78

Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

This month, we present you our All-Out Art issue featuring selected works of the creative youth. Enjoy! ♥

Citation preview

Page 1: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 2: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

When we first envisioned Stache, we wanted it to be for the youth by the youth. To be more specific, it was really meant for the youth bloggers by the youth bloggers. We want people to discover the amaz-ing person and talent that you are, and hopefully with that recog-nition, you will have the drive and inspiration to do better and be better. So with this art issue composed of carefully-selected art-ists, we hope that your creative juices will get stimulated and transform into wonderful outputs.

This month, we’re going all-out with the art (that sounds nice)! We have everything, from traditional art to typography to essays. There’s also a mini mixtape that comes with this issue for the mu-sic contributions. Don’t forget to check out the much coveted Street Lights cover by Andrew Florentino. Miss Kitkat Pecson of Hypervodka is gracing our April issue as well so don’t forget to look out for her one-of-a-kind illustrations. There is also a photography x short story format in this issue which Banawe Corvera made and it will def-initely warm your hearts. Those are only three of twenty five contrib-utors in this issue and we’re sure that every one of them will blow you away.

We’re so happy with how people responded with our invitation to contribute to our magazine. Even though your works are not included in this issue, we will be opening up another all-art issue in about half a month, so don’t feel bad cause your art will soon show in our pages.

Special thanks to Afianne Cope for making our all-out art issue poster!

Page 3: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

TRADITIONAL ART

DIGITAL ART

PHOTOGRAPHY

WRITTEN

Belle CanoDrei Santizo

Eliza Jean Francisco

Jackie FranciscoMoira Pauline Parton

Patricia Salonga

Patricia Ann SantosCloud Quinot

Kitkat Pecson

Coco NavarroDylan Dylanco

Jodit SantanderMai Evangelista

Banawe CorveraDanica CondezMao Alducente

Karla BernardoKathryn Hilario

Lesly BriesVincent Galang

TYPOGRAPHYMUSICJen Masilungan

Andrew FlorentinoAvery Wong

What is Andromeda

Editor-in-Chief: Maine ManalansanArt Editor: Elisa AquinoFashion Editor: Ecks AbitonaLifestyle Editor: Mare CollantesMusic Editor: Maan BermudezWeb Master: Mary SilvestreSenior Photographer: Pat Nabong

Page 4: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 5: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

by Belle Cano

Page 6: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 7: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

by Drei Santizo

Page 8: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 9: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 10: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

by Eliza Jean Francisco

Page 11: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

by Jackie Francisco

Page 12: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

by Moira Parton

Page 13: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 14: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 15: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

by Patricia Salonga

Page 16: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 17: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 18: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 19: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 20: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 21: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

by Patricia Ann Santos

Page 22: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

by Cloud Quinot

Page 23: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 24: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 25: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 26: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 27: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 28: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

by Coco Navarro

Page 29: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 30: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

by Kitkat Pecson

Page 31: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 32: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 33: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 34: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 35: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 36: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

by Dylan Dylanco

Page 37: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 38: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 39: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 40: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

by Jodit Santander

Page 41: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 42: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

by Mai Evangelista

Page 43: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 44: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 45: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 46: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

This is a story about a boy, and another.

Who live in the slums, where the sun still shines

Page 47: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

Where the murky waters are threatening,

And houses are too close for comfort.

with every piece of garbage afloat.

Page 48: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

sack in hand, a piece of trash to save their day

Where people go about their daily lives barefoot,

This is a story about a boy

Page 49: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

Who do they have? Each other.

And another,

by Banawe Corvera

Page 50: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 51: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 52: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

Photographed by Danica CondezStyled by Vince Crisostomo Make up by Bea Dalumpines

Modelling by Lois Pagalilauan

Page 53: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 54: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 55: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

by Mao Alducente

Page 56: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 57: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

In Her White Dressby Karla Bernardo

The tolling of the bells filled the air with unease and anxiety. She stood by the door in her immaculate white dress adorned with lace and ribbons with a bouquet of white flowers in hand. The wind was blowing her wavy black hair as it cascaded down her face, her shoulders. Her mother told her the previous night that she should pull her hair up in a bun; she always looked more radiant that way. But she knew James always wanted her hair down – he liked putting it behind her ear when it fell to her eyes and cheeks. It was one of his many little gestures that she secretly adored.

