Welcome to the new-look lip blog

Hopefully you haven’t gotten too confused while I’m been mucking about with this thing. Yes, it’s very simple, nothin’ too fancy, but a will be a lot easier to customise whenever I feel inclined to. There’s also plenty of space for big piccies, so knock yourselves out team! I recommend getting a Flickr account, if you don’t already have one, to host your photos and any other images you want to share. Enjoy!

wanted: feedback

To break up Rachel’s blog-hogging - and because I desperately want it - I’m putting out this call for feedback on the website. Yes, again. I’m not planning a huge re-design, I rather like the current one, but I’m after feedback on usability, and am also planning to add a few new sections.

So please take the time to answer the following questions - either post here or email me.

What are your favourite sections? What would you like to see more of?

Are you having trouble finding particular info / pages? Which ones?

What do you think of the colour / images / layout?

Do you think we should include more interactive sections such as our online polls and forum? Suggestions?

Other comments are also much appreciated. Thanks for your time.

[Have you stumbled across this blog, and haven't actually seen our website yet? Click here]

Rachel’s New York blog #5

I am now no longer a karaoke virgin. Solita and I met up with Amanda and friends at the Milk Bar in East Village where Allan and I used to live. It was funny because we always wondered what that place was, with its black curtained windows with white half-mannequins placed around. It is a bar that serves milkshake-like cocktails with a cow decorative theme. There weren’t many people there, so we didn’t stay too long and moved on to St. Marks Place to a small karaoke bar. We were the first ones there as well, so had all kinds of time to sings songs ourselves. This was a sit at the bar kind of karaoke place, not a get up on stage type. I sang Fire and Rain, Everybody Wants to Rule the World and Daydream Believer - and helped many others sing many other songs. I discovered Japanese plum wine, which is this beautiful sweet, sweet wine, kind of like drinking an all-natural lollipop. I had three glasses and loved every one. Gotta find that stuff in Canberra. Altogether, there were 7 of us - two plus-size (ha, ha) models, another friend of Amanda and her friends, plus Amanda, me and Solita. We capped off the night at a crowded bar on Stanton St, but Solita and I weren’t into that, so we left. I passed the apartment Allan and I lived in when we first met, had a not very good potato knish at Katz’s and Solita found herself some pizza. Then, it was on the subway to home.

Saturday I was due to meet Jenna at 12.30 in SoHO. My planning skills made that a bit of a debacle, but we did eventually meet up around 2.30, I think, and had lunch complete with a bottle of white wine at a cafe in SoHO. That was lovely. Jenna also took me to Toys in Babeland, where I finally got to see the famous Hitachi Magic Wand. Can’t afford one at the moment, but will have to have one eventually, especially as you can still use it as a massager as well as a vibrator. Toys in Babeland is a great sex shop. It feels totally comfortable and everything is out and working so you can see how it vibrates and moves. It was just like walking into any old store and browsing the merchandise.

Saturday night was Lucia’s bachelorette party. Jenna, Solita and I did not make it out to Massqequa, Long Island, until 9.00, but it was great to see the surprise on Lucia’s face when we walked into her cousin’s house, as she hadn’t been told we were coming. Her cousin had made a nice feast of rice and homemade refried beans along with taco fixings. There were genital shaped cakes, vodka jelly shots, pina coladas, mudslides, sangria and coloured margarita glasses stuffed with bead necklaces, a condom on a stick, white chocolate penis pops, tissues, Blowpops and such. After a couple hours of eating, drinking and talking, the party piled into two cars to go to a club, but we were stuck in traffic for an hour at 11.30 at night! We didn’t get to the club until 12.30 and then had to leave at 1.30 so Jenna, Solita and I could catch a 2.05 train back to Penn Station. The club was very mainstream, but I danced to the misogynist hip hop with the Ortiz girls, while Jenna and Solita watched. Fortunately, Solita and Jenna got along very well so we had good train conversation.

Sunday was the Gay Pride parade. It was a very hot and bright day and Jenna, Solita and I slowly roasted while we watched the parade of LBGT groups and friends meander their way down 31st Street. When we first got to the parade and the dykes on bikes were rolling by, waving and cheering, I actually started to cry. Something about the solidarity of the whole thing moved me. The parade was much longer than I expected (we got there for the start at 12.30ish and by 2.00 we started walking uptown, still watching, until we got to the 57th Street start of the parade. It was a hot day for such a non-compressed parade. I expected it to be more flamboyant, but aside from the sporadic float of dancing nakedish men showing off their lovely bodies, the big queens with their headdresses and sparkles were few and far between. Most marchers were just ordinary sexually diverse people. Nevertheless, Jenna, Solita and I felt really good to have been part of it. I thought there’d be more parade viewers, but then again, we were uptown and the Village is the heart of gay culture in NYC.

