Sunday, 19 April 2015

In The Purple Seat: Justin Serrao




We had the amazingly talented Justin Serrao in studio with us for a chat last week, here is what you missed.

You just came back from a UK tour, how was that?
It was epic- we went with the Parlotones and we did the UK- we did London, Birmingham, Manchester, Bristol, Glasgow, and Dublin. It was an amazing trip, playing with the Parlotones- they have huge crowds out there, it was an experience.

So what was the best part of this tour?
It’s all great, but highlights of it- Manchester was definitely my favourite and Glasgow.

You said that you went with the Parlotones- how did that happen?
We are all from the West Rand, and Glen, the bassist, and I play golf together.  A lot of deals get made on the golf course.


Have you always had a passion for music? How did it start?
Yes, I’ve always played guitar. I actually started playing the bass when I was 9 years old and playing live since I was 13 years old. It’s what I’m meant to do.

Do you have any passions besides music?
Golf, it’s just a good balance from being in the clubs and pubs and then going into the greenery.

Do you have any celeb crushes?
Rolene Strauss, she’s beautiful and studying to become a doctor.

What is the best advice that you have ever been given?
This too shall pass.

What is the most embarrassing song on your IPod?
Boys to Men- End of the road, My kind of girl… The classics

Who are your favourite bands/singers?
I really like country music so people like David Ramirez, Noah Gunderson,  Jason Isbell, Zac Brown Band, Keith Urban and Luke Bryan.


How do you handle mistakes during performances?
Pretend that it was supposed to be part of the show, you just carry on. As soon as you stop, people think that you suck.

Where would you like to perform the most?
Nashville and Texas.

If you weren’t singing, what would you be doing?
I always wanted to become a geologist, I’ve always enjoyed looking at rocks.

How do you balance having a career with friends and family obligations?
It’s tough, because my working hours is basically from Thursday until Sunday night, so I get Monday to Wednesday off most of the time. So I miss a lot of family lunches and getting to see my friends on Friday nights. It’s definitely not easy.

Written by Ghia ten Doeschate



Thursday, 9 April 2015

#PLAYWITHOREO CAFE


 

World’s most playful cookie brings South Africa the #PLAYWITHOREO POP-UP CAFÉ

LET YOUR IMAGINATION GO AND COME play #PLAYWITHOREO


 
This April, the world’s number one biscuit and milk’s favourite cookie, OREO, invites South African fans to the deliciously playful #PLAYWITHOREO café. The quirky cookie has proved to be the most playful snack in the world over the past 100 and some years and always aims to celebrate the kid inside us all and inspire moments of carefree fun. This year the playful biscuit is back with more fun and spirit to lighten fans’ moods. On the 2nd April 2015 the #PLAYWITHOREO café will open to the South African public at The Zone @ Rosebank for a limited period only (closes 3rd May 2015).




The experiential café, a pop-up store at its best, characterises the brand’s imaginative spirit. OREO’s attitude will be brought to life in the café as the store is built around the concept of ‘play’. OREO believes that ‘play’ enables us to see possibilities in the ordinary and that’s what it wants for its fans – moments of endless, imaginative play.  “OREO fans are used to playing with OREO, whether twisting, licking, dunking, rolling, stacking or dipping the biscuit to make various delicious treats,” says Grant Van Niekerk, Category Leader: Biscuits and Beverages at Mondelez SA, “Now OREO is on a mission to inspire imagination and play around the globe, not only with the cookie itself, but in consumers’ everyday lives.” “We are thrilled to open the #PLAYWITHOREO Café to celebrate playfulness and inspire more moments of joy,” explains Van Niekerk.

Fans visiting the cafe can take time out of their busy, serious days to enjoy the delight of the OREO ‘Cookie Conveyer’, a moving dessert bar with OREO inspired treats designed by the renowned patissiere Danielle Postma from Moemas. OREO dessert prices will vary from R10 to R40 and the menu is a mouth-watering list of OREO happiness; OREO popcorn snack, OREO sprinkle pops, milk & OREO, white chocolate OREO fudge, chocolate OREO slab, dreamy OREO chocolate truffle, crushed OREO milkshake, OREO cookie monster cupcakes, OREO cookie crumb parfait, rocking OREO white chocolate cheesecake, OREO shortbread sandwich with ice-cream and last but not least the OREO ice cream Sundae.
 
 

Whilst at the store, café goers can also let their creative sides free and play with the world’s number one biscuit via a variety of fun-tivities. Visitors can dream up amazing ‘OREO Selfie’ art at the OREO decoration station by choosing from a multitude of miniature and edible props and create their own ‘Cookie Characters’. There are three miniature OREO photo-studios where you can style your OREO for awesome mini photo opportunities. Additionally, there are life-size backdrops to take your own playful selfies or simply take five on our OREO see-sae or swing or café tables and relish in the playful spirit of the cafe.
 
 

The playing doesn’t end there as the café also hosts a boutique OREO store where fans can purchase limited edition OREO merchandise and memorabilia. You can even share the fun with a friend by purchasing a dessert for them to come and enjoy when they visit the store next. The café is the perfect spot to bring family and friends to let your imagination go. So make your play date today!

The café will be open to fans 7 days a week from 10:00am to 20:00pm, including public holidays.

Don’t forget to sign the café guest book before you leave the happiest pop-up café in town and share the fun you had with us with #PLAYWITHOREO to @OREO on Twitter and Instagram  and Facebook at Oreo.


Sunday, 5 April 2015

In The Purple Seat: Ryan Keys

Ryan Keys is a young South African designer, born in Johannesburg. After developing a passion for fashion at a young age, he studied couture at Spero Villioti Elite Design Academy, and has successfully launched a store in Parkhurst. We had the privilege of having him in studio with us to answer a few burning questions.



