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by L_A_NÂ

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H E I D I L E E Echo Hat in L_A_N Magazine Issue 3 by Veronica So
photo: Ricardo Pedaline & Ignacio Torres
model: Jaki Doyka
L_A_N is an underground sci-fi bible with a focus on innovative design and technology. With their first issue inspired by dystopian and utopian visions of the future, and their second dedicated to digital art and internet culture, the pop futurist makers of L_A_N held a preview party for the new issue, which is themed around ideas of the outsider. If you werenât one of the lucky few to walk away from the digital launch with a special USB edition, now is your chance to take a glimpse before their Kickstarter campaign for the print issue goes live. -NOWNESS. http://nowness.tumblr.com/tagged/LANMagazineTakeover
high-res digital copy HERE >>Â https://www.mediafire.com/?hg2vztv0jjgwdff
VERONICA SO: REDEFINING 'GEEK CHIC' Veronica So is a girl of many talents: editing, art directing, writing, photography and fashion design. Amongst others. Her latest endeavor is a unisex clothing line to run alongside her magazine for the âfashionable futuristâ, L_A_N. She speaks about why being stylish and being geeky really arenât so different. Youâve no doubt heard the phrase, âBeen there, done that, worn the t-shirtâ. Imagine being so enamored with something that the t-shirt simply isnât enough: you want everything else to match. Well thatâs how a lot of people feel about L_A_N magazine. Obviously, generally speaking, you wouldnât wear a magazine, but once youâve seen the spreads in L_A_N, youâll be eating your words. âItâs image-making more than considered editorial design,â Veronica says, describing how her layouts differ from the norm. âIt takes a lot of energy and time to get it how I like it.â Time and effort aside, as far as the readers are concerned, thereâs little not to love about the aesthetic of L_A_N. Think muted, psychedelic colour palettes, skewed text thatâs only legible from certain angles and fashion shoots set in online video games â all culminating to form an absurdly oversized, A3 newsprint publication. Since L_A_N is essentially a fashion magazine, the idea of an affiliated clothing line isnât especially outlandish. The innovation lies in the fact that the spreads themselves form the digital prints on each and every garment. Not only does this mean you can proudly wear the aesthetically appetizing layouts proudly on your chest, youâre essentially wearing readable clothing. Genius like this doesnât spring out of thin air: it takes brilliance and hard work. Much more than a pretty face â though she does have one of those, too â Veronica employs her creative talent at the helm of L_A_N as editor and creative director, meanwhile finding time in between to sing in electro band, TEETH, or tackle a freelance writing job. âThe only reason I run around like a crazy person doing all these things is because I haven't actually decided that one thing is enough,â she explains, when asked how she does it. âI need a balance of different worlds to feel safe and productive at the same time â a creative retreat from creative work.â Grudgingly considering the prospect of an apparently apocalyptic scenario that could result in picking a single career, she lands on something of a compromise: âI do like sitting around, coming up with ideas and making them happen in a really precise way,â she muses. âI think that's what it is I'd like to do most â creative direction in any field I'm involved in.â Regardless of what Veronica decides to do, itâs likely to involve two of her great loves: fashion and being a shameless nerd. L_A_N is an excellent example of this, channeling the two together to form a kind of technologically stylized perfection. âI think everyone is capable of being a geek of something,â she says, when asked about her fascination with all thinks geeky. âIt's a sign that pop culture has created something that completely vibes with your outlook, aesthetic and romanticism.â Regardless of everyone elseâs potential inner nerd, Veronica has a particularly long history with hers. âI think growing up 'geeky' had a lot to do with me having a close relationship with my younger brother and the fun of being able to share similar interests. For example, I rescued a copy of Ender's Game from a recycling bin on Earth Day only because I thought he would like it â and ended up reading and being obsessed with it myself.â Anyone who grew up taking an interest in the sci-fi genre will agree that any love as a child can rapidly evolve into obsession. âIt's heaven to be a fan of something when you're young,â the self-confessed fan agrees. An attraction to the genre was only amplified for Veronica and her brother, since their uncle worked for Industrial Light and Magic, a division of Lucasfilm Ltd. (responsible for the Star Wars Saga) that works specifically with visual effects. âMy brother and I watched Star Wars a lot [growing up], almost every weekend,â she remembers. âOur uncle had loads of paraphernalia from the franchise, including Yoda masks, art books and novels so it was an easy fandom to fall into.â Fashion didnât hook itâs claws until a little later in life. âUp until high school I wanted to study marine biology and painting,â Veronica remembers. âOnly in junior year did I realise I wanted to study fashion and I really had to scramble to learn about designers and sewing. In my last year of high school I made a lot of clothes, a few of which were prom dresses for other girls.â It didnât take a lot for the link to be made between this fresh inspiration and a life-long career in professional geek. âIn my first year at Central Saint Martins I designed a Stormtrooper blaster print bag.â She considers, before continuing, âI was really bemused at how well that went.â From that point onwards, the sporadic dots between fashion and âgeekâ were quickly and easily connected. âThe semester Episode III came out, my research book was filled with Polaroids of Jedis, Imperial troopers and Bobba Fetts walking around Leicester square the day of the premiere. I realized then that geekdom was timely and affected in a very similar way to fashion.