Friday, February 28, 2014
The Aesthetics of Minimalism in Street Style Blogging, Plus Blogger Emily Lane, Outside Prabal Gurung
When I first started blogging, now almost two years back, I was eager to put up every semi-decent picture I took. Sometimes I'd have four of a single individual. Sometimes I'd post several people from a single day of shooting. I would try different angles, different filters, different effects, presenting to you the various phases of aesthetic development I underwent as a photographer. And you, poor reader, had to endure it all. Now, I've begun to pull back. I've followed the lead of the blogs I follow and begun to streamline my posts. As blogs professionalize, they also tend to minimize. They settle on a single look, a single style of presentation, a single orientation for their photographs. They create consistent minimalist cascades of images that stream down the page like a Tumblr feed on an iPhone. The blogs that do best are often the ones that show the least. What's left for you to see is a best of compilation without the original hits. My own process of becoming a blogger has also been about learning to streamline. I have lots of good shots of Emily Lane, for instance, featured above, posing before the steps of the post office building where Prabal Gurung had his recent show at New York Fashion Week. But here's the only one you get to see on this blog today. If you want more, you'll have to check out my Instagram feed: @urbanfieldnotes, where I'll be posting another one or two. A gimmick to make you follow my Instagram feed? Perhaps. But that's a common blogger strategy, and I'm not above it. And guess what? I'm not going to be posting my New York Fashion Week photos on and off for the next six months like I did last season either. You're only going to see a small portion of what I took, and you're only going to be seeing them at all for the next couple of weeks until it warms up a little, and I can start getting decent shots on the streets of Philly again. Why? 'Cause this a "real" street style blog now. It is an exercise in restraint.
Thursday, February 27, 2014
Natalia Kills, Outside Prabal Gurung, 8th Ave, New York
Scott Schuman, in a recent interview with Kinvara Balfour at the Apple Store in Chelsea, made the comment that the alignment switch in street style photography from primarily vertical to primarily horizontal had everything to do with the medium with which readers would be viewing the material: computer screens, especially laptop screens. Horizontally-aligned photos simply look better on laptops. That's why street style stalwarts like Tommy Ton and Nam began shooting primarily in horizontal. But now that more and more readers are viewing images on mobile phones, a vertically-aligned medium, the convention is beginning to switch back. I hope it doesn't happen too soon. I feel like I'm just getting the hang of horizontal.
Here's British singer Natalia Kills working the photographers in front of the old Manhattan post office.
Here's British singer Natalia Kills working the photographers in front of the old Manhattan post office.
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
Tuesday, February 25, 2014
Monday, February 24, 2014
Chiara Ferragni, outside Rag & Bone, 33rd St, New York
Seems like everyone got this picture of Chiara Ferragni, the blogger behind The Blonde Salad, wearing Louis Vuitton outside Rag & Bone. Well, I did too. So there!
Thursday, February 20, 2014
Mordechai Rubinstein, Garmentologist: My Unfiltered Conversation with the Man behind Mister Mort
Mordechai Rubinstein is a long-time staple of the New York menswear scene. After years of working in retail, publishing, and marketing, he began one of the earliest menswear blogs, mistermort.com, in November of 2008. He remains one of the Internet's most dedicated afficionados of all things sartorial. He loves clothes, obsesses with clothes, notices things about clothes that nearly all of the rest of us miss: the stitching on a pair of jeans, the way a jacket is buttoned or a pair of trousers tapered, the cross-pattern of a woven coat. These things matter to him, and on any given day, during lunch breaks or before or after work, he snaps dozens of shots of such details on his iPhone or Yashica camera. Some of these pictures make it to his blog or his Instagram page. Others just pile up in the hard drive of his computer. Appropriately, he calls himself a "garmentologist," or a "fashion anthropologist."
Mordechai Rubinstein, doing what he does on the streets of SoHo |
Two weeks ago, I got the opportunity to hang out with Mordechai on the streets of SoHo, New York, his home terrain these days, and watch him at work. We sat on the window ledge of the American Apparel store at the corner of Spring and Greene, watching people go by and chatting about Fashion Week, Korean street style bloggers, and the changing face of menswear. I have left this interview more or less unedited here. There is a rhythm and a cadence to Mordechai's speech that is all his own, a kind of manic James Joycean stream-of-consciousness that I didn't want to accidentally eliminate. As such, it's longer than the other interviews I have posted in word count, though it was shorter than most in duration. Stick with it. Read the whole thing. It's worth it. I left my conversation with Mordechai wanting to know way more about fashion — both its material form and its social fabric. I hope you will be similarly inspired.
Mordechai Rubinstein stopping some guy on the street to photograph his coat. |
Mordechai: This [SoHo]
is the neighborhood I started, pretty much. I’ve been working here in retail
for a long time. And it’s where I took my first pictures really. It’s amazing
for me, because I left town for two years, I went and lived in San Francisco.
