Monday 17 August 2009

I Need Your Fashion Advice

So we were supposed to have a fashion intern starting today but she bailed on us. Officially it was because she couldn't afford to do an unpaid internship but I kind of think she was worried what might be involved in "Stain Design". Anyway I was kind of looking forward to having a second set of eyes from a fashion perspective because sometimes I'm not sure if my fashion judgement is all that good.

If any of you reckon you have a good eye for fashion can you take a look at the proposed new design for the shirts versus the old shirt and let me know which you prefer. Cheers all.

Old shirt


New Shirt White


New Shirt Black



My personal favourite is the new black shirt. Amazingly our printer sent me one with a blue sparkly logo which is pretty rad but I think maybe it makes me look a little "soft".

Newslite.tv Interview

This is an interview with Newslite.tv, a website devoted to weird news, a couple weeks ago.

Friday 14 August 2009

Leave London Now

Got a message the other day from one of my friends in London who is originally from Mumbai. Apparently one of his friends from back home, not knowing that he knew me, emailed him a link to an article on Easy Tiger and told him this was a reason not to stay in London. Brilliant!




Tuesday 11 August 2009

Japanese Astronaut Underwear Article and Letter to the Editor in Response

Here is another article about dirty underwear in the Times (London). Below is our letter to the editor in response.


From
July 31, 2009

Astronaut Koichi Wakata didn't change underwear for a month

Koichi Wakata

The Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata is looking forward to fresh sushi, a hot shower and some clean clothes when he gets back to Earth. Since his fellow crew did not complain, the pants are being judged a success

After circling Earth 2,208 times and enduring numerous near misses with speeding space junk, Koichi Wakata could be described as the kind of person who flies by the seat of his pants. But the Japanese astronaut proved during his 138 days in space that he is not the kind of person to kick up a stink about things.

As the space shuttle Endeavour prepared to return to Earth yesterday, bringing Mr Wakata home from the International Space Station, where he has been since March, he revealed that he had been wearing the same pair of prototype pants for a month, all in the name of science.

Designed to resist the rigours of lengthy space travel, the anti-static, flame-resistant, odour-eating, bacteria-killing, water-absorbent smalls have been put through their paces as part of a project aimed at ensuring that future space travellers will need only minimal space in their suitcases.

“We’re going to go beyond the Moon some day, and little things like this will seem like really, really big things when you’re far away from Mother Earth,” Mike Suffredini, manager of Nasa’s space station programme, said.

If Mr Wakata’s colleagues noticed that he had been skimping on his laundry, they were polite enough not to let on — and he refrained from bringing it up in conversation. “I haven’t talked about this underwear to my crew members,” he said during a pre-landing press briefing.

He added: “I wore it for about a month and my station crew members never complained, so I think the experiment went fine.”

Mr Wakata, 46, ate a number of curries in space, along with Japanese-style dishes such as salmon rice balls. He said that upon his return to Earth he looked forward to eating fresh sushi and cold noodles and taking a hot shower.

Mr Wakata’s special clothing range was designed by the Japanese space agency, Jaxa. It also includes socks, T-shirts, trousers and leggings, all made of cotton and polyester with a futuristic-looking silver coating.

The clothing made its debut in orbit last year when Takao Doi, another Japanese astronaut, tested it out for 16 days. But scientists wanted the product put through more rigorous testing to assess its durability.

Other astronauts on the space station usually pack their dirty laundry into unmanned Russian cargo ships, along with their rubbish, then send the craft back towards Earth. They burn up en route.

This was not an option for Mr Wakata. His clothing has been placed in special bags ready to be taken to a laboratory, where experts will examine how well it held up to the challenge.

Eager to prove that he was not just a space clothes horse, Mr Wakata talked about the success of the other tasks he performed while in orbit.

One was the testing of a “magic carpet” — a white sheet that acts like a surfboard, allowing the astronaut to move through the cabin standing upright. “I flew on this magic carpet by using adhesive tape so that the soles of my feet stayed on it,” he said.

The test was among 16 unorthodox experiments suggested by Japanese schoolchildren to see how various items performed in zero gravity. Others included how to fold and store laundry when the garments kept floating away, and how to administer eyedrops in space.

Endeavour touched down at the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida at 10.48am (3.38pm BST) yesterday.


LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Dear Sirs,


We noted with interest your reporting about the Japanese astronaut, Koichi Wakata, who spent 30 days in space wearing the same space age underwear. While we see the special water absorbing, anti-bacterial underwear as an incredible advance in undergarment technology, we can't help but think this invention is not the most practical solution to the problem of being unable (or unwilling) to change ones underwear for days on end.

At our company Easy Tiger Corp, we manufacture Pre-Stained Underwear, that is underwear that already have stains printed in them. The purpose of having the stains printed in, is so that if you get caught with dirty underwear you can just say they came that way. This solves the same problem as the astronaut briefs but undoubtedly costs only a tiny fraction of the amount.

--
Philip Watson
CEO
Easy Tiger Corp



Wednesday 5 August 2009

German Underwear Thief Article and Easy Tiger Letter to the Editor Response

Hey there, hope you enjoy this. It's an article about a German underwear thief from July 21st and our Letter to the Editor in response. Don't know if it got printed but somehow I doubt it.


Man arrested for stealing 1,000 pairs of pants

A German man has been arrested after police discovered he had stolen more than 1,000 pairs of underpants and swimming trunks from a sports centre.

Three pairs of pants: Man arrested for stealing 1,000 pairs of pants
Police then came across the enormous collection of underwear while searching his flat Photo: GETTY

Police in the western German town of Gelnhausen recovered more than 1,000 pairs of underpants and more than 100 pairs of swimming trunks after catching a thief snatching another three pairs for his collection.

The 46-year-old man was caught in the act on Sunday while visiting the sports centre.

Police then came across the enormous collection of underwear while searching his flat.

"They were all evidently in use, but had been washed and neatly stacked away," a police spokesman said on Monday.

Police are now investigating where all the underwear came from. The suspect claims to have acquired the pants and trunks from car-boot sales and over the internet, police said.


Easy Tiger Corp Letter to the Editor

Dear Sirs,

We noted with interest your article about the gentleman in Germany whose apartment contained more than 1000 pairs of used mens underwear. Our company manufactures pre-stained mens underwear because we believe the best way to combat the embarrassment of being caught with soiled underpants is to be able to say you bought them that way. Certainly if the gentleman had been aware of our underwear he could have avoided the shame of being caught leaving a sports club with six other mens stained underwear.

Even outside the world of fetishism Pre-Stained Underwear is rapidly becoming a must-have fashion accessory. We have been getting a significant amount of interest in our products from Germany but the greatest number of sales and hits on our website www.easytigercorp.co.uk come from the UK followed by the US.

Regards,

--
Philip Watson
CEO

Easy Tiger Corp