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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, July 6, 2008

ISLAND LIFE SHORTS
Stick together with mochee

Advertiser Staff and News Services

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Mochee combines art and architecture.

Photo by Nicholas Monu

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

The installation at Ong King Arts Center.

Photo by Nicholas Monu

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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser
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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser
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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser
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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser
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Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser
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WHAT'S ON YOUR IPOD?

DJ Zita

1. "You'll Find a Way" by Santogold

2. "Pro Nails" by Kid Sister, with Kanye West

3. "Random" by Lady Sovereign

4. "Honey" by Erykah Badu

5. "Bam Bam" by Sister Nancy

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Hawai'i-Japan crosscultural connections are not just about hula and anime anymore. Hawai'i fashions and accessories are being infused with a Japanese aesthetic, and Island interiors are not just about tansu and tokunoma — now they're combining Japanese style with urban edge that's as at home in Honolulu as it is in Shinjuku.



CREATE MOODS

Looking for an easy way to get your personal space in sync with your psyche? Wanna transform a room without any major renovations — not even a splash of paint? Check out www.mochee.com for an innovative way to get the walls around you to match your personality, taste and mood.

Mochee is Honolulu artist Sabina Hochroth's means of combining her passions for art and architecture in an innovative new business. She creates original, museum-quality matte vinyl wall decals that are easy to put up and take down. They won't even damage the wall, so they can be changed on a whim. Her designs range from humorous and whimsical to modern and edgy, including icons, inscriptions, anime, kanji and her artistic impressions of forests and the feminine form.

She will also work with clients to create custom design mochee decals to suit their own spaces. It could be as simple as turning a logo into a wall decal or as complex as redesigning an entire hotel space. The decals are available in 23 custom colors and are sized from 16 inches by 13 inches to 21 inches by 52 inches.

To get an upclose and personal look at a mochee installation, check out Ong King Arts Center, 184 N. King St., where Hochroth shares the space with illustrator Jasper Wong through the end of this month.

— Paula Rath



KOOL ACCESSORIES

While kimono may be uncool to the GothLolis in Harajuku (unless, perhaps, layered under a frilly black jumper), there's a little company called Kimono Kool that takes pieces of authentic vintage kimono fabric and turns 'em into cool accessories with a distinctly urban edge. Kimono Kool makes hair baubles, cell- phone charms, shoelaces, belts, bra straps, fanny packs, cuffs and caps, to name a few of their cute accessories. Necklaces are fragments of kimono encased in acrylic hearts, flowers and butterflies. The full line of Kimono Kool is sold at Chit Chat at Bishop Square. Prices range from $7.50 to $72.

— P.R.



CHARMING NECKLACES

Professional photographer Rae Huo has a great eye, and not only through her camera lens. When traveling in Japan (as she often does, since her husband Zakka recently started his own Japanese-inspired doll business with a cat called Miao) she often sees styles that she hasn't seen anywhere else.

Witness these charming crochet-and-chain necklaces. Huo spotted them in a Harajuku boutique and bought one for herself. "Everyone at home (Honolulu) started asking me where I got it," she said, so she decided to import some. We love that they are black and white, which seems to go with everything, and that they combine the old-fashioned charm of crochet with the modern edge of metallic chains. The crochet rosettes are even removable to wear as a brooch; a little touch of GothLoli without going overboard. Priced at $45, they are available online at www.zakkamono.com.

— P.R.



SALES & BARGAINS

  • Fashion-forward boutique MisFortune carries the high and the low from designers in Los Angeles and New York, with trend jewelry such as feather pendants and earrings under $20, and designs by Lucy Love priced around $50. Find the sales rack loaded with goods including dresses by Jenny Han and Swimsuits by Dawn, all marked 40 percent to 70 percent off. Check it out while you wait to see "Sex and the City" yet again! Ward Centre; 597-1556.

  • Need a visual change in your cramped apartment? Still have the couch your tutu gave you from back in the day when she sported a bikini? The Honolulu Design Center has something fresh to spruce up your pad. Everything in-store is now 15 percent off. Lamps, rugs, lounge chairs ... they seem to have it all. 1250 Kapi'olani Blvd.; 956-1250.

  • Aloha Rag, the keeper of chic clothes with pieces from designers found nowhere else on the island, has now slashed 40 percent off women's and men's spring and summer clothes and accessories, with past seasons' items marked down even more. The place to grab a deal if you love 3.1 Philip Lim, Chole, Dolce & Gabanna, Pierre Hardy, Anne Demeuleester and Alexander McQueen. Shop online (www.aloharag.com) or at their boutique, 1221 Kapi'olani Blvd., suite 115; 589-2050.

  • You buy an occasional thrift find or vintage score, and aren't appalled that someone sat on a chair before you? Then Design Within Reach has the sale for you, with select floor models marked at half of the original price. Hurry in before all those iconic modern designs are snatched up. Ala Moana Center; www.dwr.com.

    — Pualana Lemelle



    GARDEN OF TATTOOS

    Flattened along a wall at the back edge of The Contemporary Museum lies a dragon who isn't so much fierce as noble and wise. Tattoo artist Mike Ledger, who moved here in 2000 to open the Mike Ledger Tattoo shop at 930 McCully St. (945-9797), has turned it into one of Honolulu's most popular tattoo shops. Known for his Tibetan-, Hindu- and Buddhist-influenced style of tattooing on sleeves and body suits, he was invited to paint on the cafe wall, facing a serene portion of the museum's lawn (partial image at right). Be sure to catch a glimpse of Ledgers' installation before it's gone; it's showing only through July 13 at The Contemporary Museum, 2411 Makiki Heights Drive; 536-1322, www.tcmhi.org.

    — Lacy Matsumoto