Related_
North Palisade. Sierra Nevada, California.


NANA 1st Illustrations _ Ai Yazawa
NANA 1st Illustrations gathers Nana Osaki, Nana Komatsu, Ren Honjo, Nobuo Terashima, Shinichi Okazaki, and Yasushi Takagi not as model sheets but as quiet romances in fabric and metal. Osaki’s black leather and lace feel like vows; her Vivienne Westwood Armour Ring glints like a promise she keeps. Komatsu floats in lighter textiles and soft palettes, a tender blur that finds light even when it trembles. Shinichi moves in bondage pants—wide legs, trailing straps, D-rings and chains—tempered by fitted tanks, layered belts, and combat boots; the strapwork turns his stride into music and cinches him closer when the stage goes still.
Ren and Yasu hold steadier lines—smoke, denim, talismanic hardware—anchors for the others’ weather. Here costume is character: friendship sewn into hems, devotion clasped in studs, defiance stitched in black. A Complete NANA 1st Illustrations book scan is available on the server. A Complete NANA 1st Illustrations book scan is available on the server.





Zero Risk Security.Inc
EMERY MOUNTAINS
April 2024, FRIEZE No. 9 Cork Street Gallery, London
EXHIBITION: The Mountains Between Us, FRIEZE No 9 Cork St


Weaving together photography, video and sculptural objects, lena_c_emery highlights the accelerated loss of mountain glaciers and the desperate conservation efforts currently employed to impede their decline. Under the continued influence of greenhouse-gas forced global warming, ice that took centuries to develop is vanishing in just a number of years. A fate experts predict for at least two-thirds of all glaciers by the end of this century. EMERY: In ‘The Mountains Between Us’, I capture the current environmental efforts undertaken to reduce the rate at which glaciers melt. Glaciers have held space for centuries, silently bearing witness to history. They’ve seen the world change in ways we can barely comprehend. Because my grandfather spent his life in these mountains, watching this particular glacier retreat and form lakes where there was previously only ice and at a pace that’s steadily increasing, feels deeply personal. The idea of covering these mammoths in fabric to stall the inevitable, feels both tragic and emblematic of our relationship with nature: The magnitude of loss countered by gestures that, though earnest, feel powerless. Visually these wrapped peaks evoke images of muddied tents, makeshift shelters that we’ve come to erect for those displaced by upheaval. This fragility, their fragility, our fragility, is a direct reflection of the imbalance we have sown, where those least responsible for ecological destruction are forced to bear its heaviest burdens. The title became a way to frame those divides. Mountains have always symbolised barriers, but perhaps they could also be reimagined as thread, shared histories and a collective belonging. The elemental particles composing our very being once danced amidst these ancient landscapes and if they disappear, part of us does too.



Invisible: Abbott Thayer and the Art of Camouflage
Abbott H. Thayer is now best known for his portraiture and paintings of angels, such as this one from 1887 held by the Smithsonian American Art Museum. He was also obsessed with nature, particularly how animals could disappear through their color patterns into a landscape.
Thayer identified two visual phenomena undergirding this invisibility: “obliterative countershading” and “disruptive patterning.” In the first, animal skins achieve an illusion of monochrome flatness via coloration darkest in sunlit parts and lightest in areas generally bathed in shadows: examples include the light bellies of otherwise dark rabbit coats or the silver undersides of sharks. The resulting visual compression of a three-dimensional form produces an illusion of monochrome flatness. The second principle takes this illusion to the next level of protective concealment: mottled patterns corresponding to the animal’s habitat disrupt the contours of its flat silhouette, resulting in an impression of not being there.


Batou + Togusa
illustration by Yuki Yoshimoto
Combat Swimmers German Special Forces





SASQUATCHfabrix. — SASFAB 2-in-1 Coat/Gilet
The Honey Hunters Of Nepal
Nepal is home to the Apis Laboriosa, the biggest honey bee on the planet, and honey hunting plays a significant role in the local way of life. The bees build their hives on the cliffs of the country's foothills, which adds complexity to the honey hunting process. Local honey hunters use rope ladders and baskets to access the combs after driving the bees away with smoke from a fire underneath the hives. They carefully collect the honey treasure from the combs while dealing with territorial bees. The harvesting occurs once a year and begins with a harvest ritual that varies across towns, often starting with a prayer and the offering of flowers, rice, and fruits.
This unique aspect of Nepali culture is captivating, and tourists have the opportunity to witness the bravery of the honey hunters, explore the fascination of the Nepali landscape, and admire the intricate homes of the honey bees.


















Nike × Undercover GYAKUSOU FW2012
Lake Rotsee Refuge by AFGH Architekten firm




Sonoya Mizuno as Dr. Azumi Fujita — Netflix MANIAC (2018)
Mercedes-Benz W126 S-Class — Red Leather Interior
Boston Dynamics SpotMini Quadruped Robot
Marble Caves at General Carrera Lake in Patagonia



The Marble Caves, known as Marble Chapel and Marble Cathedral, are located at the center of the lake and were formed by waves over the past 6,000 years.
NEIGHBORHOOD Utility Vest
Issey Miyake Spring/Summer 1999 — A-POC Runway
Metal Gear Solid by Yoji Shinkawa




Ryoji Ikeda — test pattern
Nike Komyuter Black/Summit White (AA2211-001)

Rick Owens Draped Wrap Skirt, circa 1998
Andreas Fuhrimann Gabrielle Hächler - Zielturm Rotsee, Rotsee Luzern
Mies van der Rohe Barcelona Daybed for Knoll
Lake Louise, Banff national park, 2014
Cacoon Hanging Chair
The Cacoon Hanging Chair is constructed with robust engineering to support a weight of up to 200kg or 440lbs. This product was designed in the UK by the collaborative effort of Nick and Sarah, a husband and wife team.





