Archive for April, 2008

Kamakura

Wednesday, April 30th, 2008


Kamakura Nature

I visited Kamakura last week for the first time. It is an absolutely gorgeous area in Kanagawa, about 1.5-2 hours south of Tokyo by train. It’s next to the beach and has a lot of Japanese historical landmarks.

The area is mostly quiet, especially when the tourists leave (I stayed around until fairly late at night), and was filled with beautiful nature. It felt great to get out of the endless buildings of Tokyo for even just a little while. My friend who moved there recently is a surfer and he offered to give me a chance to try surfing using his board. I’m considering giving it a shot, maybe in a month or two when it has warmed up even more.

I’m also trying out Flickr for photo hosting. Give the photo a click for more pictures from my trip. There is something weird with the colors of the photo though… I’m not expert on this stuff; I tried to research it but monitor gamma and color space settings are confusing. In Aperture (photo editing on my Mac) it looks fine. When I upload the image above to Flickr it looks washed out in Firefox. Then I opened Flickr in Safari and it looks normal. I’ll have to reboot to Windows in a minute and see how it looks there. If anyone knows if there is some universal fix for this let me know!

Grand Theft Auto 4

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

I walked into a game store in Shinjuku today on a whim to research what is currently popular in Japan. Today was a national holiday, the weather was beautiful, so I was tooling around Tokyo. To my surprise, the English version of GTA4 was in the store and there were plenty of copies. WTF? It was an imported British PAL version of the game that works on Japanese Xbox 360 Hardware. I asked to confirm, I didn’t expect the PAL version to fly, but lo-and-behold it works fine.

Anyways, I’ve just started to play it now and it is awesome so far. Really cool atmosphere and what seems like an extremely well realized world. I don’t have much more to say yet other than I’m planning to stay up for at least another hour or two to keep going (it’s 12:30 am right now).
Check it out!

Fashion I Like: Tsumori Chisato Wallet

Friday, April 25th, 2008

While exploring Daikanyama recently I found a Tsumori Chisato store. While the designer primarily focuses on women’s clothing, she does some men’s clothes and accessories. I just found out recently that a group of friends I have here went to the same fashion design school as this designer… apparently it’s the most famous in Japan. Kind of cool.

Anyways, here’s the wallet:


It has a sea life theme. As you can see, the buckle/button to open it is a star fish. I love the colors on this too. Some kind of sea-green with the shiny silver interior. Speaking of the interior…


Nice and shiny! The wallet is made of leather and has some interesting grains in the leather. It is not smooth.

Finally, my favorite part of the wallet is actually the interior lining. The tiny details that pepper the lining are really cool. It’s the kind of thing that you and other people don’t see often but when you do it really gives you a feeling of cohesiveness in the design of the item.


If you can’ see it, click to open the big version where you can see the small crab on the inside of the coin pouch. There are a number of sea animals in the lining of the cash bill area as well. Awesome!

Japanese Cell Phone Culture

Thursday, April 24th, 2008

Before coming to Japan I knew Japanese cell phones in general were considered more advanced than their western counterparts. That is still somewhat true but western phones have caught up in many ways and at this point it seems more like what is important on a phone is more dictated by culture than technical ability.

Certainly some features like the ubiquitous availability of 3G (or faster) cell service in Japan still is not available in the west. That said, recently it seems like thinness or “cool” factor is more important in the US than it is in Japan. In Japan it is more about phone features, it seems. I have met many people who honestly don’t use normal internet e-mail on a computer. Seriously, they only use their cell phone. Therefore a lot of people’s internet usage, not just e-mail, is done on their cell phone. The phones are geared toward this use.

Recently I have sent an absolutely absurd amount of e-mail on my phone. In the US, I didn’t use SMS or phone e-mail hardly at all. When I wanted to talk to someone, I would call them. I almost never talk to people on my phone in Japan. In the last 23 days I have sent over 500 e-mails from my phone, according to the logs. At my job these days I only send a handful of e-mails a day so my phone usage is by far blowing that away.

It’s basically like IM here. I haven’t met anyone who has asked me “what is your AIM?” or whatever the equivalent popular client is here. I think it’s because there isn’t any. Everyone just e-mails on their phone as their IM client. Due to this phone e-mails are cheap… I haven’t carefully examined my bill but I think the price is nearly nothing. Internet usage on phones here is a lot cheaper than in the US.

Fashion I Like: Crazy Hat

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008

I had a dream about a month ago. I wanted a really interesting and crazy hat. No, seriously, I literally dreamed that! Luckily, my friend Magu-chan, a clothes designer, makes all kinds of crazy stuff at the store she works at in Ura-Harajuku called “Rocker & Hooker”. Check out this handmade camouflage (in Japanese “meisai”) hat that she made…


The details and lack of uniformity are awesome!

Fashion

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

For some reason after I’ve come to Tokyo I’ve gotten a lot more interested in fashion. Both men’s and women’s. I’m not sure exactly why but it has become a kind of a creative outlet for me. Perhaps it largely has to do with how many interesting and cool clothing shops there are near where I live. Living in Shibuya-ku means I can get to Harajuku, Aoyama, Omotesando, Daikanyama, and Shibuya itself in just a few minutes. These places are littered with both mainstream brand fashion and tiny funky shops selling weird creations. Also it’s probably because of the kinds of crazy fashions you can see every day here. Pretty much anything goes, from the salary man army of suit wearing men to the sensational Shibuya gyaru/gyaru-o and koakuma (little devil) styles.

I’ve recently had an interest in “kira kira” accessories, a Japanese sound word meaning something like “shiny”. Shiny bags, wallets, shoes, pens, whatever. That said, I can’t really associate the type of clothing I wear with any particular group. One day I’ll wear a suit jacket and slacks and the next day torn-up jeans and a leather coat. Basically, whatever looks kind of crazy, cool, and can be mixed and matched. And of course, clothes and accessories that are “kira kira” or “pika pika”… both basically mean “shiny” and although there is some kind of difference between the two I can’t understand it.

That said I think some of you would be interested in seeing some of the fashion items or stores if for no other reason than to have a laugh at how silly it can be sometimes. I’m going to start a series of blog posts called “Fashion I Like” and put up pictures for you to check out starting with things I’m already wearing and then pictures of stores and such that I take while out and about. I’ve taken a lot of pictures recently and need to get some uploaded. I promise to get on that this week.

Teh Internets! They have returned!

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

“The Internet is not a truck! It is a series of tubes!” (from Senator Ted Stevens excellent speech)

And now it is finally installed in my house. Although in many places in Tokyo you can get fiber I ended up having to get DSL because fiber isn’t installed in my building yet. That’s the bad news, the good news is that fiber is getting installed in the next few months and I should be able to switch to it. Anyways, I’m just happy to be able to use the Internet at all!

Once I get some pictures uploaded I’ll do some posts to let you guys know what I’ve been up to. It’s been ohanami season here, the cherry blossoms have bloomed, which means lots of drinking outside and looking at trees. It reminds me of July 4th in the states without the BBQs… anyways, more details on that in a proper post with pictures.