Guest Blog: Places #3

Hello,

Let’s talk about virtual places this time — the internet. Here are three of my current favourite websites:

(1) ilove.cat
The web address says it all. If you’re not a cat person, you should visit. You might change your mind about cats after that.

(2) Feasting Never Stops
An excellent resource for food-related ephemera and beautiful photography. Very much like a food-only version of But Does It Float.

(3) Peter Nencini’s blog
A wonderful sense of aesthetic and impeccable craftsmanship and detailing. I enjoy reading his posts too.

 

 

Bonus link: Casual Days
The wonderful people behind Casual Poet have recently launched a new lifestyle magazine entitled Casual Days. Their journal, though fairly new, is a simple, easy pleasure to browse through.

 

Thank you Euphe for this opportunity! I hope you had fun in Bangkok.

See you soon
May

Guest Blog: Coffee Table People

Hello everyone, how have you been doing since I last popped by? :)

Besides blogging my photographs and travels at Green Tea Fields, I am also one-half of the blog Coffee Table People. My friend, C, and I started it in April this year and our basic modus operandi is to cover interesting cafe concepts in Singapore and beyond. I provide the photography (we feature only film photography for our cafe reviews), C provides the words, and together we get to drink a lot of coffee and tea. Not bad, eh? Here are some of my favourite photographs from our various jaunts!

xx Michelle.

Guest Blog: Places #2

Hello,

Let’s move closer to reality a little. Maybe even slightly hyper-real?

Venice, to me, is hyper-real. From the moment you step out of the train station, the midday view overwhelms you. At once beautiful and horrible at the same time, too much to take in, an authentic fake.

(But I don’t have a photo to illustrate this. My need to document is always secondary to [a] my personal safety, and [b] making sure I’m walking in the right direction. This usually means what I document on my camera and phone ends up to be a very selective viewpoint of the experience.)

You might want to imagine a display of advertisement billboards for Persol and Dolce & Gabbana, placed alongside, and over, facades of crumbly, stucco-ed palazzos, little jet boats zooming along the canal, the water a perfect blue…

I could only think of home — specifically our casinos and theme parks.

Out of fatigue I declared Venice a monstrosity and decided I wouldn’t like this place very much.

Venice is one huge tourist attraction, isn’t it? The locals, they must live underground — or maybe on a hidden island not shown on any map, where they have a hospital, a prison, and a supermarket. How ‘authentic’ is this gelato shop, compared to a street food stall in Bangkok? Do gondoliers really shop here? Will Venice’s demise be a simulation itself? Maybe the death of Venice will be a future fable — like a reverse of the Merlion’s tale.

— May

(Yes, the gelato is mostly real. Real good.)

Guest Blog: Chinatown

Hello, it’s Michelle, back in the don’t kay siao house again with more Bangkok photos to share!

I have been to Bangkok quite a few times in the past few years but this trip was the first time that I ventured into Bangkok’s Chinatown. Being quite a fair distance from Bangkok central where I was stayed, I hailed a tuk-tuk to get there. It was a long way through lots of dark and gloomy streets before the tuk-tuk suddenly burst out into this bright and rowdy thoroughfare that instantly reminded me of Hong Kong! It was incredible! All the street hawkers were out there doing their thing, cooking up a storm and trying to tempt the hungry souls walking past them. After having my fill of tomyum soup, I eventually ended up in a quiet sidelane for desserts where the hawkers catered more to the residents rather than the tourists. If you haven’t been to Bangkok’s Chinatown yet, make sure you mark it down in your itinerary the next time!

xx Michelle.