It was supposed to be six months, but I stayed two years, working for Levis,
and to be back, and not just to be back in New York, but be back on the streets
— not just any streets — but in SoHo, it’s like I’m 20 years old again. It’s
kinda crazy. I can hang on the corner and shoot and, you know, you have certain
corners nowadays that weren’t like they were back then. There’s like bloggers
from Korea, like ten of them just on the corner like a mob.
Brent: I’ve seen
some of those mobs, hanging out, doing that.
Mordechai: It
kills me, and it’s great. You know, I’m not complaining. You give anybody a big
camera to shoot National Geographic style,
they’re going to get a clown, a guy, to them, whose really well-dressed,
because he’s wearing, I don’t know, shorts in the snow or a dress, and he has a
beard. You know, it’s like, OK fine, we get it. You’re trying to be weird and
different, which is what it’s about now. But it has me going to less Fashion Week
stuff.
One of Mordechai's photos from Fashion Week, as originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Brent: Are you
going to be checking out much of the Fashion Week stuff.
Mordechai: I
mean, because I live here, and my heart and everything is here and in it, I’m
not going to ignore it, but I go to less and less. It’s like everything’s online
a second later. I do want to touch and feel fabrics, but that’s not always at a
show. It’s more at a presentation. I’ll go to certain companies, because
they’re nice to me, and because I believe in their stuff. I’ll go to some
companies that are not nice to me, and I still like their stuff. But yeah, I’ll
support, as much as I can. You know, for work we do two shows.
Brent: So are you
part of that whole process?
Mordechai: Yeah,
but again, we’re menswear, and it’s really only a women’s business over there,
but um, you know, maybe I’ll run around. It’s amazing that every job I’ve had
I’m able to like be myself. I’ve worked retail forever and ever and ever, and
then one day Condé Nast tell me, “We want you to come and work for Men’s Vogue.” I say, “Men’s Vogue.” Is that X? [goes to talk
with friend, not actually named X]. This is the good thing about standing over here and the bad thing
about standing over here, you bump into people. [they chat for a while. He
introduces me to X. They talk about a monster truck rally his friend went to in
LA]. One of my first New York friends. I was working retail, he wandered into
the store, invited me over to his place to smoke a joint after work, man to
man, "I’m doing a movie, it’s for school." The name was big, cause it was like a
big New York acting family, that sounds mafia, acting family, but you know, it
was a family of actors, and one of these was this friend, and he asked me to do
the wardrobe on these great people. So I did it. And he was in film school at
the time. Then he went on to work for MTV for a million years. I think he still
does, but he does a lot of stuff on the side. I never thought people like him
would move to LA. Because I can’t stand a lot about men’s fashion in LA. But
he’s back and forth, and it’s cool.
And I love what happened.
Photo by Mordechai Rubistein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
That’s the best
thing about being on the street. You never know what you’re going to see or who
you’ll bump into, but these people, he’s like, "I took a picture with you in
mind." I’m like, "Shit, you should have texted me! I’d like to share it." So,
yeah, where were we?
Brent: We were
talking about gangs of Korean street photographers out in SoHo.
Mordechai: It’s
cool, though, because out there they have a TV show. They have a street style
like fighter or something TV show. I’ve never seen it. I’d YouTube it, but I’m
like bad at sitting at the computer. And
I wish that I had. I don’t really know what it is, but like yeah, some of these
dudes are on reality TV shows out there, and they’re like street style shows.
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Brent: I’ve had a
couple of friends who have shot Seoul and have told me it’s like a madhouse
there. You walk down the street and people get stopped for like two hours by
photographers. So I don’t know. It’s taken off.
Mordechai: Yeah,
I mean it’s like any idiot with a camera’s a blogger, but then again, now you
have the i-telephone and the other ones that can take pictures. So it’s like,
I’m not saying I’m an artist at all. I don’t even consider myself a
photographer. But yeah, back to what you were saying about, you know, so I, at
first I made up this title “garmentologist.” And I was like, yup, that’s what I
am. And my friend was like, “No. You’re actually an anthropologist.” And I was
like “Oh, cool! I’m an anthropologist. I don’t even know what that means.” But
smarter people I’m meeting along in life are like, you know the clothes are so
secondary to you. It’s really about the person. And I’m like, wow, it’s amazing
that you took that out of it, because it is a huge part of me, but it’s not. It
is because I’m a people person. I grew up Hassidic Jewish. On Fridays, we went
to yeshiva. And you go, and I don’t know if you’ve seen around, they’re called
a mitzvah, and there are like these mobile homes that drive around. Are you Jewish?
Are you Jewish? Are you Jewish? You probably get it once in a while. You have a
beard. But at Holiday times, women lighting candles. Men, jelly donuts and
menorah. Are you Jewish?
