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Head To Toe: Sasquatch Festival Fashion Part 3
Photos by Brooklyn Benjestorf // Styling by Marz Martinez // Makeup by Michelle Mai Smith // Hair by Portia Malia Imle // Models: Erica Miller, Theresa Endoso, and Christina Reed
Featuring Christina Reed


What she’s wearing: Sheer lace robe, ’60′s psychedelic bikini, black shiny riding boots, champagne toned crystal rosary, and wooden beaded wrislet all from Atlas Clothing.
Get The Look
Christina’s overall look was fun and colorful, so we wanted to take her bright and futuristic with her makeup. Remember to always use waterproof products if you want your look to last through your endless dancing.
1. First, prime your face with a good shine-free primer. Remember to include your eyelids–they can get sweaty, too! For Christina, we used Boots No. 7 shine free primer.
2. Perfect the complexion with Makeup For Ever HD foundation in 117 for that camera-ready finish.
3. To create bright, colorful eyes, use Urban Decay’s 24/7 eyeliners in “Electric,” “Ransom,” and “Asphyxia.” First apply “Electric” (bright electric blue) eyeliner along the top lash line creating a thick base and “wing” it out. For interest, follow the wing back along the crease of the eyelid to create an inverted check shape.
4. Then, fill in the “check” shape, with a purple eye pencil (Urban Decay – Ransom).
5. Also apply a lighter purple eye pencil (Asphyxia) to the bottom lash line.
6. For sky-high lashes, use Maybelline Colossal Volume Express mascara in black (make sure it’s waterproof, of course!).
7. To add extra interest, fill in some strong brows with the purple liner (Ransom) for a monochromatic eye look.
8. For a bright pop of color on the cheeks, we used Make Up For Ever powder blush in Neon Pink 75 along the top of her cheekbones (not along the apples of the cheek). This adds height and will focus the interest upward.
9. To finish off the look, apply Revlon Super Lustrous lip gloss in Peach Petal for a long-lasting shine. The soft lips will balance out the color on the rest of the face for a more fashion-forward look.
Hair Tutorial by Malia ___
All looks were created without heat and very few bobby pins and hair ties.
• Dry shampoo gives hair more volume and texture, apply all throughout the scalp and about 1.5” up the hair strand.
• Use fingers to massage the dry shampoo into the hair.
• Backcomb the top section of the hair and brush lightly back to smooth the area.
• Mist with hairspray.
• Create two braids, one on either side of the head and pull them back and underneath the volume created.
• Tuck the braids under each other and pin.
• Use a soft texturizer to finish the ends of the hair and finish with hairspray.
Products Used: Bead Head Hard Head Hairspray, Candy Fixations Marshmallow Whip, Rockaholic Dry Shampoo. For all festival looks, we recommend Joico Humidity Blocker.
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Posted in Fashion, Head To Toe
Tagged 2013, Atlas Clothing, fashion, festival, hair, makeup, Marz Martinez, Sasquatch, The Makeup Session, tutorials, TWINSISTR, vintage
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Head To Toe: Sasquatch Festival Fashion Part 2
Photos by Brooklyn Benjestorf // Styling by Marz Martinez // Makeup by Michelle Mai Smith // Hair by Portia Malia Imle // Models: Erica Miller, Theresa Endoso, and Christina Reed
Featuring Theresa Endoso
What she’s wearing: Oscar de La Renta geometric print scarf worn as a halter top, Pebbles sequins and puff paint jacket, gold circle earrings, all from Atlas Clothing, gold necklaces from hair stylist’s collection, black faded cut-off denim Guess shorts and black cowboy boots model’s own.
Get The Look
Makeup Tutorial from Michelle Mai Smith
Theresa’s makeup focused on creating a golden, sun-kissed look with soft, shimmery eyes, and bright, fun lips!
1. First, apply a mattifying primer to keep the shine at bay and create a smooth base for the rest of your makeup. We used Sephora collection anti-shine primer for Theresa.
2. For the eyes, apply a soft sweep of a copper eye shadow to the eye lids. Here, we chose “Chopper,” a glittery copper eye shadow from the Urban Decay Naked 2 Palette.
3. Add highlight to the eyes using a light, shimmery eye shadow (here we used Urban Decay Naked 2 Palette in “Bootycall”) along the inner corners of the eye and just along the brow bone.
4. To keep the eyes soft, don’t use eye liner; instead just lightly sweep black, waterproof mascara on your lashes. For Theresa, we used L’oreal Voluminous Mascara in Carbon Black.
5. To add contour to the cheekbones, use NARS bronzer in Laguna, along the hollows of your cheeks to add some color and warmth for a natural, sun-kissed look.