â By the time Veronica had reached her third year at CSM, she had created a playground in which style and geekery could coexist outside the obvious thick-framed, lensless glasses so often affiliated with the term âgeek chicâ. When required to create her own magazine as part of her graduating year, L_A_N was conceptually conceived. âI wanted to make something for someone like myself: no commercial promises, no professional pressure. Writing about anyone I felt deserved to be written about, but had not been discovered,â she says, describing what she wanted to achieve when she began L_A_N. Over the last two years, sheâs managed to produce exactly what she envisaged. âItâs growing in a really honest, organic and cult way â just the way I want it to be,â she enthuses. âI want my readers to be invested in the magazine â to know that there is an entity out there that has this corner covered. L_A_N moves people emotionally through the imagery, tone and subject matter. I approach it like having one amazing, intense, informative and meaningful conversation with someone I don't see very often.â L_A_Nâs U.K. stockists are few and far between, a fact, which adds to itâs allure as one of the rare and sought after creatures of the published world. One place they are stocked, however, is at Primitive London, a tiny, tucked away establishment in Haggerston, which possesses a similar magnitude to the publication. âI was invited to sell L_A_N in Tokyo for the Primitive London pop up shop at Candy and decided it was a good time to sell clothes,â Veronica says, when asked where the idea for the line began. âThis small collection was especially made for Tokyo, but I'd like to continue making L_A_N <label> to sell online.â While in most cases, launching a label would involve heavily time-consuming production, the process for L_A_N <label> was fleeting, though the effort and talent poured into it is unquestionable. âThe collection was conceived and completed within a month,â Veronica confirms. âThe lookbook was planned and designed in a week. I really like intensely fresh ideas coming to life over a short period of time â it completely takes the pressure off.â Thatâs not to say that she didnât have help. New York-based designer and fellow CSM graduate, Alexandra Polk collaborated with Veronica on the collection, alongside additional support from Anna Love of Opening Ceremony and L_A_N contributor, Andrej Ujhazy. âItâs a simple idea that works.â Purely placing the already painstakingly designed layouts onto poly mesh clothing is about as simple as it gets for a magazine-affiliated clothing line, and itâs the fluid ease of the concept that makes it work in terms of both concept and wearability. âI love Jean Paul Gaultier's Soleil pieces. Those stretchy tattoo tops and dresses with digital prints on them from the 90s,â she says, describing her inspirations. âL_A_N is a magazine so I want it to be about the content rather than complicating the design.â âI want to produce full L_A_N collections where each piece is focused on one editorial story.â Most avid L_A_N readers will be scrambling for the pieces while theyâre still hot off the press, for itâs a lucky few that can already claim ownership, including, but not limited to, those featured in the look book. âThe idea was to curate a set of personalities who are L_A_N readers and collaborators and have them wear a piece of the collection in their own personal style,â Veronica explains. The weird and wonderful creatures that adorn the pages of the look book are in fact fans of the magazine, and every shot is self-styled.Â
Essentially, once you get hold of a piece, L_A_N <label> is another way of preserving a part of the publication for yourself as a reader. Every part of the brand, from the eerily warped text that fills the magazine layouts to the heavy paper itâs printed on, guarantee to instigate a geek following all for L_A_N. âI would never print something that couldn't be kept or loved for a long time,â Veronica agrees, and with every new accomplishment it seems more likely that sheâs created something of a legacy for both herself and L_A_N.

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Found in London 2
Found at Beach, Shoreditch.
A word about this little shop. It's amazing. A gateway to some of the best stuff happening in small press in London. The gentlemen there have curated a stunning collection of artists' books, zines, prints and magazines, and it is virtually impossible to decide what to leave behind.
So here are the ones that made it with me to the counter (in no particular order):
1. L_A_N Edited by Veronica So, London | ÂŁ15
This beautifully printed, tabloid-sized zine is hilarious, though I'm not totally sure if that's its aim. If you're a fan of Tim and Eric you will appreciate the 90s pixellated internet graphics and images of girls in John Lennon sunglasses with binary code projected onto their faces in a weird, computer screen blue. That illegible purple text you can see on the cover there says 'Fashionable Futurist' when you hold it horizontally up to your eye. So at least they're up front about it. True hipster jizz.
2. Seeing Green â Aaron McLaughlin & Grace Miceli Published by Fourteen-Nineteen Books, London | A steal at ÂŁ5
A stunning zine of new photography and photo montage. It totally succeeds in offering that kind of fashionable thing at the moment â you know, hipster-matic, lots of flashes of sunlight in fields and woodland creatures â but without faux-naĂŻvety and just shows strong, emotive work by two young and very talented artists.
The publishers themselves, Fourteen-Nineteen, I was told at Beach, are young and very talented themselves. That's pretty clear â their website is well worth a geeze.
3. U Are a Chef â Ăivin Horvei's Sci-fi Cookbook Published by Landfill Editions, London | Can't remember how much this was.
This mag is very funny and silly and clever, so it had me at hello. The preface begins, "I am ANGELO, I like food. I am a chef and a collector. So are U." Angelo is the rubbish-bag-headed African mask-faced fellow that appears as the zine's covergirl, and the alter-ego of Norwegian artist Ăivin Horvei. Within we follow Angelo around to his friends' houses, where they cook for him, and find the recipes published with a picture of them together. It is beautifully printed on a Riso with lovely, gaudy colours.   Â
Landfill Editions are based in London, and seem to be, like Fourteen-Nineteen, producing some outstanding publications.Â
4. Memoranda â Raffi Kalenderian Published by Nieves, Zurich | ÂŁ11
This little publication is an exhibition catalogue of one Raffi Kalenderian, a young American painter. It is beautiful â both the print quality and the works themselves.
The publisher, Nieves, looks like they've got a good thing going.