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Brent: No.
Mordechai: For the different holidays we’re all
about outreach. That’s how I grew up. You know, satmar, other sects of Hassidic
Judaism, if you don’t have a beard, if you have an earring, you’re not Jewish.
It’s bullshit. If you’re born a Jew, you’re a fucking Jew. You can convert to
Buddhism, or anything, you’re still a Jew. That’s how it works. So, it’s a big
part of my life still, even though it doesn’t look like it, or people are like,
“yeah right.” It is. As you can tell. I guess my point was, oh, that taught me
to talk to people I think. I mean, I went to fashion school, well whatever. I
didn’t learn nothing at fashion school, not one little thing. It was a joke. I
was hanging out with my friends, going out at night.
Brent: Did you
study design?
Mordechai: I went
to FIT. I studied accessory design. I wanted to design women’s shoes or women’s
handbags. I was really into them. And I still am. People laugh. My girlfriend
laughs. She’s like, “You don’t know anything about women’s wear.” Every time I
take a picture of a girl, she’s like “Oh, come on!”
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
But, you know, I started
working in menswear. I got really lucky working for the New Republic clothiers,
one of the coolest stores New York’s ever had. It was like 20 years ahead of
its time. It was the American Paul Smith. All the shoes were bench-made,
handmade in London, you know like Trickers, Sargants. All the ties and
accessories were from London, from Duchamp, all these companies. The clothes
were all hand-tailored here in New York, turn-of-the-century through the ‘70s
hand-tailored, so it looked super-vintage, Edwardian, high-wasted pleats,
velvet collars on all these types of topcoats and jackets, but it was all made
here, so it was like an American Paul Smith. Rock’n’Roll historians would come
in. I knew nothing. I was coming from yeshiva. I went there and a yamaka’s a
pocket square, you know, and they were like, “Why do you want to work here?”
And I was like, “Look at these clothes! What do you mean?” And I have two older
sisters. They’re pretty well-dressed. We didn’t grow up with any money at all,
but miraculously, I love the way my family dresses. They’re Hassidic, but they
look cool and have great taste… without spending money. I mean, no one in my
family wears designer clothes or knows anything about Style.com or any of
those. Which I think is so rad, you know. I’m working at Kate Spade for a long
time, my mother’s asking me to get her a bag on Canal Street, you know. Maybe
that’s part of it. Not to be humble, but you know, it’s like, you don’t grow up
with it, so it’s like you’re not spoiled with this shit. What else? What else?
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Brent: So you
notice it.
Mordechai: So I started working for the New Republic and
then I met Kate and Andy Spade there. They used to shop there a lot and a lot
of, like, just cool New Yorkers. And they said they were going to open up a men’s
store. When that happened they brought me to open it. It was a really tiny
company, but it was part of Kate Spade. There were 3 or 4 people doing Jack
Spade. Her husband Andy, advertising jeans, and then, from there, when they
sold to Liz Claiborne I went to work for Condé Nast. I never thought in a
million years what this little yeshiva kid would do at Condé
Nast. But they asked me to be a marketing editor of Mens Vogue, and I did it. I loved it, until it crashed. It closed,
and I’m thankful that Levis asked me to come do some stuff with Dockers and
Levis. I was making some stuff for them. I stayed there for a bunch of years.
Now I’m back in New York. I never thought I would have [been] relieved. I still
don’t consider myself a New Yorker, because I was born in Providence, Rhode
Island, grew up in Baltimore, Maryland, but as a Hassidic Jew, we came here
every other weekend. Every holiday, so we were always here, so I saw the
streets, but again, it’s funny. Because for me it’s a color, or it’s something
weird that catches my eye. It’s not the person. Once I’m there, I’m like “Why
do you wear all black?” I notice photographers wear all black. Maybe I talk a
lot, because I’m uncomfortable, maybe I ask too many questions, I don’t know. I
ask a lot of questions. But that’s also, you know, these bloggers take pictures
for a million days, a million hours, whatever, they’re not talking or getting
to know the person, or getting to know why he’s wearing what he’s wearing, or
how we wore it the way he wore it. To me, it’s almost the most important thing.
It’s like, it’s great that the guy is wearing a kilt, but why? Is he from the
seventh regiment of Stockholm, or wherever they wear that shit? Or is it a costume?
I like to know why. You know, today, people don’t care. They don’t care that
the stitches, you know, that this shirt is 22 stitches per inch and its
wax-coated thread-needled. They care a little bit, but it’s bullshit, you know.
I think.
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Brent: So do you
consider yourself primarily interested in the people who are wearing the
clothes or is it primarily about the objects themselves?