Actually, the parade was a happy reminder that there are importantly good things about America. It’s awesome that we can have a parade celebrating gay people and tolerance and that opposers are also allowed to stand with their anti-gay signs and be there too. (there weren’t that many of them, at least not uptown). It’s rude and obnoxious, but they have their right to express their opinion.

Jenna left us at 2.00 to enjoy the wonderful shops of NY. After Solita and I found the beginning of the parade, she went off to shop for the party we were having that night, and I had a cold coffee and a slice of pumpkin pie at the Hungarian cafe. Really refreshing. Then I helped Solita prepare some veggies for kebabs and party guests arrived around 5.30. It was a small party, outside in the beautiful summer night cool with healthy food and good people. There were a couple of gals Solita works with, an old high-school acquaintance who lives near Solita, and Lucia came around 8.00. It will be so hard to go back to work when I get home. In fact, I really need to work on my grant application and lip email, but am so not in that space. I will do today, but it will take some coaxing.

Tonight I should be cooking a birthday dinner with Louisa and then spend an afternoon in Coney Island tomorrow.

More later….

Rachel’s New York blog #4

Swing dancing last night was awesome! I presume the dance was in the studio where all the classes happen and it was an amazing space of light hardwood floor and mirrors. Yet I still was able to not watch myself dance. I asked probably about 10 different guys to dance. The dancing here is so much better than in Canberra. One guy said he’d only been dancing for about 4 months and he was already better than many of the guys who’d been dancing in Canberra for over a year. So, yeah, I was blown away by the level of dancing - no one seemed to be a beginner and almost everyone was quite good. It was different dancing than I am used to - no Charlestoning - some much closer, entwined, hip-swaying sort of dancing - and more room for improv - at least I guess that’s the case as I found myself often dancing arm length away from the guy with both hands in his and not knowing quite what to do. By the end of the hot and sticky night I was losing it a bit, but other than that I think I held my own well enough. Solita, whose only taste of swing came last year when Lucia gave her a bit of a lesson at a nearly-dead swing club, loved it and she danced a few dances as well.

The dance party ended at 1.00 am and we were still up for partying, so Solita took me to the Village to this awesome piano bar. This was a tiny bar with a bunch of mostly gay men surrouning a piano and singing their guts out to Sweeny Todd and Gypsy songs. It was such a great place with a variety of people there, a heavy woman with a beautiful voice, a set of three friends in a corner table, one woman of whom I was told was an ex-Saturday Night Live star, a couple couples and some random stragglers you wouldn’t expect to see at such a place. For the most part everyone could SING and it was a very communal feel, with a tinge of failed dream sadness and cheery camaraderie. There was a very cute gay boy who I was making eyes at (couldn’t help it) and he told Solita and I, who were sitting on stools off to the side of the piano, that we were great and gave me a couple great big, beautiful hugs. He also got the piano player to play In the Rain from Les Mis for us so we could sing too. Solita knew a couple songs from Sound of Music, but otherwise we were watching the others sing.

We left around 3am. Today we met up with Gigi and Wendy (who write the West Village Life column in the mag). After hanging with the ever-adorable Gigi in her West Village apartment, Solita, Wendy and I went to the pub that was Dylan Thomas’s hangout and had a good, fattening lunch (I had fried potato skins with generous amounts of sour cream…). We then checked out the new Hudson Riverside park and talked about many things. Wendy showed us Hugh Jackman’s apartment in a building totally of windows and then left us to visit the muffin shop that at that time of day (4ish) did not have a line out the door. I didn’t get a muffin because the chocolate and Heath bar brownie looked better (and was). But for the record, muffins are $1.75.

A subway booth attendant was kinda rude to me today and the New York City gloss is wearing off a bit. Which is good, ’cause I’ll want to go back home to Canberra. For now, though, its all sun and play.

Now Solita and I are off for a night of bar hopping with Amanda.