1. How did you first discover your passion for fashion? And who influenced you into pursuing this?
 
From a very young age. Funny enough I actually used to dress my mom for a lot of events and all of that sort of stuff. Then I started getting big into photography and looking at all of those sorts of things and from there I decided that I need to do it and take the leap and decided to study fashion

2. What was the first garment that you ever made?

The first thing that I made was actually for a school project, we had to do a photoshoot for Art. So I went and made a skirt and jacket- well I bought the jacket and added the extras. And then we shot the stuff and yeah… That was the first official thing that I made.

3. What inspires your designs?

There are a lot of things that inspire my designs- one of them being travels. I like to travel a lot, whether it is in the bush or traveling abroad, I get a lot of inspiration from that. And mainly, funny enough, I actually look at the beauty in nature and those sorts of things. But the instead of looking at the beauty I look at the more evil side to things. So I might look at a butterfly but then I might look at it drawn to a flame or something like that, which does sound quite gross but at the end of the day it’s about what emotion you feel when you see the clothes.

4. What is your favourite part of being a fashion designer?

Creating fun, beautiful things. I like to see the look on a bride’s face when she sees her gown for the final time, the smiles. It’s probably the most gratifying part of it all: you’ve worked for two months straight to try and create a beautiful connection and people love it. I mean you never know, some people might hate it or love it… You never know what people will think of it. So I think that’s the major thing- seeing people’s reactions and liking what you do.

5. You were one of the designers at SA fashion week. What was that experience like?

It’s very very fun. That is one thing that I think people want to know the process of: Basically you get invited to show, and then after that you go for castings where you will see maybe one hundred different girls, they will walk for you and then you choose which ones you like. You then take measurements and then alter your designs. Then you do the final checks before the show and then you show. But everything is absolutely taken care of, I mean on the day you have people steaming your garments. So it’s a hell of a lot of fun but there is a lot of stress which keeps us on our toes.



6. Do you have a specific research process when designing a new collection?

Not necessarily, because I feel that every collection is very different. I think that the first collection that I did for fashion week was more about introducing myself to the people, so actually more of showing them what I can do. This year I was concerned about showing people dominance versus submissive. So with that I might read a book, like 50 Shades of Grey, and be like “okay. This inspires me” and then do a lot of research into why people like about it and how they harness it. So I will look at a whole bunch of things. So that I know what it can and can’t do, and basically live that collection for a while.

7. Who inspires you the most in fashion?

People around me, like my friends and family. I don’t actually look at other designers or things like that; I look at the people around me. The things they do. And from there I gain inspiration from them, whether it be a vacation that they have been on and then I decide that I need to go there and see these beautiful places or things like that.

8. What is your philosophy on the art of fashion?

I am very focused on my fabrics. Like I focus on my fabrics and fabrications and I feel that with fashion you are very much reinventing the wheel. But I feel that with my design aesthetic I am more concerned with the fabrication and how you make things. So your fit needs to be perfect, I mean you can take a cheap pair of pans, but tailored perfectly they can make you look like a million bucks. My fabrics I like to source all around the world and there are a lot of beads. So it may be a simple A line dress but then it’s completely beaded, and that’s the wow factor of it.

9. What do you think makes your fashion unique?

I’m very set on textures so I like to maybe make one thing out of feathers and then the bodice of it maybe leather, so it’s playing with many things. A lot of people have said to me that I like to use different things, so it may be a gold lace on a pure white and then people are like is it a bridal gown, is it an evening gown… And it can really be anything.

10. Which celebrity would be your dream client?

I would love to push the boundaries and dress someone like Lady Gaga, with something like that I would go absolutely crazy and push the boundaries. But then again I  would like to dress someone like Jennifer Lopez. I mean she has been around for so many years but still has an amazing body and looks absolutely amazing in anything that you put her in. So I would really like to dress her and do something classy and elegant.

11. What does the future hold?

I can definitely see a lot more stores, the online store is launching soon. Dressing a lot more people, hopefully a lot more international celebrities, a lot more local celebrities, and just expanding the business in general. I don’t just see us being a fashion business, I see us doing accessories and then branching off into more luxury goods, I see us branching off into homeware. I can see us branching off into absolutely anything and everything, things that go with the brand.



 
 
Written by Ghia ten Doeschate

Wednesday, 1 April 2015

Samsung Launches New Quick Repair Service for Mobile Devices

Samsung customers can do their shopping while their mobile devices are being repaired
 
 
Samsung Electronics South Africa is proud to announce the launch of the Samsung Quick Repair Service (QRS). Customers can now have their mobile devices repaired in real time. The service, which will deliver speedy resolutions to minor technical problems, will be available at selected Samsung Brand Stores and selected partners nationwide.
 
“We recognise that our customers already have demanding schedules and cannot afford to wait in queues getting their devices fixed or software upgraded,” says Richard Chetty, Service Director at Samsung Electronics SA.
 
The Samsung QRS includes the maintenance of cellular devices and tablets, and the repair of screens, motherboards and cameras. The expert teams can also assist with simple email set up, software updates and the transfer of data from one Samsung device to another.
 
The turnaround time of the service is designed to be as swift as possible, but will be impacted by the availability of parts in the store. “Ninety Percent of repairs can be done within the hour but some of the more complex issues may need a longer waiting period in order to ensure that the job gets done correctly and the mobile device returns to the consumer in a fully functional state,” concludes Chetty.
 
Visit: http://www.samsung.com/africa_en/brand/Samsung_brand.html to find your nearest Brand Store.