Mordechai: It’s
really both. I mean, look, clearly this guy likes blue [points to a guy
passing]. Cobalt blue jacket, hat, and bag. I don’t think it’s because it’s hip and trendy for
the season. I think he’s drawn to the color. He’s slightly hip, because his
glasses are two-different colors, color-blocked. He has a tote bag. Men don't
really carry totes per se, unless they’re 90 year-old on the Upper East Side,
or weirdoes, or young hip people, but he’s — I’m not going to judge where he’s
from — probably not from around here regardless. He’s paying attention to some
part of it, you know. So, for me, that’s why I’m drawn to it. I want to know,
why the blue? If it’s a uniform, a guy’s working, he’s a garbage man, and he
has like 13 cargo pants and each one’s being used for something else, yeah I’m
dying to get inside and know what’s going on.
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
But I took a picture once of some
90-year-old guy on Madison Avenue in a camel overcoat, wide-well corduroys, and
I think he’s wearing New Balance, and a beautiful camel, cashmere scarf,
walking with no worries in the world, whatever it’s called, no cares, just like
strolling down the street whistling, both hands in his pockets. I stop him, and
I’m like “Hey, can I take your picture?” It’s always different. That’s a big
question I get, it’s like “What do you see?” It’s different every single time.
Oh, I like your beret. For me, it's normally that I like something. That’s how
it is for me, because I’m drawn to it. Am I talking too much? Too fast?
Brent: Not at
all. That’s why I’m recording it.
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Mordechai: ‘Cause
I’ll just go on and on until I get hungry or your stop me or whatever. Or we’ll
figure it out. So, yeah, it’s like, “Can I take your picture?” It’s normally,
“Why?” Or “Go ahead.” Or, you know…
[points at a coat] I love that coat! Fleece floral. Wow! Um, it’s like, “Can I
take your picture?” And it’s like, “Why? Get away.” A motion like this, but you
don’t know if they’re deaf or old, but you don’t want to take advantage. Fine.
I just walk away. Or, my favorite, New York men, or men in general are like
“Why me?” Which is so cool. They’re so humble. Even if they think they’re cool,
they’re pretending, which is so nice. They’re not like on some cool guy shit.
It think today’s men are kinda fucked, because on the one hand they want to be
like yeah, yeah, yeah, and then they’re afraid of the backlash once it gets to
the Internet, and nobody wants to see the comments. I get it. I don’t really
want my picture taken either, not so much because of the comments, but about
everything. Like, ok, “I’m wearing all black-today. You’re going to wear all
black tomorrow.” “I’m wearing denim today. Denim today’s the trend, is it?”
“You’re wearing tie-dye, but oh, you’re a hippy.” I’m not a hippy. I like
different things. I don’t know one Grateful Dead song, but I love vintage Dead
shirts. You can call me a phony. I don’t care. I love the wear in them. I love
the art of the tie-dye. You know, but you walk through the airport, and people
from all sorts of countries are like, “Ah, I went to that show! 1958.
Dadadadada.” And I’m like, “I don’t care!” But, I try to be nice about it.
[points at another person passing] Color-blocked everything coats.
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Brent: Is this
how you live your life, noticing everything that goes by? Constantly assessing
everything people are wearing?
Mordechai: Yeah.
Brent: Would you
do that without the blog too? Or does the blog focus your attention?
Mordechai: Oh
yeah, yeah. Not only that. I don’t know how you found me, but like, the blog
itself is suffering because I’m spending so much time in the street. And I
don’t know if that’s Instagram’s fault, but I’m on the blog stuff right now.
I’m about to like go in hard. I’ve been saving it for a while. I’ve got a
gazillion photos to post. I’m so behind. I love Instagram, but like, key people
aren’t on it, they’re on my blog, which is amazing. You can’t assume that
everyone’s on it. And I’m not about to share the same content. Like, oh, I
might have an Instagram button to share it on my site, because I think it’s
cool, my Instagram photos. But it’s different content. I gotta keep that. And
I’ve been pretty good with it. I could do a lot better. It’s just in San
Francisco I was bored as fuck There’s nothing to do there. No street style.
It’s the opposite of this. But now that I’m in this city, to be able to sit
here and go like this. This is tremendous. It doesn’t happen everyday that I
can do this. I’m taking advantage of it, because I’m sitting with you at the
same time. Normally it’s like walk to lunch, walk back, get a couple photos,
sit at my desk, take a walk, try to get some appointments, zone out a little
bit. But with the dude in the camel hair, I say, “Hey, can I take your
picture?” “Sure, go ahead.” You know. I take it, and he says, “Oh, you like my
coat!” And they pick up on one thing. For me, it’s like, the beret, the coat, a
guy that age is typically picking up on one thing. He’s not… either he has no
time for you, some rich banker dude whose like, “Ok, take your picture and go,”
or they have time to hang, which is kind of weird too, because then it’s like,
“Uh, now what?” I just opened up a can of worms. But I like that people ask why
are you taking my photo? What’s it for? It’s cute. It’s cool. It’s like they
want to know a little about me too, you know what I mean. It’s like I would
want to know if someone took my picture on the street where it’s gonna be.