Later…

Rachel’s New York blog #3

So I did indeed meet Louisa at 5.00 yesterday. We had dinner at my favourite NY restaraunt - Khyber Pass - which serves wonderful Afghani food. I felt very good about my dinner because we shared an appetizer and one dish and didn’t even finish the dish, when usually I eat a whole main myself. After dinner we wandered around SoHO a bit and had some (lousy) coffee in a chic cafe on Broadway. On the way to the cafe bathrooms, windows looked out onto what looked like a great bookstore, so we headed there afterwards. It turned out to be this bookstore that Allan and I had once stumbled upon when we were living in NY and never found again, despite looking for it. It is a used bookstore with cafe/bar that is actually a fundraiser for an organisation that supports homeless AIDS suffers. It’s warehousey spacious, got lots of wood and a banistered balcony on either side of the store. I bought a very cute kid’s book for the lovely 5-year-old Madeleine and her brother Cadell.

I also happened to spot a gal who was in the same dorm as me at Bard, the college I went to for a year before going to Bristol. That was very cool, especially as she is still in touch with my old roommate, whom I found out has just gotten a Masters (?) in Special Education and is very soon to be married.

Louisa left me at the bookstore to go off to a class and I couldn’t get in touch with Solita so I wandered around the West Village until I happened upon Washington Square Park. There I discovered a neighbourhood association were soon to screen Don’t Look Back, a 1965 documentary about Bob Dylan. So, I hung around for that. The movie was okay, a little bit boring, and Dylan came across as a bit of an asshole. But what a beautiful night to be watching a movie under the stars.

I’ve been very good here about drinking lots of water, but it is causing me to pee very often. Which can be a problem in NY as public toilets do not abound. On the way to meet Louisa, I was forced to duck into the Strand (18 miles of used/cheap books) to make use of their toilet and did find my way to the fiction section to check on whether there were any copies of my favourite book (The Chess Garden). I get copies everytime I’m in NY. There were about 4 hardbacks and 4 softcovers. I bought one hardback for $6.50. Very restrained of me if I do say so myself. After the Strand it started to thunder, so I ducked into Veniero’s, the famous Italian cafe where my cousin works, and enjoyed iced coffee and a canolli, which the bakery is very famous for. Unfortunately my cousin was not working. I will have to try and hit Veniero’s after 7.00pm and hopefully I’ll find her there.

Today Solita and I made our way to the Brooklyn Botanic Gardens. This was a good day for reminding me why I don’t want to live in America. As we were eating water mozzarella, avocado and tomato sandwiches on Italian rolls in the only part of the park where you are allowed to sit on the grass, we watched a guard tell a group of exuberant school children that they weren’t allowed to play ball in the gardens (we were in a very big open field, bordered by trees). It was a tennis-sized ball. Just as Solita and I finished eating, the guard told us that we weren’t allowed to eat or picnic in the gardens; we could only eat cafe food at the cafe. I owe here one for waiting until we were finished for reprimanding us. As Solita and I walked around the Japanese and rose gardens we discussed how Americans can think they are so free when they can’t eat, sit, play or take their shoes off in the fucking botanic gardens. I will never go back there, at least not until those rules are lifted.

I thought it’d be better to wear my dressier flats today, you know, to rotate my walking shoes, but my feet hurt right from the get-go. I still got off the subway on the way back to Solita’s at the other side of Manhattan and walked a bit through Central and Morningside parks to get back home. My feet were killing me. I did take a half-hour sun and reading rest in Central Park, and then I stopped for pizza. Solita had told me about this place. Their pizza slice is absolutely enormous - wider and maybe twice as long as a dinner plate. I took pictures of both a full pie and a slice but do not know whether they will do the size of the pizza justice. The slice cost $2.75 and was a very good pizza.

Tonight Solita and I will eat a home-cooked meal of stuffed grilled Portobellos with Australian red wine (I didn’t know if the other cheap wines would be good, though I wanted to try a Brazilian or Chilean wine). Then we will be off to swing dance!

‘Til tomorrow…

Rachel’s New York blog #2

Well, I’ve just lost my whole blog, so here’s a summary of what I wrote

- $3.00 enormous aluminum dish of rice and red beans on Sunday were awesome

- two evenings of dinner/dessert, candles and great conversation on the porch with Solita

- all you can drink free wine at a Chinese restaraunt with Phillip and then a not very fun hour at a Karaoke gay bar

- lots of walking through Riverside, Central and Morningside Parks

- cross-stitching, sleeping and reading in the parks

- cold tomato soup and French crusty bread sandwiches in cute dark coral-coloured cafe in midtown with Solita

- very achey and caloused feet

- this morning cross-stitching in Riverside Park

- Hungarian iced coffee and poppy-seed pastry thing at the Hungarian bakery cafe

- meeting Louisa tonight at 5.00.