They met in college, as most of their couple-friends did. She was this bubbly, friendly psychology major, meanwhile he’s the introverted comic book nerd from engineering. To say that they were an unlikely match would be an understatement: she couldn’t get through a horror movie, he loved suspense. She was part of the campus radio station, meanwhile he’d rather stay in his room with his books. She had a penchant for collecting antiques and vintage items, he can’t live without his computer and PSP. She was loud, he was si-lent. They weren’t even compatible according to the juvenile grade school game of F.L.A.M.E.S. (which one of her closest friends did at the back of her notebook, much to her chagrin) because apparently they could only be “Friends.” And yet for everything that could drive them away from each other was this strong, unexplainable attraction sparked they shared and has kept them together.

She could feel the apprehension shivering down her spine. For all her poise, Sara was also a very insecure person. She really couldn’t handle being put on the spotlight all the time (which explains why she enjoys being on the radio). There is an apparent buzz coming from inside the church. She knows they are all waiting for her, and it makes her feel uneasy. It’s a big day for her, and everyone wants to see how she is, how she looks. But a part of her does not want to get in. She taps her beige platform heels nervously as she waits.

“I don’t understand why you’re always so fidgety,” James once asked her. “For someone so sure of herself, you are such a worry-wart.”

“I just don’t like things not going my way,” she responded.

It was one of those rainy afternoons as they were stuck in traffic along the congested roads of Edsa. Little black shadows of droplets covered her legs. She hugged herself a little and felt the warmth of his jacket. She steals a glance at him with his eyes firmly planted on the road.

Page 58: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

“You know, babe, one of these days you’re going to have to learn,” he finally says, breaking the silence. “Because you know, I’m the boss.”

“Ha! You wish!” she laughs.

I could get used to this, she thought.

With James always came this feeling of certainty. Their affair was never this grand, head-over-heels kind of thing. They weren’t really each other’s types, but they did complement each other in an unexpected, remarkable way. They became partners for a philosophy class they shared in the second se-mester of their first year in college. They worked on a paper about Kantian and utilitarian ethics. It started with long discussions on Yahoo! Messen-ger about the pros and cons of both ideas, that eventually turned into pon-derings on life, and in their lives particularly. Inevitably, an attraction was sparked. But more than that, there was an underlying friendship, a grow-ing familiarity, from which their relationship was built. It was more like an effortless transition, a feeling growing on them slowly and surely. James didn’t make her feel like the most beautiful person in the world – he made her one. He was always just there, holding her hand, or standing by the side-lines, just being there for her.

She was sure that theirs was a love that would last. Possibly for dec-ades, hopefully forever.

From where she was standing, she could see her mom and James’ mom, Tita Agnes, were hugging. At the beginning of their relationship, there was hesi-tation from her family because she was the youngest and only daughter and her parents were very protective of her. It didn’t help that James was also very shy and would hardly strike up a conversation with her parents when he came over, and that her brothers didn’t like his apparent withdrawn personal-ity. But over time, his sincerity for their daughter allowed them to accept him as part of the family and make him open up to them as well. Sara was also lovingly welcomed in her family as she fit his mother’s perfect idea of the beauty-and-brains daughter-in-law. She always felt at home with their family, having met them through the numerous birthday parties and reunions his fam-ily invited her to. She couldn’t wait for the day to be officially part of his family.

But she already was, really. When James was diagnosed four months ago at the hospital for days, she stayed there for him together with his mom. They would talk about James’ silly antics as a kid and how among all his children, James was the sweetest. Tita Agnes would bring their photo albums and show Sara his baby pictures as he slept, and they would share a little laugh to-gether. At night, Sara would hold his hand whenever the nurse came in to get blood samples (which happened at regular intervals), and she would sleep be-side him just to make him feel better, even if it meant having half her butt uncomfortably squished in the cold, constricted hospital bed. It was during those days, and all the following hospital visits after, that she felt Tita Agnes welcome her as her own kind.

Page 59: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

“When I get married, I’m going to make sure we have ice cream on our fridge 24/7,” she says, with her spoon raised in conviction.

