

Do you have any advice for shop partners starting up at Spreadshirt?

Just spend that extra bit of time to customise your store, there are some many t-shirts sites about now, that you need to do something a bit extra to make yours stand out.

Where do you get your ideas for designing? What happens before a shirt lands on your site?

I get ideas from everywhere, it can really depend on my mood. I love music and the whole culture (fashion/design/visuals) which goes with it. Being a child of the eighties, I’m a bit of fan of eighties popular culture, and that definitely has an influence, as well as things like modern architecture.
Before a shirt lands on the site and ends up on the ctrl-clothes.com wall, it has to go through a rigorous design process starting on my trusty notepad before going digital via Illustrator CS4. The process can end when I can answer “ yes” to the question: “Would I wear it?”.

What do you think about Spreadshirt’s printing techniques - how do you use them for different designs?

I have only used Flex printing so far, and I am pleased with all the results I’ve had, especially the printing onto the hoods of hoodies. I really want to experiment a bit with some of the other finishes, like the flock, but especially the glow in the dark. My style I don’t think would suit some of the glittery finishes, but glow in the dark definitely appeals to me.

What’s your favorite shirt of all time?

I have so many favourites that’s it is hard to keep up, but I’m currently loving this Major Lazer t-shirt.

Have you ever seen a stranger wearing one of your shirts? What did you do?

Unfortunately, I haven’t seen a stranger wearing one of my t-shirts, if I saw someone in the street though, I would probably end up jumping on them or something. That would be pretty cool!

What’s your opinion about t-shirt culture in the U.K.?

I think t-shirt culture is pretty good in the UK, there seem to be quite a few small outfits producing really cool limited run items. Quite a lot of the main stream stuff is a bit naff, but yeah, there are definitely lots of cool tees about if you know where to look.

What are some of your favourite places to visit on the Internet?

Apart from obvioulsy www.ctrl-clothes.com (shameless plug!), I have a bit of a social networking addiction! You can follow me or the store on twitter (@bentopliss or @ctrlclothes). I like to look through and upload my work to user-generated design portfolio sites like behance.net, some of the work on there is really amazing.

I like to keep up to speed with the latest in both the design world and the real world, so sites like www.thecoolhunter.co.uk, www.designboom.com, www.smashingmagazine.com and or course news.bbc.co.uk are all good, as well as all the interesting links posted up by people I follow on twitter. There are just too many to list!

Are you working on any other new designs?

I’ve just finished designing the gallery part of the website (so please take a look, I’d love to know your thoughts), so I will start work on some new designs very soon, as it’s been a while now.

Thanks for the interview Ben!

 

September 30, 2009 - No Comments!

September Top 10

Boris – Buzz In (Optimo Mix)

Mellow – Drifting Out of Sight (FC Kahuna Mix)                  – Been after this tune for YEARS, finally got it – so good

Simian Mobile Disco – Audacity of Huge (Dekker & Johan mix)

Erol Alkan & Boys Noize – Waves

Beni – Maximus (Senor Stereo Remix)

Tiger Stripes – Alma

Seth Troxler – Panic, Stop, Repeat!

Paul Beyon & Darius Basslray – Jeebuz Champ (Nectarious Remix)

Luciano – Orange Mistake                                                            – Another oldie

Naudascher & Mogg – Moon Unit (Part 1)