6. Top off the look with a 2 for 1 lipstick, shine and color from Maybelline – Color Sensational High Shine Lipstick in Coral Lustre. A great choice if you don’t want to carry around both a lipstick and gloss to create that perfect pout.
Hair Tutorial from Portia Malia Imle
All looks were created without heat and very few bobby pins and hair ties.
• Create a middle part.
• Secure a high pony tail just behind the part.
• Grab a section of the ponytail and tie it in a loose knot two or three times.
• Wrap the knot around the ponytail and pin loosely, repeat until all hair has been pinned, leaving the ends out.
• Pull the ends of each pinning apart to create a sort of halo around the knotted bun.
• Mist with a medium hold hair spray.
• If you have bangs and wish to create an even bolder look, use a little gel or styling clay to create a triangular shape, spray with a hard hold hairspray and clip until dried.
Products Used: Bed Head Hard Head Hairspray, Chi Farouk Ultimate Control, AG Stucco Matte Paste. For all festival looks, we recommend Joico Humidity Blocker.


Posted in Fashion, Head To Toe
Tagged 2013, Atlas Clothing, fashion, festival, hair, makeup, Marz Martinez, Sasquatch, The Makeup Session, tutorials, TWINSISTR, vintage
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Head To Toe: Sasquatch Festival Fashion Part 1
Photos by Brooklyn Benjestorf // Styling by Marz Martinez // Makeup by Michelle Mai Smith // Hair by Portia Malia Imle // Models: Erica Miller, Theresa Endoso, and Christina Reed
Featuring Erica Miller


What she’s wearing: Black snap front tank top, denim overalls, and 90s kicker boots from 33 Vintage (an Atlas vendor), jelly bracelets and peace necklace from Atlas Clothing, army jacket is model’s own.
Get The Look
Makeup Tutorial from Michelle Mai Smith
For Erica, we decided on a natural look with a little edge using minimal products, and ensuring a long lasting effect!
1. First, prime the entire face, including eyelids, in a mattifying primer. Here, we used Sephora collection anti-shine primer. This will keep your face shine and oil-free even under the hot sun!
2. Next, add a plum eyeliner to your top lash line and wing out the edges. This gives a little edge and color as compared to the traditional black. Here, we used Urban Decay 24/7 eye pencil in Rockstar. These formulas are proven to last through the night. Then, add your favorite mascara to top-off the eyes.
3. Set your eyeliner with a powder eye shadow that’s similar in color. This will lock the color in place. For this, we used “Hustle” from the Urban Decay Naked Palette.
4. To add some color to the cheeks, sweep NARS blush in Orgasm, up and along the cheekbones for a soft flush.
5. Finish the look with a pink lip stain. We used Cover Girl Outlast lip stain in 400 “Deep Pink.” Lip stains are a great when you’re on the go–there’s no need to worry about re-applying or having it rub off. It’s the perfect accouterment if you’re going for some natural looking color for your lips.
Hair Tutorial from Portia Malia Imle
All looks were created without heat and very few bobby pins and hair ties.
• Start by backcombing around the crown of the head
• Lightly brush hair back and over the backcombing to soften. Mist some hairspray for hold.
• Begin a French braid on the side of the head, only adding hair from the bottom of the braid. If your hair is difficult to braid, you can use a small amount of styling clay to smooth each section as you braid.
• Push the braid in and up into the backcombed area to create volume. Pin the braid there.
• Twist the braid into the remaining hair in the back to make a side swept, asymmetrical look.
• To make this more of a carefree and voluminous look, distress the hair by hand by grabbing a section, pinch the end and, with some friction, push the rest of the section up the strand.
• Mist the look with hairspray. Since backcombing can make the hair less shiny, add a little shine spray to finish. With this look, we attached a feather to add even more interest.
Products Used: Bed Head Hard Head Hairspray, Bed Head Headrush Shine Spray, AG Stucco Matte Paste. For all festival looks, we recommend Joico Humidity Blocker.

Posted in Fashion, Head To Toe
Tagged 2013, 33 Vintage, Atlas Clothing, fashion, festival, hair, makeup, Marz Martinez, Sasquatch, The Makeup Session, tutorials, TWINSISTR, vintage
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All Tomorrow’s Parties: Art Ache at Chop Suey on 5.5
It’s getting to be that time of the month! Art Ache is upon us once more, this time with a special Cinco de Mayo installment of the popular pop-up art market. Featuring a bevy of local shops and artists slinging their gear to the beat of a live DJ (this month features music by DJ Ruben Mendez), budget-conscious shoppers can sip $3 mimosas (or pound $5 whiskey shots, if you cray) while scouring the racks for affordable vintage, fine art, collectibles, and crafts. As per usual, the party kicks off at 1PM at Chop Suey on Capitol Hill, and is, as always, free to get in. As yet another amazing event presented by No Sleep, expect to have a great time surround by fabulous taste.