“Be my wife then! Fill my fridge with Double Dutch!” he jokes.

She looks at him with a smile. “Sure.”

“Yes! O, it’s a deal ha, Mrs. Gatchalian?”

“Fiancée pa muna. Call me your fiancée first!” she chuckles.

Fiancée. The word always sends her goose bumps, but at the same time makes her heart skip a beat. It’s a scary thing of course, choosing to spend your life with someone, in sickness or in health. But she was ready for it. James was her best friend, her soul mate. She hated how silly and cliché that sounded but it was true. For every difference that could drive them apart, she knew that there was no one else that would understand her the way he did. Their love was like a simple, little secret; like tumbling into bed after a long day. Having the pillow between your arms, the blankets wrapped around your legs, with your old shirt and comfy shorts -- it’s not the most strik-ing part of the day, but it’s the most comfortable, the most needed. It’s not when you’re most beautiful, but it’s when you feel most like yourself. It’s warm, it’s cozy. James was her security blanket, her safety.

“Sara,” a voice suddenly calls out to her. It’s Jasmine, James’ older sister. “This is our Tito Greg. He just came back from the States. Tito, this is Sara, James’...” she trails off.

“It’s nice meeting you, hija,” he says.

Sara manages a quick smile as Jasmine squeezes her hand before finally leading their uncle towards the front of the church. The bells’ ringing has grown louder. She looked up at them, noticing their swaying, constant move-ment. It was a deep, solid sound that came from the back and forth swinging; a beautiful, assured rhythm as they moved from side to side – continuous, un-yielding, constant.

Fiancée. She was his, and he was hers. He was right there by the altar, waiting for her. But she couldn’t believe that this day would come so soon. The moment has finally come. She made the first step towards the red carpet that stretched in front of her. This was for James. Fighting back the tears with all her might, she walked down the aisle, as everyone looked on, towards her fiancé lying peacefully for all to see. In her immaculate white dress adorned with lace and ribbons she placed the bouquet of white flowers by him, as her beautiful hair cascaded down her shoulders just the way he liked it.

Page 60: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

Week 8: Nautical Dreams

As a ship finds home in the harbor, I find refuge in the sea. The cerulean waters, forever harmonious with the sun breaking across the horizon, is the most perfect masterpiece any god could have created. The raging waves crash-ing, returning to tears as they reach the stony shore fills me with an unex-plainable solace. A solace filled with sadness, yes, but peace nonetheless.

The north wind softly caresses my body and cleanses my soul as it takes me on that distant dream of myself and my father exploring the seven seas - a silent, distant memory I remember with piercing clarity. The seagulls squawk-ing, trifling with the ships save me before a broken promise engulfs me com-pletely; the out-of-tuned band reminding me of my existence... and my fa-ther’s inexistence.

It’s been two years since the sea took the S. Christina, and my father.

You may be wondering why, despite the crime it has committed, I have in me such ardent admiration for the sea. Too tell you the truth, I’m not sure myself. Perhaps it’s because I love my father too much. How could I hate the one thing my father loved? Jealous, I may be, but furious I am most definitely not.

I still come here often, bringing my father’s - no, our model ship. I sit here by the shore, staring past the horizon, smelling the salty sea wa-ter. The north wind blows and I welcome it wholeheartedly, knowing that some-how, it’s my father wiping away the tears that escape my eyes.

Musings by Kathryn Anne Hilario

Page 61: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

Week 15: The RunawaysJessica

She ran away at 17.

Getting her saved stash on an old gray sock and her mom’s worn-out photo under her pillow, she was convinced it was time she left her father and his new family. She sneaked out of her bedroom and tiptoed her way out of their house. “Good riddance,” she whispered, gently twisting the doorknob open. Without any plans of shedding even a single tear, she ventured the silent streets of their city - the lamp posts the only witnesses of her escape. Eve-ryone was asleep, but her heart was an owl wide-awake at two o’clock in the morning.

“Hey Mom, we’ll go to Vancouver. You like that place, right?” she said, looking at her mom’s photo. “Maybe we’ll get some real family time there.” She pulled her sweater closer as a cold drift blew.