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
I’ll
never forget. I was like 13 years old, 14 years old, and someone took my
picture on the street here, and mailed me a slide. Made my day. I still have it
somewhere. I’m in Times Square like this at 14 years old, and some total stranger,
I gave him my home address, mailed it to me. That’s ill. That’s so cool. It’s
like I have a hard time now when kids are like, “Aw, can you email me that
photo?” I’m like, “I’ll try. I can’t promise.” I feel like a dick. They’re not,
I shouldn’t say they’re not worth money. Maybe they are. But it’s not like I’m selling
these prints at galleries. Or like, contact my gallerist or my agent, I’m like
hit “send.” But I’ll take 30 and I don’t want to send the wrong one. So, and
like lately, people are like, “Would you mind if you not post it?” Why would
you let me take it?” But you try to be fair. So this guy, I took his photo. And
then, he’s like, “Oh, you like my coat!” And he goes like this [opening up the
pocket]. “I wear it to make the bank deposit every Monday morning. You see the
pocket. It’s all worn out from the cash.” And literally he’s like going like
this [opening up his jacket pocket to show me] and like showing me the contents
of his pocket, and I’m pretending to look. You don’t want to be, like, ok, but
you’re like alright I get it. And then he’s like, “No, no, this is where I keep
the cash.” Is he telling some story? Who knows? You know, maybe it’s just
vintage. He’s embarrassed, you know, second-hand, he wore it out, he thinks I’m
making fun of him. I start making all sorts of theories in my head. Because
people might think you are making fun of them, unfortunately. But I’m pretty
genuine that when I like it I like it. It’s another thing. I try not to say
negative stuff. I say “oy” a lot on the Internet stuff, and I’m like “Oh god,
the people. What they wear today!” But when I started the blog, I thought I’ll
keep that all positive. I’ll put negative stuff on Twitter, so that people can
learn how not to dress. ‘Cause at the start of my blog, I just wanted to be a
men’s thesaurus. I wanted someone to say “What is grey flannel? What is
herringbone? What is fair isle? I wanted them to go to my site, put in a
search, all that stuff comes up, I teach men how to dress. Some editors along
the way have told me, “Dude, I get what you’re trying to do, but if you really
want to teach men how to dress, you gotta spell it out for them.” I’m like,
“No. The photo says it all.” Tartan plaid. Charcoal suit. Can be worn with a
black hat or a non-black hat. [points to a guy walking down the street with a
ladder]. That’s a Korean blogger, one of the guys I was talking about. He… uh… hold on. [Runs off to take his
picture. I photograph the two of them with my own camera]. Did you get that?
Because I don’t think I did?
A tartan plaid tie. Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Brent: I don’t
think I got any good ones. But I got it.
Mordechai: He’s,
uh, he’s like a street style blogger.
Brent: You know
which site he does?
Mordechai: It’s
tricky, because, he’s one of the earliest ones that I knew. He came here from
Korea, parked himself on the corner, and just gangstered out. But they’re so
smart, ahead of our country. Japan, Korea, they’re so fucking smart. I think
the kids here are so stupid. They just want to be on a blog so bad, anyone that
says “Can I take your picture?” wearing a camera, they’re like “Yeah, yeah.
Take my picture! Take my picture!” However, if these guys take your picture,
it’s not a blog. They’re working for the trend forecasting companies or big-ass
fucking department stores. Like, I’m just making it up, but like, a Macy’s of
Asia. Forgive my geographical errors. Maybe it’s Japan. Maybe it’s… I’m yeshiva, I don’t know which Asia, but you know what I’m saying. It’s either
Japan, Korea, it’s somewhere, and they’re killing it, Hong Kong. They work for
these trend-forecasting companies that just buy the photos from them. I’ve done
it, so I know what’s up. They don’t say a word, they’re just like, “Hey, can I
take your picture?” If the idiot asks, this person, subject, asks, “What’s it
for?” They say, “Ah, a blog,” or something. If the kid asks what blog — and
they might even be smart enough to have a blog — they say here’s my business
card. They don’t talk. They don’t say too much. But they will tell you straight
up that it’s not a blog, it’s a company they work for. They buy the photos. But
what they’re not telling you is companies want to know what the guys are
wearing. You’re wearing triple-needle stitch denim, and I think it’s different,
and I want to supply them with photos of the design. I get it. I’ve done it. I
think it’s rad. But it’s interesting, you know what I mean. We think they’re
street style bloggers, and, haha, they’re not.
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Brent: That’s
interesting. Although I know some of them are. Some of them I’ve met.
Mordechai: Yeah. For sure.
