Snap The annual CRAZY issue
Feb 2011
US $13,70 € 9.9
COME OUT TO PLAY, EVERY DAY.
Snap
in this issue of we bring you the every year crazy overlook.
Isabella
We talked to Gysing the and blogger from studying in finest schools
most crazy outrageous Sweden Barcelona’s IED
The amazingly from the
crazy photos photographer
Guðný
Jónsdóttir
Vivienne
Westwood
The front and was taken by
backcover
in the wild and of Iceland
crazy new collection everything we her craziness
Fanney of
Fanney
crazy nature
man and love about
Stefanía Björgvins Stefanía Björgvins
This will be deep shit man.
We went to Barcelona to see if we could find some new adventures along with some talent. Every where we went everybody told us that to find new and inspiring talent we would have to go to IED (Institution of European Design) which is located in the heart of Gracia area in Barcelona. We went to IED and we were not disappointed when we saw all the talent that is being embraced there. We sat down with a very inspiring fashion marketing student who has the most interesting blog. Her name is Isabella Gysing and her blog. Deepshitman!
Q: Isabella Gysing? A: I really hate that question, but I can tell you that I thought I knew who I was when I came here, but now I am not so sure. I am going through a lot of changes for the better here in this new country
and lifestyle that I am still developing. If I would have to say something I would say that I am crazy, calm, unpredictable, I don’t like to label my self as anything. I am human and there for always changing.
Q: Why IED? A: My mom is artist and a designer and my dad is a journalist so I was brought up in a very arty home. I was always told to express my self. I learned in my upbringing how to be a creative. I have always wanted to do something creative and just have fun. My biggest nightmare was growing up. I just wanted to play and create my own things I would not cope in environment where I would be stuck doing office jobs all day Q: Why didn’t you go in the design department? A: My mom always told me never be artist! And I don’t want to be an artist. I think it is too much work and it makes you strange, you have to live with this creative pressure of making something new every day. I am more in to mixing photos with text. I love writing and even better if I can express my self with photos and text. Q: Your work? A: Yes, my blog deepshitman.blogspot.com the blog is my way of expressing my
self. There are no rules in deepshitman. So I think that is perfect, it’s a bit serious. I want it to be a bit human so I can make all my mistakes there and I stand up for my mistakes.
Q: The name Deepshitman? A: Deepshitman has been in my life for a very long time, and I am not really sure where it came from. When I make jokes with my friend we always say “that was deepshitman” so I thought this name was perfect. Serious, funny and a little bit crazy like myself. Q: What is your main subject in Deepshitman ? A: every day life, I blog about my thoughts. And the thing that are going around me in my life right now, but I write the things that happens too me in a very fun and story telling way I want people too see my life through my eyes. Stefanía Fanney B
Photography Guðný Jónsdóttir makeup & syling Stefanía Fanney Björgvinsdóttir & Margrét Gísladóttir hair Agnes Skúladóttir at Móðins Models Aldís Gísladóttir, Stefanía Fanney Björgvinsdóttir, Andrea Pétursdóttir &Margrét Gísladottir they all vear chlothing from Vintage Iceland Aldís Gísladóttir wears vintage wedding dress
CRAZY beauty in a CRAZY nature
Stefanía Fanney Björgvinsdóttir wears green vintage prom dress
A Vivienne Westwood show is an opportunity for a little soapboxing and a little showboating from Dame Vivienne. Her men's collection today provided both, a reminder about the seriousness of climate change and about the serious commitment she makes to madcap mania— sartorially speaking. Witch she is very concerned about. A Vivienne Westwood show is an opportunity for a little soapboxing and a little showboating from Dame Vivienne. Her men's collection today provided both, a reminder about the seriousness of climate change and about the serious commitment she makes to madcap mania— sartorially speaking. Witch she is very concerned about. The show notes spoke of a gang of multiethnic but recognizably British student boyfriends, and glanced for a moment at the most famous student boyfriend in recent memory, Prince William. (Let's not forget that he met his commoner princess-to-be while hitting the books at St. Andrew's.) "With royal marriage in the air, who
would you choose to be your bridegroom?" Westwood said. "Come on, girls, our catwalk is your chance to dream." Take your pick: Out paraded a cast of politics revolutionaries, class clowns, baggy-jean hoods, even a Dandy guys, complete with cigar. This being a Vivienne Westwood show, each wore amazing lipstick. The moments that the chlothes were the coolest, the suits thrown only slightly askew by sagging trousers and jackets buttoned on the bias. Or at least, you'd imagine they will be on the sales floor. But there was a daffy coherence to the whole. "Our MAN collection has plenty of choice," Westwood wrote by way of preface. And choose she did. When she took her bow, bouquet in hand, as a sort of blushing bride, she was arm-in-arm with a quilted-jacket tough. But lest that choice be too constricting, there were four other lads trailing behind. StefanĂa Fanney B.