She bought herself a train ticket and helped herself with a sandwich and a can of soda at Platform 12. At around half past two, she rode the train and stumbled her way across a guy reading a book on architecture, she thought, basing on the buildings on the cover. The guy peeked out of his book, smiled at her, and went back reading.

“Nice guy,” she thought as she dug to her bag for her earphones. Staring outside the window, she drowned herself to the drums of Muse and wondered of what she’d do upon reaching Vancouver.

In the end, she thought it didn’t matter. She was free.

Cyrus He was 18 then and like most guys of his age his being sought for adven-ture.

That night of October 17 he decided he’d explore the world without tell-ing anyone. He packed his things and grabbed his architecture book, then si-lently entered his sister’s bedroom and left a letter on her bedside table. Everyone was asleep, or so he thought. Downstairs, he found Sid blocking his way out.

Seeing him, Sid stood and walked between his legs, shedding cat fur on his pants.

“I’ll miss you too, buddy. Look after Mom while I’m away?” he said, pat-ting the cat on the head. “And don’t touch Mary’s aquarium.” The cat purred and went back to licking itself.

It was a bit cold when he went outside. Drizzling, actually. He didn’t pull out an umbrella though. Instead he faced the sky and let the rain bruise his face and calm washed all over him.

Page 62: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

He arrived at the train station around 2:15, bought himself a ticket and rode the train that will take him to Vancouver. While waiting for the train to leave, he pulled out his book and started scanning the tallest and grand-est buildings to rise on this planet.

A girl went and sat across him. Peeking from his book, he saw a green-eyed girl with a disheveled - but not messy, he thought - brown locks and heavy luggage.

“Looks like I’m not the only one to sneak out tonight,” he thought.

The girl looked to his direction. Meeting her eyes, he smiled. The girl smiled back and started digging inside her bag. He went back reading and won-dered on what sorts of adventure he’d find in the city of Vancouver.

It didn’t matter, he thought in the end. He was already on one.

Week 37: DichotomyThey.They were like a pair of socks that mirrored their half.They were a perfect dichotomy, yes, where the existence of one depended on the other.

He and She.But they were also he and she.He was night and she was day.He was persistent like reality. She, on the other hand, was fleeting like fic-tion.He was a red light and she was green.Time had long ago wilted for him while now is her season to bloom.

It's a shame that in the end only the fool was in the danger of falling in love.

Page 63: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

the twenty something disobedientby Lesly Bries

The tolling of the bells filled the air with unease and anxiety. She stoodThis desire to please you has existed ever since I had the tongue to ex-press it. When I was 12, I wanted to brave and brilliant. I wanted to make you proud and gain acceptance into the most well-known, most prestigious high school for the sciences. I wanted to be a doctor who cured cancers once thought terminal. I wanted to find the cure for AIDS. I wanted you to love me and think that I was strong and wise, and worthy of having your last name, just before I marry someone you respect and approve of, someone you will in-vite to family dinners and offer a glass of Riesling.

At 15, I was spiralling out of control. I was in the second-best school. Not the safety net, but not the echelon of scholars you wanted so badly. I couldn’t find out what it was I wanted anymore. Suddenly I had thrown my-self at the gateway of possibility, hoping for mercy. I learned how to play the bass and guitar, joined poetry and essay contests, became an alto in the school choir. Writing stood out sharp and seductive, the edge of a blade I wanted to tentatively press into my hand. I still wanted to be a doctor, but I wanted to continue this. This writing, the pleasure of thoughts swirling in the air of my mind like gray clouds of smoke, with my hands darting out, cap-turing them and setting them to paper like photographs in frames. You didn’t want that.

“Writers starve.”

Doctors can starve too. How many of these would-be doctors have given up painting, singing, sculpting, directing, in order to give the ones they loved the most a sense of pride and comfort? They are materially-fed with their substantial paychecks, clean and maintained offices, three square meals a day. Their spirits can starve though, just like ours. I would rather be deprived my breakfast than be deprived my emotional comfort.

