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NOCTA x Venezia FC's Second "Home Ground" Jersey Is "More Than a Shirt"
NOCTA x Venezia FC's Second "Home Ground" Jersey Is "More Than a Shirt"

Hypebeast

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Hypebeast

NOCTA x Venezia FC's Second "Home Ground" Jersey Is "More Than a Shirt"

Summary NOCTAandVenezia FChave reprised their on-pitch partnership once again, revealing the second collaborative soccer kit under their joint 'Home Ground' endeavor. On the heels of the duo's dual-minded Home jersey,which dropped just last week, it has now lifted the veil on its counterpart, the complementary NOCTA x Venezia FC Away jersey – which, per designer Diego Moscosoni, is actually far more than just a shirt. Dubbed a 'Future Classic Rooted in Heritage and Design,' the Away jersey revels in the history of Venice, drawing from its rich cultural heritage and leaning into the intersection of football, fashion, art, and music – a convergance that the city has long championed. The lookbook further explores this sentiment, with painter-poet Solange Smith and experimental musician Space Idol making appearances. 'In a football landscape dominated by templates, this collaboration breaks the mold, not just in form, but in spirit,' contextualized Moscosoni of the new kit, which he says is 'deeply rooted in the layered identity of Venice,' drawing inspiration from the city's 'art, fabric traditions, [and] Renaissance palette.' 'Yet it speaks with a contemporary and global voice,' continues Moscosoni. 'Working closely with the Venezia FC creative team and NOCTA allows us to create something truly bespoke, where every detail has meaning. The Away Jersey is more than a shirt: it's a flag, a cultural statement, and a collectible item designed with integrity. It carries the codes of fashion, the soul of football, and the emotional resonance of a city unlike any other.' Take a closer look at the NOCTA x Venezia FC Home Ground Away jersey in the lookbook above and cop one eitheronlineor at an official Venezia FC store on July 31.

Venezia FC and NOCTA Draw Inspiration From 15th Century Cartography With 25/26 Home Jersey
Venezia FC and NOCTA Draw Inspiration From 15th Century Cartography With 25/26 Home Jersey

Hypebeast

time23-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Hypebeast

Venezia FC and NOCTA Draw Inspiration From 15th Century Cartography With 25/26 Home Jersey

Venezia FCandDrake'sNOCTAhave unveiled the new 25/26 Home Jersey, marking the first expression of a broader narrative that will unfold throughout the season. The 25/26 Home Jersey draws inspiration from 15th-century cartography, crafted with breathable mesh side panels and featuring an all-black base. Bold orange and green panels stretch from the shoulder to the hem — paying homage to the Clb's traditional colors — while the TPU Venezia FC crest, NOCTA logo and the iconic St. Mark's Basilica star are spread across. A standout innovation is the use of silver as a core visual accent, bringing depth and elegance to the jersey. Designed by Diego Moscosoni, the jersey is available in two versions: the Venezia edition and the official Match Jersey featuring the Cynar Spritz logo. This partnership, now in its second year, extends beyond traditional boundaries, focusing on the raw connection between football and culture. The 'Home Ground' concept conveys Venice's beauty, architecture, culture, and deep passion for fashion and sport. Venezia FC is the first Italian football club to collaborate with NOCTA as a technical sponsor, embracing a distinctive path where sport, culture, fashion and music converge. 'Renewing our collaboration with NOCTA is a source of great uniqueness,' said Tancredi Vitale, Managing Director of Venezia FC. 'This partnership reflects exactly what we want Venezia FC to represent: a Club rooted in tradition, but unafraid to innovate and lead. NOCTA brings global relevance, cultural depth, and a unique creative sensibility to the world of football. Home Ground is not just a campaign, it's the expression of VFC mission to introduce a new shared language into football, one that draws from and redefines global culture while staying true to the real identity of Venice. Together, we're not replicating existing models; we're creating our own, bold, authentic, and forward-looking. Every piece born from this collaboration expresses our values: attention to detail, creative courage, and a deep respect for identity. It's a wearable manifesto of who we are and where we're headed, a Club that honours its past while shaping a future that's ambitious, inclusive, and unmistakably Venetian.' 'The partnership isn't just about football, it's about Venice, one of the most historical cities in the world and their passion not only for the club but the city and what it represents,' said Matte Babel, Co-Founder of NOCTA. 'What's really exciting, is that while the team's identity is deeply rooted in their venetian heritage the organization isn't afraid to push boundaries. Designer Diego Moscosoni, who led the design team, was able to seamlessly blend sport and fashion. It's not about slapping a logo on a jersey, it's about crafting something that carries the unmistakable character of Venice and the raw, global energy of NOCTA'. The jersey will debut on-pitch during Venezia FC's Coppa Italia Frecciarossa fixture against Mantova on Saturday, August 16. The 25/26 Home Jerseys are available for purchase starting July 23, 2025, at official Venezia FC stores andonline.