Giovanni Pesamosca’s Alpine Cabin in Friuli, Italy


Oscar Niemeyer's MAC Niterói — Louis Vuitton Cruise 2017 Venue
adidas Y-3 Yohji Court — Footwear White (EF2554)
Bruce Weber for Calvin Klein Jeans — 1991 Campaign
Karborn — Evidence of Time Travel

Comme des Garçons × Undercover Felicitations 25 Leather Jacket
Intha Fisherman on Inle Lake, Burma, 2011
Land Rover Defender 110 Station Wagon in Black
Carlo Scarpa — Fondazione Querini Stampalia Garden, Venice
Redhill MRT Station — Singapore
Nakagin Capsule Tower — Exterior Detail, Tokyo 2016
Melitta Baumeister Spring/Summer 2015 Ready-to-Wear
Nanzenji Temple Autumn Foliage, Higashiyama, Kyoto
CP Company Multi-Pocket Goggle Hooded Jacket in Grey
Stone Island × Diemme Military Boot (2012)
Stone Island Raso Floccato Riot Mask Jacket AW2004
Sort of Coal — Edible Kuro Charcoal Powder
Nike Air Solarsoft Zigzag Sandal in Black
Nike x Undercover Gyakusou Holiday 2014 Collection
Raf Simons SS2008 De Stijl Hiking Boot — White Multicolor
OMsignal Biometric Smartwear Shirt
Able Archer Duffel Bag — Black MOLLE
Nike Air Max Plus TN Triple Black
Obscur Black Leather Fingerless Glove Gauntlet
Maison Martin Margiela x Kanye West Yeezus Tour Custom Outfits


Martian Sunset
On May 19, 2005, NASA's Mars Exploration Rover Spirit captured this stunning view as the Sun sank below the rim of Gusev crater on Mars. This Panoramic Camera mosaic was taken around 6:07 in the evening of the rover's 489th Martian day, or sol.
Sunset and twilight images are occasionally acquired by the science team to determine how high into the atmosphere the Martian dust extends, and to look for dust or ice clouds. Other images have shown that the twilight glow remains visible, but increasingly fainter, for up to two hours before sunrise or after sunset. The long Martian twilight (compared to Earth's) is caused by sunlight scattered around to the night side of the planet by abundant high altitude dust. Similar long twilights or extra-colorful sunrises and sunsets sometimes occur on Earth when tiny dust grains that are erupted from powerful volcanoes scatter light high in the atmosphere.
Nike Lunar Pegasus 89
visvim FBT Lhamo-Folk
Floating Timber Staircase with Angular Steel Rail
Undercover Jun Takahashi L9F01 Low-Top Sneaker in Bordeaux
Japanese Warrior Figure — Edo/Meiji Period Ink Painting
WTAPS 11AW Ian L/S Tee — Cotton Raglan
White Mountaineering Camouflage Jacket
Sacai Paris — Before the Show, Street Snap by Masataka Matsumura
Supreme 18th Anniversary Alpha XBP Backpack
Irving Penn × Issey Miyake — Two Miyake Warriors
Hands holding weapon illustrations
Stutterheim Stockholm Raincoat in Red
Nike x Undercover Gyakusou SS2014 Sweat Map Long-Sleeve Top
A Mitten Butte and Merrick Butte seen from the View Hotel, Monument Valley Tribal Park
Stone Island Fall/Winter 2013 Garment Dyed Down Gilet
Rainbow mountains at Zhangye Danxia national geopark Gansu China
Former CGER-ASLK Building, Brussels — Marcel Lambrichs
"Wendover II (For John)" by Barry Underwood




Nike ACG Zoom Meriwether — Ivory/Orange
Dean Bouchard — Inside Out
Vatnajökull — Glacier near Skaftafell, Iceland
Desert Mountains Aerial View 012
Vennesla Library and Culture House by Helen & Hard
Swatch Art Peace Hotel Shanghai Interior by Jouin Manku
Neighborhood N-2B / N-JKT Olive Drab
Peninsula House by Watson Architecture + Design
Rhyolithberge, Region Landmannalaugar, Fjallabak Naturreservat, Isländisches Hochland, Island
A Story of Yonosuke (2013) — Shuichi Okita
Grey Peacock-Pheasant Plumage — Iridescent Ocelli Detail
Akari Hayami — Japanese Fashion Magazine Editorial
Bagh Nakh — Tiger Claw Weapon, India
Xavier Veilhan Faceted Figure Sculpture
Cidade das Artes — Christian de Portzamparc, Rio de Janeiro
Ralph McQuarrie — Battlestar Galactica (1978) Concept Art
Bally Spring/Summer 2014 Menswear — Hooded Utility Poncho
Nike Cheyenne Backpack in Tan
TRON Designs Corian — DuPont x Disney Milan Design Week 2011















