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Home Is where the Style Is

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Written by Kate Liana   
Wednesday, 10 March 2010 14:31
ShopTalkSlikPhotography-7807Tucked down an alley, off Street 108 is a hidden treasure chest of European style and flair. Kate Liana talks to Yoshie Treiber to unearth the story behind La Clef de Sol. The olive green Vespa parked outside the entrance gives a clue to the style sense that awaits inside. Up a narrow flight of stairs, the ambiance grows distinctly continental. "I always loved to sew little things – bags or a table cloth," explains owner, Yoshie Treiber. “I've always loved fabrics, all the different patterns and textures." That attention to detail and love of raw materials is evident throughout the shop. Th…
 

A Model Life?

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Written by Nora Lindstrom   
Sunday, 31 January 2010 17:15
SlikPhotography-6804Making a living out of being pretty may seem like one of the easiest jobs in the world, but as anyone who’s watched America’s Next Top Model knows, getting the pout just right and learning to smile with your eyes is not always a piece of cake. In Cambodia, where the modelling industry is still in its infancy, even those few who are taller than the bare minimum of 1.65m have a hard time making ends meet. Words by Nora Lindstrom. Beauty may be in the eye of the beholder, but when it comes to the modelling industry it is generally only skin deep. “It’s not hard to become a top model if you have t…
 

A Case of Wanderlust

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Written by Nora Lindstrom   
Sunday, 31 January 2010 00:25
SlikPhotography-5452After years on the fashion highway, Elizabeth Kiester is now bringing her unique sense of what’s hot to Cambodia. Nora Lindstrom talks to the woman who has made curiosity into a career. “I am a wanderlust,” says Elizabeth Kiester, owner and founder of Wanderlust, one of Cambodia’s hippest new clothing stores. Initially opened in Siem Reap in October 2008, the venture quickly blossomed, and Elizabeth opened her second shop in Phnom Penh exactly a year after the launch of the first one.“For people who don’t have English as their first language, they might not know how we use the word ‘wanderlust…
 

Keok’jay

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Written by Melissa Fisher   
Thursday, 07 January 2010 22:04
SlikPhotography-4676From Pippi-Long Stockings to Street 240, Rachel Faller has travelled a long way. The owner of Keok’jay talks with Melissa Fisher. Walking into the cool shaded interior of Keok’jay, a young woman in pleated braids is sewing away on a round table. It’s crowded with buttons and odd bits of cloth. Rachel Faller is the owner of this alternative fashion clothing shop on coveted Street 240. Keok’jay employees HIV positive women to produce bags, shirts, skirts, and other fashionable products made with sustainable materials. Pushing a pile of buttons and string aside, the 23-year-old Bostonian relates …
 

A Touch of New

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Written by Administrator   
Monday, 09 November 2009 12:46
Everyone is raving about Poetry, Siem Reap’s latest retail addition. Words by Nicky Hosford

It’s hard to buy clothes in Siem Reap, really hard.  Alas, we can’t wear silk every day, not even underneath.  We’re not really into “No Money, No Honey” t-shirts – Heaven forbid that one should ever be mistaken for a tourist – and we’re not, most of us, so small that we can get into the clothes sold in the markets.  “I shop once a year.  When I go home”, is the common, flat reaction when you ask someone where they obtained any particular item of clothing.

“Oh my God!  You haven’t been yet?!! You have to go!”  said my usually, mostly, measured friend.  I’d asked her where she got her rather magnificent bracelet.  Great chunks of fake amber, in a rather Queenly formation, wrapped her wrist.  It was cool. I wanted one.  “Poetry is the best shop Ever!“ she said.  Crikey, better do as she says.  

So I went, and there I met Don Prosatio, the Filipino designer of the clothes in the shop and partial inspiration for all the madness contained therein.  The other part of the inspiration is Loven Ramos, a Filipino artist who is also seeing significant recognition for his work.  Between the two of them, and all their friends, the shop is an endlessly changing whirl of fashion, art, stationary, accessories, and random wares that they find.  “It’s very fluid then?”, I asked.  “Emm, actually I was going to say it’s more chaotic” said Don frankly.  

Like the river that is a reflection of your core, this shop will never be the same shop that you entered before.  It is entirely a likeness of the personalities of the two men behind it: evolving, quirky and fun.  “You know, someone asked me why we just put in the bright yellow/green chairs”, said Don, “and, really, there’s no answer to that.  We just like them!  There are no rules in this place.  The only constraint is space”.  

Lining the walls are Don’s funky and magically soft clothing line is intended to create a sense of freedom and balmy ease.  They’re sloppy, loose and can be worn with anything.  “I wanted to make stuff that I would wear”, says Don.  “I don’t want costumes, I want clothes that can be integrated into any wardrobe”.  

And that’s only part of the fun. Loven’s artful sense of humour is everywhere to be seen, from his aspirational tote-bags, “Dear God Please Turn Me Into A Gucci”, poetic books of matches, “Why do thee stir such fire?”, and spunky notebooks and cards.  

Then there’s the jewellery.  Scattered all over the shop, the collection is drawn together from all parts of the world, designed by friends of the boys, and by the boys themselves.  This is not so much a cooperative of artists and designers, as a playhouse.  Every piece is unique, frivolous and guaranteed to make addicts of this shop.

When asked if they had plans to expand to Phnom Penh, Don says no, not yet.  For him and Loven, the shop is so much an extension of who they are that it would be impossible to run it remotely.  For Phnom Penhers, make sure you put this on your itinerary the next time you’re bringing relatives/friends up to visit the temples.  To all who find this mad, magical Aladdin’s Cave, you will never be stuck for birthday presents or that necessary accessory again.
 
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