Brent: Although I
don’t know exactly what happens to the content once it’s on the blog, who else
they send it to. A lot of those guys are working for magazines now too.
Mordechai: Part
of me is a little jealous (you don’t have to mention that). Yeah, I wish I was
selling my photos, blah, blah, blah, whatever. It’s cool. I mean, look, my
dream job would be on the streets all day shooting. It’s gonna happen. It’s
just what I want to do.
Brent: Has the
blog led to other professional opportunities for you so far?
Mordechai: It
has. It has. I think I’ve been hired for a couple jobs, be them short term
projects, or collaborations because of it, or some full-time gigs. You know, I
think companies have brought me on not knowing exactly what I do. I was never
hired for anything in my life with a job description. Or a real title. And it’s
just — knock on wood, without the evil eye — worked out. I’m not a millionaire,
and I’m sure my girlfriend wishes I was. I’m not rich, but I’m happy. I love
documenting. I call myself a garmentologist. I just want to document the
streets. Like a fashion anthropologist. People say I’m a fashion
anthropologist. I don’t know what any of this means, but, then I heard a
“documentarian,” and I was like “yeah.” I like to tell people I’m a journalist.
‘Cause it’s true. I’m a blogger. I’m a journalist. I break the fucking news, if
I can. I did, anyway, back in the day when I was going to trade shows and
shooting shit that nobody had. I mean, today, everybody’s wearing the same
thing, and they go into stores and they want the whole mannequin. They want the
whole look. They want whatever you’re wearing. There’s no research. It’s not
like, “Oh, ok, Spiewak [pointing at my jacket], I’ll go get it.” It’s not like
this is my dad’s. He wore it in the war. I’m not saying it has to be vintage,
but it’s like, I’m curious, did you take these jeans in to make them slim, or
they came triple-needle?
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Brent: They came
triple-needle.
Mordechai: It’s
interesting, because it’s for workwear. Why? Because built to last, you know.
But today it’s fashion. A lot of shit has no function. No whatever. I didn’t
say that. So where were we?
Brent: I don’t
even know. Just keep going.
Mordechai: I
mean, with things like this, if it goes well, I talk. If not, I’m like, “Oh,
God, why did I waste my time?!” You understand. And this is better than email
also. You don’t get it through email. We could have had a conversation. We
could have a Skype conversation…
Brent: I’ve done
a bunch of those, but you get a very different feel for a person.
Mordechai: I’m so
happy that we could meet up. I’m happy I wasn’t a dick, because I can be so
hard to deal with. People take it as like “You’re an asshole.” I’m not. I’m a
weirdo. I’m not even a weirdo. You know what I mean, if I get too stoned the
night before, I don’t feel like doing it.
Brent: Well, I
have to say, I’m happy you use the anthropologist language, because the whole
sort of argument of my book is that street style, at least at its best, is a
kind of popular version of anthropology.
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Mordechai: Yeah,
but do the people you’ve spoken to get it, or no?
Brent: A lot of
people do get it. Yeah. I mean, I think that it depends on the motivation of
the person. You know, when I started getting interested in street style, a lot
of stuff was documentation of what people were wearing on the streets of, say,
Helsinki or Cape Town, or Buenos Aires.
Mordechai: You
were obviously, well I shouldn’t say obviously, but you were on the blog,
looking at the stuff, looking at this stuff. You were on the Internet and you
were thinking, wow, street style sites are popping up.
Brent: Well yeah,
they were popping up all over the place, and it interested me just in terms of
being able to get a real feel for the city through what it is that people are
wearing, and a lot of the early people I talked to, that was their primary
motivation. You know, they weren’t
making money off it. They didn’t have any professional photography experience.
Mordechai: That’s
right. This is what the streets of Helsinki [was doing].
Brent: Hel Looks.
Mordechai: Yeah,
Hel Looks! I used to love that blog.
Brent: Yeah,
she’s one of the people who’s going to be in the book.
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Mordechai: Oh
cool! I used to love that blog. And I say I used to, because I’m not on the
Internet that much. I got in trouble saying that in The New York Times. “Oh
you’re a blogger. You don’t go on the Internet?” It’s like, how much time do
you have. That blogs kills it! It’s one of the earliest blogs ever, and it's
funny because I always dreamt of… I started on Flickr. Before I blogged , I put
everything on Flickr, and after a while I learned how to make it private, and I
started a blog, ‘cause I was getting more traffic on Flickr, and I was like, “I
can’t handle this! I’m gonna make a blog.” So with Flickr I was like, I want to
go to Russia. I’ll put in Moscow and look at the streets and see what it looks
like. And it’s so cool. I’ve never been
there, but I feel like I have. And now, with blogs, and because they’re so big,
and the Internet’s so big, now if you’re going to go to Berlin, or if you’re a
kid, and you’ve never been to New York, and you want to see what kids are
wearing, it’s kinda cool. Or you’re like, “Oh, I like how the kids in Helsinki
dress, I want to try that at home. Wait! What’s your blog?