Poster design by Travis Wagoner.
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Posted in All Tomorrow's Parties, Nightlife
Tagged art, Art Ache, art market, Chop Suey, Cinco de Mayo, crafts, fashion, live music, No Sleep, Ruben Mendez, vintage
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Seattle Peach 100: Hollis Wong-Wear
Powerhouse poet, Hollis Wong-Wear, has known that she would always write since she first put pen to paper. As a young teen, she would furiously scribble angsty verse with colorful gel pens into a notebook filled with black pages. “I wrote when I was upset,” she says, “and I wrote when I didn’t want to talk to people, and I wouldn’t get upset super easily, but when I did get upset, I was in a huge, inarticulate funk. It would be really difficult for me to get out of it, so writing, even then, was a cathartic exercise for me. You can get addicted to that process of having some sort of creative outlet be therapeutic, so that got me hooked.”
Over time, the Petaluma, CA native discovered that poetry not only allowed her to process her emotions in a positive way, but through that process she came to know and understand herself and begin grappling with the concept of identity in the most profound of ways. As a high school student, Hollis was deeply involved in theater, and after attending a local Youth Speaks event, one of her theater buddies who knew that she was both a brilliant writer as well as performer, encouraged her to participate in the program. She got into the finals at her very first Youth Speaks poetry slam, and the experience unlocked her creativity in a way she had never experienced before. She decided against participating in that year’s high school musical, and instead focused her efforts on her newfound passion for spoken word. “It was symbolic for me,” she says of that choice, “because I was like, I’m going to focus more on my original content, and not on this play. When I found out how powerful the union can be between theatrical performance and my own content, it was over.”
This creative shift gave way to a whole new landscape of ideas, both in exploring herself through words, and in coming to understand those around her through their own spoken word performances. “It’s (a form of) social justice,” she explains, “but it’s not for the sake of being a good person, it’s social justice for survival and making sure that we don’t get silenced and swallowed by what happens, either by a very immediate life or death situation or whether that’s just our stories and our histories and our selves being masked by the status quo and assimilated into that kind of numbness that we develop as an older person.” Investigating the politics of identity is a recurring theme in Hollis’ writing, connecting the dots between the personal and the political. It’s plain to see that Hollis believes that poetry is a playground for ideas, with the potential to be instrumental in igniting the discourse necessary to make social change. “Poetry activates voices to be heard,” she says, “and because of that people are empowered, and because of that people can step into the world and make change. I’ve seen that so often, I feel like I’m a product of that. It saves people in the most constructive way because it’s being really thoughtful about self and building self through words.”
Seattle really has spoken word poetry to thank for Hollis’ move to the Northwest, as she chose to attend Seattle U specifically because she was so inspired by the Seattle Youth Speaks team when she saw them at the national slams. It was on that team that Hollis first met Maddy Clifford, Hollis’ partner-in-crime in the socially conscious rap duo, Canary Sing, which was Hollis’ first go at making her craft musical. Canary Sing is a really natural progression from the ladies’ background in spoken word, the influence apparent throughout all of their music. While Hollis has continued to stay involved with Youth Speaks over the years, music has become the dominating medium through which she expresses herself. Since Maddy moved back to the Bay area, Hollis has done collaborations with a myriad of local artists, including Macklemore & Ryan Lewis. She wrote the hook for their hit song, “Wings,” and sings on the track, “White Walls,” both of which appear on the local hip-pop duo’s massively successful record, the Heist. Her own musical endeavors have gradually inched away from being activist art and closer to fun-for-the-sake-of-fun pop music. The Heartfelts, a soulful R&B trio she was in with Amos Miller and Jahon Mikal, somewhat bridged the divide between the feminist warrior rap of Canary Sing and the frivolous party-starting jams of the Flavr Blue, Hollis’ current project with local producers, Parker Joe and Lace Cadence. “It’s mood music,” she says, “and it’s music to have a good time to. Even though it can be hella stressful and we’ve invested thousands of dollars in the project, it’s always been on the basis of This Feels Good. And that’s a powerful thing to do because when you’re working really hard and you’re doing all sorts of community work, it’s really important to remember to celebrate and have fun.”
No one deserves to let loose and have a good time quite like Hollis. City Arts magazine recently ran a feature on her titled “The Workhorse,” which is a fairly apt description. Besides being a working musician, Hollis has been a producer for a number of Macklemore & Ryan Lewis’ music videos, including the now ubiquitous “Thrift Shop” video that has since sky rocketed them to next-level fame. She is the youngest member of the Seattle Center Advisory Committee, which makes all sorts of important decisions on the use of that space. She was involved with a food justice program for about two years. She’s still a mentor for the Youth Speaks team in Seattle. She works as a tutor. She’s started writing material for a solo album. AND she recently revisited her theater roots as an actress in the cast of These Streets, a critically acclaimed production at ACT Theater about the history of Seattle women in rock.
