Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Alexey Veter



Best known for his famous "Hamster-shot"
but this 25 y/o model from Russia has a lot more to offer.





Early Lunchbreak

Matt Stone by Gregory Vaughan




Matt Stone is at Major Model Management.

Jason Morgan by Joseph Bleu




Jason Morgan is at Major Model Management.
Photography by Joseph Bleu.

Monday, May 18, 2009

So Now What?

Mario d'Amico for Carlo Pignatelli







Comics are Art, just Funnier



The Italian city Lucca has beautiful cathedrals, museums and old parcs. So if you open a Museum about Comics in a city like that, you really need something special. And I think this campaign called "Comics are Art, Just Funnier" did the job perfectly!



JC - East Village Boy of the Week



JC from Brooklyn is this weeks East Village Boy of the Week. Go check out the complete shoot by Richard Welch at East Village Boys.

Manuel Traxler








Manuel Traxler is at Major Model Management.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

I Can Booze it Alone!

Hidden German Treasure



Okay, so no zoo for us today but a little late afternoon drive in the country. And since we're so close to Germany we often end up there. This afternoon we stumbled across every photographer's dream; an abandoned factory. This stupid photographer only took his iXus75 on his trip, so he tried to make the most out of the moment. Still, I hope you like the results and I definately go back with my big camera (and who knows a handsome, muscular guy).







Waking Up Peter



We were supposed to be at the zoo at 10 this morning, but these pictures show me waking up Peter at 2 this afternoon. No, we never made it too the zoo. And yes, I can be an annoying asshole waking people up with my iPhone. I was gentle though.

Recipe for Matthew Paul*




The New England Clam Bake
A Tasty Tradition

The ritual of the New England clambake is older than New England itself. The Indians of Martha's Vineyard perfected this method of cooking food in a rock-lined sand pit long before the English, French and Spanish empires cast their acquisitive eyes toward the Americas.

Anyone who knows the joy of a clambake on the beach can understand why it is called a feast. First a pit is dug in the sand. Then it is lined with smooth rocks. Wood for a fire is placed on the rocks, ignited and permitted to burn to ash. The ashes are carefully swept away, leaving fire-hot rocks to cook the food. Rockweed or some other seaweed is piled on these rocks and then layers of potatoes, onions, corn in the husks, lobsters and clams are added to the pit. Next a layer of seaweed is placed on top, and a wet canvas is thrown over all to confine the steam, which cooks the medley into a flavorsome meal with subtleties that are unforgettable.

Preparing a clambake is a day-long project. Some do-it-yourselfers enjoy this, but others hire caterers to do the work. Then, too, New England ingenuity provides variations on the ancient clambake by cooking it in metal containers. Note that this is the only way to have a clambake here on the Vineyard, as Massachusetts state law prohibits open fires.

You can cook a clambake in your yard in a metal garbage can, or in a steamer in your home, or you can hire a caterer to prepare it in cooking vessels heated by burning gas in the picnic area of your choice. You can even go to a store and buy an already prepared clambake – hot in the pot.
The following is a guide to making a do-it-yourself-indoors clambake.

Put six ears of corn in husks to soak in salted water for one hour. In the bottom of a 20-quart steamer place six cups of water. Cover with the upper section of the steamer and add a generous layer of wet, well-rinsed seaweed. Take three boiler-fryer chickens that have been split, and wrap them in cheesecloth. Tie with corners of the cloth and place on top of the seaweed. Wrap five medium-sized, unpeeled potatoes in the same way and place them on the chicken. Wrap the six ears of corn in cheesecloth and place them on top of the potatoes. Then add small clams, wrapped in four cheesecloth bundles, each containing a dozen clams. Last, add six one-pound lobsters also wrapped in cheesecloth. Top the ingredients with seaweed. Place a medium-sized, unpeeled potato in the middle and cover. Steam until the potato on the top is cooked, about one and a half hours. Serve with melted butter. This recipe serves six.


*) and for anyone else who enjoys good food and coocking.

Andrew Stetson





Where the Hell is Willem? #53


Can you tell me where I am?

Ian Nelson Foster by Rick Day










All images by Rick Day.

Happy Birthday Maxima


Today our beloved Princess Maxima turns 38.

Sunday Morning


What a beautiful way to wake up on a sunday morning.