Will remember to copy before I post next time…

The travel bug hits lip staff

Hey hey. Wish I had access to the Net during my travels. No such luck where I’ve just been, so this is written in retrospect and subject to time-lapse memory.

I’ve just got back from a snowboarding adventure in New Zealand. If you’ve never been to NZ, get packing now as this journey comes with my personal Gold Seal of Approval. The views are spectacular – LOTR fans only get a small taste of the sheer breathlessness you can experience on the summit of a snow covered mountain over 2000 feet above the place you left the car.

The food is A-M-A-Z-I-N-G. The land is so fertile, produce is a million times better, and meat-eaters can definitely appreciate that their dinner used to eat really well too. Even NZ McDonalds tastes better than the rubbish we get here. But don’t waste your time, money, or taste buds on take-away. At every single restaurant, cafe and bakery we ate at, the food was divine. And, oh, the sandwiches! How does something so simple taste so good?

The snowboarding was an adventure in itself. As someone who has never seen a decent layer of snow in her life, I had mixed feelings about approaching the slopes. Day One was so warm I had my own personal sauna inside my ski jacket. The fresh layer of powdery snow meant it didn’t hurt as much when I slipped onto my butt – which occurred frequently. Day Two was somewhat colder and the snow somewhat firmer, but my ability on the snowboard was improving and I was having too much fun to care. Day Three on the other hand only re-emphasised to me how unfit I am and how much work snowboarding actually is. My muscles ached, and the number of rear-end slides I had endured made it difficult to sit down. Hence Day Three’s activities were reduced to admiring the skills and agility of other boarders – from inside the lodge.

Despite the pain, my only beef is with the sleeping arrangements. Our “ski lodge” was a glorified hostel with a fireplace and four-person spa. The other travellers staying there were not the friendly party-makers I expected, probably because they knew we could hear their every move through the paper-thin walls, and vice versa – especially when in the bathroom. And the beds were crap. The only sleep we got was through sheer exhaustion and with the assistance of the spoils of our Duty Free shopping.

Next time I’m going five-star all the way baby.

Rachel’s New York blog #1

I usually write my travels out on paper to transcribe when I’m back home, but I like the idea of blogging this trip instead.

I am beautifully happy to be in New York. There is nowhere else I’d rather be right now. I was so excited to get off the plane in NYC that I couldn’t stop smiling and singing “New York, New York, it’s a wonderful town/The West Side’s up and The Battery’s down…”

Today, Solita–a close school-friend who I’m staying with–and I spent the day walking uptown on Amsterdam Avenue. We ate very good Ethiopian food for lunch, bought cherries and peaches and I even found a hot pretzel for $1.00 (an excellent, excellent price).

In the late afternoon I went for a walk in Riverside Park, where I found a path through some woods. The grass is so green and soft here, the trees so… not eucalypt. After walking I spread out in the sun on the grass and cross-stitched and read from a couple of books. The weather is perfect, not hot, not cold. Not dry, not humid. A little breezy, gentle.

Now that I’m back at Solita’s I’m feeling tired, but it is still light outside (7.55pm) and that is so excellent.

The hotel stay in Tokyo between my two plane rides was awesome. The second longer leg of the trip was so much easier to deal with after a good night’s sleep, and I got to try some Japanese rice pudding and other breakfast delicacies. I also met a very cheerful, chatty and interesting woman from Adelaide who was absolutely beside herself that she was taking her first trip to NY (to meet up with an ex-lover and good friend) at breakfast. She’s lucky to have romance in this city! Chatting with her (she teaches Aboriginal culture and art and history at one of the Adelaide unis) also made the plane ride much shorter, as we got seats together when we checked in at the airport. Her NY excitement rubbed off on me and made mine even bigger. Possibly, I will meet up with her while we are both in New York and I’ll get to see how she’s enjoying herself.

I’m taking lots of pictures and will try to check in daily!

Pictures from Zine Fair Day

An interesting day as usual at the Zine Fair. At first it was quiet at our little stall. Some people were confused by the directions and could not find us downstairs.
Until…

… mysteriously the arrows changed direction.

cheesy..!

Zine Fair Day

Just a quick reminder for Melbournians… There is a Zine Fair Day happening this Saturday 4th June at the Hawthorn Town Hall between 12pm - 6pm. I will be there with the lovely ladies Erin and Kelly. I will have many, so I’m told, many copies of lip mag and other goodies for sale. Should be a good day. Hope to see you there!

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