How does this woman keep it together? Is she on Tiger’s Blood? She makes the solution seem so simple: “It’s finding that balance between getting inspired by that social energy, but not having it compromise your potential. The fact that I’ve had an amazingly supportive boyfriend over the last two years has really helped me ground myself because I love being social, and that’s where I get a lot of my energy from. I feel like I’ve been able to move myself into a more balanced point-of-view, definitely catalyzed by my relationship with Jeff (Lawrence, also known as his alias, dj100proof).”
Being the kind of girl who’s a ball to be around and can party with the best of them, but can put her nose to the grindstone when push comes to shove and crank out some really incredible work, is precisely what has earned Hollis her place in the Seattle Peach 100. She’s infinitely inspirational, and equally approachable. She’s the kind of person that makes you feel like all things are possible. Scroll on to see what Hollis had to say for the Seattle Peach 100 Factsheet.
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Posted in Interviews, Seattle Peach 100
Tagged ACT Theater, Amos Miller, Canary Sing, City Arts, dj100proof, hip hop, Hollis Wong-Wear, interviews, Jahon Mikal, Lace Cadence, local music, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, Madeleine Clifford, Parker Joe, poetry, Seattle, social justice, spoken word, the Flavr Blue, The Heartfelts, the Heist, theater, These Streets, Thrift Shop, Youth Speaks
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All Tomorrow’s Parties: Spring Party I at Electric Tea Garden on 5.2
No Sleep presents Spring Party I, a night of “crystal fantasy/synthesized reality music,”according to the show’s lead curator and visual maestro, Frankie Crescioni. Featuring the talents of Dr. Troy of Medical Records, Goo Goo (sometimes known as Travis Ritter), Bankie Phones, and Diogenes, for those looking to enjoy a thirsty Thursday on the CHEAP (Spring Party I boasts a $3 cover), this Thursday, May 2 come get at that dance floor and leave your worries at the door. 21+ at Electric Tea Garden.
Poster design by Dax Ed Word Anderson.
TweetAll Tomorrow’s Parties: Medical Records RX at Electric Tea Garden on 5.5
No Sleep and Medical Records present an evening of live bands at Electric Tea Garden on May 5. Featuring the talents of Stacian, Samantha Glass, Alicia Amiri and resident DJ, Dr. Troy, this party promises to deliver “only the crème de la crème of synth/cosmic/wave/disco/kraut auditory vibrations.” For the low price of $6 cover, if you’re looking for a way to have a memorable night on Cinco de Mayo without dealing with the party monster shit-show that most of Capitol Hill is guaranteed to be, this 21+ event tucked away a bit off the beaten path is right up your alley.
Poster design by Tyler Jacobsen
TweetAll Tomorrow’s Parties: The Thermals at Neumos 4.25
The Thermals put on the kind of show you imagine happening in dimly-lit, beer soaked dive bars before you were old enough to distinguish between punk rock and grunge, let alone survive in a crowd at a rock show. The Thermals are not like, “Fight it all because fuck everything.” They are like, “Fight it all because it’s worth it, and we have to.” That’s the distinction between the mosh-pit punk of generations past, and the powerful, post-pop-punk generation the Thermals belong to.
I first caught The Thermals at the Sasquatch Launch Party in 2011. My experience started out pretty neutral, thanks to one of those dry-delivery comedian/emcees you have never heard of, dropping jokes like they smelt bad. The Thermals’ straight forward power chords, crash-riding drums, and up-and-down the neck bass scales at first had me dismissing the music as the product of a less catchy, and equally empty, Portland version of Green Day. For the sake of fun, I let the 13 year-old in me take over to guide my body through the head banging, high contact dance I remembered from my Green days. By the second half of the set, I had completely let go, and was on the stage with stars in my eyes. This was not about guitar solos and being impressive. It was about passion. It was about sharing raw energy. It was about sucking the sweat out of your dripping hair and smiling because the salty water makes you feel rebellious. It took music off of its pedestal and gave it to the people. It made sacrilege like The Who destroying everything on their stage make sense. By the end of the show I was a Thermals fan for life.
The Thermals play an all ages show this Thursday, April 25, at Neumos with local openers, Wimps and La Luz. Doors are at 8PM, advanced tickets are $15.
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Posted in All Tomorrow's Parties, Music, Music Events, Nightlife
Tagged 2013, all ages, bands, La Luz, live music, live shows, local music, Neumos, the thermals, Wimps
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