Brent: It’s
called Urban Fieldnotes.
Mordechai: And
you sent it to me in the initial email?
Brent: I did,
yeah.
Mordechai: And I
didn’t look at it? Very possible. I’ll definitely check it out. Is it about
traveling?
Brent: It’s not.
So, a big portion of this project for me is to get out on the streets and do
what it is that the people I’m studying are doing.
Mordechai: And
so, by doing this, you’re doing that. Literally.
Brent: Yeah.
Mordechai: That’s
so dope. I appreciate your sitting here with me and not like a fancy coffee.
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Brent: It’s all
good, man. This is what anthropologists do anyway. We chill with our subjects,
you know, try to get past that “I study you” sort of thing and try to make it
into something more meaningful. And also so that you’re seeing from the
perspective of the people you’re working with. That’s what I try to do as an
anthropologist. Which is what interests me about the street style. I was
getting into a branch of anthropology, it’s called Visual Anthropology, where
people work with photo and video to do their work, rather than just writing
books and chapters, and all this other stuff, and I started editing this
journal called Visual Anthropology Review.
Mordechai: Visual Anthropology Review. [Points to a guy crossing the street]. That’s
the third guy we’ve seen wearing that shirt today. See the dude with the
jacket. It’s the same one my friend X was wearing.
Brent: Yeah,
you’re right.
Mordechai: That’s
so wack. Go back to LA!
Brent: I lived in
LA for seven years before coming out here.
Mordechai: Oy
vey!
Brent: So I was
interested in what these people were doing, and I decided that the only way I
was going to understand it was to go out and shoot it myself, and figure out …
Mordechai: I have
two questions, but I’m going to let you continue first with the project.
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Brent: So the
project is partly me…
[muffled, something about who else is part of it]
Brent: There’s
like 17 or 18 of them listed on my blog. My interviews that I do I just put
them up.
Mordechai: They’re
already up? And then you’ll just put them in your book afterwards?
Brent: Yeah.
[Answering something he asked]. Oh, yeah, the book contract’s been signed, so I
don’t have any choice.
Mordechai: and
you’re allowed to publish it first on your site Nobody minds?
Brent: Well,
because they’re an academic publisher I think they’re not as stressed about it.
And it was part of my book proposal is that I’m going to do this project from
the perspective of a street style blogger. So the book’s going to be called Street Style Anthropology.
Mordechai: [excited]
Really? This is so cool. It’s like meeting a rabbi. I’ve been [??] myself
around my whole life, and now I’m meeting one. I mean, I call myself an
anthropologist. I never googled the term. I never knew what it is. I’m not
embarrassed by it. But a little bit. But I always imagined [it fit me]. Like,
dope, dope, that’s what I am. An anthropologist of why they were wearing it.
And before you got involved with this particular thing, you were still an
anthropologist, but you were doing what?
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Brent: Well, I
was working largely in Indonesia. I was working with the independent streetwear
scene in Indonesia .So, there’s a huge indie streetwear scene in Indonesia. At
any given time, there’s about a thousand different streetwear labels, mainly in
Bandung and Jakarta on the island of Java, but also in this town I lived in a
long time ago called Yogyakarta in the center of Java. It’s just kids who are
between the ages of…
Mordechai: So
style? Style? Clothing brought you out to these places?
Brent: Well, I
went out there at first because I was interested in youth culture and I was
interested in the music scene. I started focusing on the music scene, right,
like all these kids in punk and indie bands and hip hop groups, and stuff like
that. And all these bands had their own clothing labels. They were all hooked
in with each other. What they were doing is making music themselves in their
home studios, and screening T-shirts to go along with it, and selling them in
shops their friends owned.
Mordechai: So you
were documenting what they were doing.
Brent: Absolutely.
So I ended up getting into the streetwear scene that way.
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Mordechai: I like that. Most people who aren’t into clothes and they told me
they were doing something like that I’d be like “fuck you!” What do you know
about fashion? And stuff like that. But your story that led up to it, that’s
rad. One of my biggest pet peeves, is, like, I’ll be at a fashion event, Pitti,
wherever, shooting, somebody, who shall remain nameless will be on my side, in
front of me, shooting the same thing I’m shooting. I might have one advantage
to them that I stop the person and ask. Some bloggers will get mad. Why are you
talking? You’re messing up my shot. Other bloggers, because I’m bringing them
closer and making their subjects still. So they love and hate at the same time,
but I’m like, I’m really generous, ‘cause I work on the edit side. You know
these editors, because you happen to know them from the Internet, and they walk
by. It’s like when I used to ask baseball players for autographs back in the
day. “Mr. Clemmens, Mr. Clemmens, Mr. Clemmens,” I would say their names,
because everyone around me was saying their names. I didn’t even know who he
was. I wasn’t even into sports, but I wanted the autograph. These guys, “Hey
Bruce, Hey Bruce, Hey Bruce! How’s it going, Bruce?” You know Bruce Pask? You
know he’s from The New York Times. You know he’s one of the
fashion dons of the world? No. You don’t know anything. Which is fine. Or maybe
you do know everything about him. But it’s still like, I’m not saying you have
to know Dries Van Noten from ’99 or Miu Miu from 2002. You don’t. You don’t. You
really don’t. But the kids are just know- it-alls. And when I say kids, I’m 38,
but I’m ageless. I’m like a fucking 16-year-old. Ageless is maybe the wrong
word.
