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It has been a tough year for all of us but for those starting their university life it has meant adapting to a new way of studying - not only remote learning but also finding new ways to explore creative ideas with other students, having never met in real life.
For their first module, undergraduate photography students at the University for the Creative Arts (UCA) Rochester, in Kent, were asked to create work in response to the theme environment .
Calli Faraway
image copyrightCali Faraway
My images show the journey of this 1974 Volkswagen Beetle through both natural and industrial environments.
The renowned
The company, known for its yellow stitching and chunky soles, will sell 350 million existing shares, suggesting a valuation of about £3.3bn-£3.7bn.
Sales of the boots have soared in recent years as its unique style becomes increasingly sought after.
The company, founded in 1947, came close to bankruptcy in 2003 when it cut jobs in Britain and moved manufacturing to China. A member of staff applies a safety sign to the Dr Martens store window in Princess Street in Edinburgh, in June 2020. Getty Images Teenagers wearing Dr Martens in Belfast, Northern Ireland, in 1974. Getty Images The Dr Martens Central London Store on its 50th Birthday on April 1, 2010 in London. Getty Images
Cancer made me pull my life together : Zandra Rhodes on fun, fashion and Freddie Mercury
Portrait of Zandra Rhodes at her London home and studio. Photograph: Alecsandra Raluca Drăgoi/The Guardian
One of Britain’s greatest designers, she has dressed everyone from Princess Diana to Diana Ross. She discusses punk, pink hair and staying creative after serious illness
Tue 26 Jan 2021 01.00 EST
Zandra Rhodes was doing a yoga session with a friend in the early weeks of the pandemic when she realised that something was wrong. “It’s a funny story,” she says. “We were lying on our lilac mats in my rainbow penthouse, and I was breathing deeply – and my stomach felt full. And I thought, why is it full? I haven’t had a meal today.”
Died: December 25, 2020. MARTIN Lambie-Nairn, who has died aged 75, was a designer whose work will be known to millions who have watched British terrestrial TV over the last 40 years or so, even if they don’t know the name of its creator. This came through a series of animated logos that gave both the BBC and Channel 4 their corporate identities. More recently, Lambie-Nairn was behind the oxygen bubbles ident for mobile phone network, O2. He was also the brains behind the original Spitting Image (1984-1996), which became one of the most iconic TV programmes of its era. The puppet-based satirical sketch show‘s grotesque rubber caricatures created by Peter Fluck and Roger Law matched the brash, no-holds-barred scurrilousness of its material. Running for a phenomenal 18 series, the programme was described as being “based on an original lunch with Martin Lambie-Nairn”.
Luard Fyson backstage at Stella McCartney in Milan.
- Credit: Gabriel Stokes
From being scouted at a Rihanna concert to modelling for the likes of Prada and Valentino - how a former Framlingham student is making a name for himself in the fashion industry.
At just 22 years old, George Goodin, known in the industry by his middle names Luard Fyson , has travelled all over the world while walking for some of the fashion world s biggest designers.
Mr Goodin, who is the son of former Suffolk Judge David Goodin, was born in Ipswich and went to Framlingham college, before studying fashion journalism at the University for the Creative Arts in London.