At 20, the twenty-now, I am doing what I want. Wearily, you gave in, convinced by my failures at chemistry, my inability to stomach physics. But you don’t know what I know. I write about the chemistry that takes place be-tween people, how relationships build and grow and suddenly burst into the brightest novas invisible to the naked eye. I learn about the physics of the written word—how it slowly climbs, how force builds and reaches a peak, how situations unravel until they rest once more, everything downhill once again.

I will struggle to find a job and stability. I will never find material satisfaction in what I do. That’s something you’ve made clear. But I will not struggle to be. Nobody can predict how I will turn out, but I know that in spite of these changes, this need to prove myself to you, I will remain in-tact, my sense of self as untouchable as the pureness of empty space.

Page 64: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

Of Goodbyes and Hellosby Vincent Galang

We should always take note that in life, saying hello is like when a child rides a train for the first time. Getting on is always exciting. The long ride just as thrilling – there may be bumps every now and then but the view keeps everything enjoyable. But in the midst of all the happiness, the child forgets that he has a destination, and that soon they’ll reach the sta-tion and he’d have to get off. When we say hello, it is anticipated that at one point we’d have to say goodbye as well. People then suddenly feel alone after separation, and few actually see the positive in goodbyes.

As one door closes, another doesn’t just open like everybody says it would. Sometimes, you have to find the door – it isn’t locked, but it isn’t wide open either. It’s just waiting to be discovered. What’s important in life is how we see things around us. We may be passing by opportunities eve-ryday, and we don’t know it. Life is about perspective – we should for once try to see something as more than what we normally perceive it to be. We should open our minds to the real beauty of things that usually upset us. Farewells may be heartbreaking, but one must see that they’ll soon lead to something more, something new. Change may be frightening at times, but it is what’s going to help us move forward and progress. Exits may cause us to take one final look back, but it reminds us to look forward, and prepare for the world in front of us.

Just like how every hello entails a goodbye, every goodbye entails a hello as well. Though we know of the inevitable conclusion, we choose to take the risk again. It’s an unending cycle of growth and experience that makes us more of a person every time.

I’d like to take this opportunity to say goodbye to those who’ve been a part of my high school life. To my teachers, thank you for your strong dedi-cation to your craft (I sometimes wonder how you haven’t gone insane yet) and preparing us for the life that awaits outside the walls of our school. To my friends, especially my dear IV–Wisdom, thank you for all the memories and the happiness, and for being a family I could always turn to. Lastly, to LSQC, for being my second home for four beautiful years during which I had the most wobbly but best journey of my life.

Page 65: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 66: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 67: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 68: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 69: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 70: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 71: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 72: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 73: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 74: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 75: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03
Page 76: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

CreditsSTACHE Magazine Online does not claim ownershipon any of the photos included in the magazine. They belong to their respective ownerswhich is quite obvious by now. If ever yousee anything left uncredited, don’thesitate to email us at [email protected]

Cover image (brain) credit: http://mellowmint.deviantart.com/

WHERE TO FIND THE PEOPLE INSIDEMaine- darkpantomime.info

Elisa- thundepopcola.tumblr.com

Mare- aninstantoutoftime.tumblr.com

Maan- missmcsmitty.tumblr.com

Mary- dearmary.info

Ecks- ecksssy.tumblr.com

Pat- dorkoinvasion.tumblr.com

Cloud Quinot- [email protected]

Dylan Dylanco- [email protected]

Kitkat Pecson- [email protected]

Moira Parton- sharkyaya2yahoo.co.uk

Patricia Salonga- [email protected]

Mai Evangelista- [email protected]

Coco Navarro- [email protected]

Jodit Santander- [email protected]

Belle Cano- [email protected]

Drei Santizo- [email protected]

Eliza Francisco- [email protected]

Patricia Santos- [email protected]

Banawe Corvera- [email protected]

Danica Condez- [email protected]

Mao Alducente- [email protected]

Karla Bernardo- [email protected]

Kathryn Hilario- [email protected]

Lesly Bries- [email protected]

Vincent Galang- [email protected]

Jen Masilungan- [email protected]

Andrew Florentino- [email protected]

Avery Wong- [email protected]

What is Andromeda- [email protected]

Page 77: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03

AWESOMESTACHEballers

for sale!check oursite fordetails.

Page 78: Stache April 2011 // Issue 03