I love love love old men, because they’ve lived, and they have such great stories, and I don’t shoot a lot of young guys, because I respect this [gesturing to my outfit] because you’re doing black and you’re just blending in, and you’re not trying, but a lot of these kids are just trying so damn hard. Look at me! Look at me! Everything is about look at me! Oh wow! Woooow! Wooooooow! [gestures at the jacket of a passerby] The patchwork. The love, you know what I mean? It’s like, ah man, old couples arm in arm. Priceless. Right? Priceless. Fucking priceless. Anyway, yeah, so that’s that. That’s really cool. Thank you so much for hitting me up.
Photo by Mordechai Rubinstein. Originally posted on Mister Mort. |
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Preetma Singh outside Cushnie et Ochs, 15th St, New York
All good street style photographers, over time, develop their own distinctive, and recognizable street style signature. It's not just about the lenses they use or they settings they shoot at. It's not just about whether they shoot straight ups or candids, in portrait or landscape, still-shots or motion. It extends into the very color palette of their images, the amount of grain in their shots, the mood they convey, in short, the settings they use post-production. The photos on The Locals, for instance, are characteristically cool and wintery. Julian from Bleu Mode shoots in the washed out tones of a faded photograph. Vanessa Jackman pushes the grain on her pictures, lending them a distinctly impressionistic feel. I don't think I used to pay that much attention to this aspect of street style photography. I was more concerned with composition and depth of field. Now, I'm slightly obsessed with it, and mainly because I have discovered the wonder of Lightroom presets. Presets! So that's what they're all using! And it's not like they're employing them will nilly, one photo in this preset, another photo in that. No. They are cultivating a distinct visual brand, making their work virtually synonymous with one type — or possibly a few types — of preset. I don't know who's using which, but suddenly it seems like a code I can crack. I can see the immediate signature of them on the work of a photographer, and the absence of them on others. So that begs the question: what preset should I be using? How should I mark my visual brand? What does my signature look like? I like the classic film photography look, and I've been playing largely with old Kodak presets the past couple of posts, mostly in the 100-200 ISO range. But I don't want to enter into the garish domain of the "retro," those all-too-conspicuously manipulated filters that define the look of Instagram.
Street style photography makes claims to authenticity and realism that, in a sense, go against the very idea of using presets. But the thing is, street style photographers tend to use presets that make their photos appear more real, more "untouched," more filmic. They borrow from the conventions of documentary photography, preferring just a touch of grain, just a hint of wear. Subtlety is important. Because the last thing a street style photographer wants you to think is that all they have to do is put a mediocre picture through a preset, and voila! It looks awesome. It doesn't work that way. Presets adjust the color scheme, temperature, and tone. They tweak. They don't reinvent. You still have to have a good picture to work with. I stand behind the claim that the art of photography happens behind the lens, not in front of the screen.
I like this preset I used on market editor Preetma Singh. It's more subtle than the preset I used on Bryanboy yesterday, a little less contrasty, a little less warm, but still recognizably Kodak in its look. It's a slide film preset. I'm going to experiment with standard film presets in the future. What do you all think of this one? And can you even see what I'm talking about?
Street style photography makes claims to authenticity and realism that, in a sense, go against the very idea of using presets. But the thing is, street style photographers tend to use presets that make their photos appear more real, more "untouched," more filmic. They borrow from the conventions of documentary photography, preferring just a touch of grain, just a hint of wear. Subtlety is important. Because the last thing a street style photographer wants you to think is that all they have to do is put a mediocre picture through a preset, and voila! It looks awesome. It doesn't work that way. Presets adjust the color scheme, temperature, and tone. They tweak. They don't reinvent. You still have to have a good picture to work with. I stand behind the claim that the art of photography happens behind the lens, not in front of the screen.
I like this preset I used on market editor Preetma Singh. It's more subtle than the preset I used on Bryanboy yesterday, a little less contrasty, a little less warm, but still recognizably Kodak in its look. It's a slide film preset. I'm going to experiment with standard film presets in the future. What do you all think of this one? And can you even see what I'm talking about?