Why this single photo exposes the brutal reality of Sydney's housing crisis
Why this single photo exposes the brutal reality of Sydney's housing crisis

Daily Mail​

time17-06-2025

  • Business
  • Daily Mail​

Why this single photo exposes the brutal reality of Sydney's housing crisis

A Sydney two-bed apartment that's listed as part of an 'affordable' state government housing scheme is on the market for $1,100 a week. The two-bedroom two-bathroom apartment on Waverley Crescent in Bondi Junction, comes with income eligibility guidelines, which advocates say proves 'affordable' housing is out of reach for low-income Aussies. To be eligible to rent the property, applicants must not earn more than a combined income of $121,000 for a couple, $161,500 for three adults, $145,300 for a couple with one child and $169,500 for a couple with two children. NSW Affordable Housing Ministerial Guidelines states a home is 'usually considered affordable if it costs less than 30 per cent of gross household income'. However, the Bondi Junction apartment would see a couple spending more than 47 per cent of their income, three adults would pay 35 per cent, while a couple with a child would spend 39 per cent. The apartment, which has a $4,400 bond, is listed under Affordable Housing Scheme by HomeGround Real Estate Sydney. NSW government sets out the guidelines for the scheme. After a report in The Guardian on Tuesday, the listing price dropped to $1,040 a wekk and then to $1,000. A HomeGround spokeswoman said the price reduction was because of winter fluctuations in the market. 'Initially, we advertised the property with a market rent set at $1100 per week,' they said. 'However, as market conditions fluctuate weekly, especially in the Bondi area, we have adjusted the asking price to $1000 per week as we transition into the winter market.' They had previously said the below-market price point for the apartment may seem highly because the market rent is high in locations such as Sydney's eastern suburbs. However, they insisted the listing was 'more affordable' for families. In NSW, affordable properties must be rented out with a discount of 20 per cent on the market rent, but guidelines state 'flexibility in pricing may be applied to moderate income households'. However, as a result of rising market rates, this discount still means many low-income families are expected to rent properties that cost more than 30 per cent of their household income. A spokesperson for Everybody's Home Maiy Azize told Daily Mail Australia: 'Our governments keep spruiking so-called 'affordable housing' schemes, but nothing beats the real thing: social housing. 'We need genuinely low-cost rentals that people can actually afford. Even people receiving an average income in Sydney don't qualify for social housing, yet they're priced out of the private market. 'Families are falling through the cracks and entire communities are suffering. The only real fix is to build more social housing and open it up to more people.' Managing director of the Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute, Michael Fotheringham said many 'affordable' listings do not live up to the name. 'It's a really loose terminology that different state rules apply across the country, and we have both federal and state government investing in programs to deliver affordable housing,' he added. 'But what 'affordable housing' is, is really unclear.'

‘Affordable' Bondi Junction apartment listed for $1100 a week
‘Affordable' Bondi Junction apartment listed for $1100 a week

News.com.au

time17-06-2025

  • Business
  • News.com.au

‘Affordable' Bondi Junction apartment listed for $1100 a week

An 'affordable' Sydney apartment that is part of a state government housing scheme has been listed to rent for $1100 a week. To be eligible to rent the two-bedroom, two-bathroom apartment in Bondi Junction, a couple cannot be earning more than $121,000 combined. A couple earning the maximum allowed income would be paying 47 per cent of their salary on rent. The apartment is leased by HomeGround Real Estate Sydney as part of the NSW government's affordable housing scheme. Following a report in The Guardian on Tuesday, the listing price was reduced to $1040 a week and then $1000. A HomeGround spokeswoman said the price reduction was because of winter. 'Initially, we advertised the property with a market rent set at $1100 per week. However, as market conditions fluctuate weekly, especially in the Bondi area, we have adjusted the asking price to $1000 per week as we transition into the winter market.' Renters advocate Jordan van den Lamb said anyone who could pay $1000 a week rent – and still earn less than the income threshold – could not afford food, bills and medicine as well. 'It's nuts,' he told NewsWire. 'The guidelines make affordable housing by definition unaffordable … pretty Orwellian if you think about it.' 'The idea that we would spend billions of taxpayer money to subsidise private landlords to offer something that is tied to an already unaffordable market as the solution to a housing crisis, it's just not going to work and this is what all the experts have been saying.' Mr van den Lamb has risen to prominence online speaking about the state of housing in Australia and unsuccessfully contested a Senate seat for the Victorian Socialists at the federal election. He said the non-profit HomeGround agency had a relatively good reputation. 'These are the good ones … I've got nothing wrong with them,' he said of HomeGround. 'It's the private landlord that's being subsidised by the government and incentivised to do this. That is the problem.' In NSW, 'affordable' properties must be rented out at 20 per cent below the market rent, but the state government rules say 'flexibility in pricing may be applied to moderate income households'.

Lynn Freed, South African writer with a wry style, dies at 79
Lynn Freed, South African writer with a wry style, dies at 79

Boston Globe

time01-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Boston Globe

Lynn Freed, South African writer with a wry style, dies at 79

'If Joan Didion and Fran Lebowitz had a literary love child, she would be Lynn Freed,' critic E. Ce Miller wrote in Bustle magazine, describing Dr. Freed's writing as 'in equal turns funny, wise and sardonic.' Advertisement Raised by eccentric thespians in South Africa, Dr. Freed immigrated to New York City in the late 1960s to attend graduate school and later settled in California. Her first novel, 'Heart Change' (1982), was about a doctor who has an affair with her daughter's music teacher. It was a critical and commercial dud. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up Dr. Freed caught her literary wind in 1986 with her second novel, 'Home Ground,' which drew generously on her upbringing. Narrated by Ruth Frank, a Jewish girl whose parents run a theater and employ servants, the book subtly skewers the manners and lavish excesses of white families during apartheid. 'Here's a rarity: a novel about childhood and adolescence that never lapses into self-pity, that rings true in every emotion and incident, that regards adults sympathetically if unsparingly, that deals with serious thematic material, and that is quite deliciously funny,' Jonathan Yardley of The Washington Post wrote in his review. 'It is also the flip side of rites-of-passage literary tradition, for its narrator is not a boy but a girl.' Advertisement Writing in The New York Times Book Review, novelist Janette Turner Hospital praised the novel's keen point of view. 'Lynn Freed's guileless child-narrator takes us inside the neurosis of South Africa,' she wrote. 'We experience it in a way that is qualitatively different from watching the most graphic of news clips.' Dr. Freed returned to Ruth Frank in 'The Bungalow' (1993). Now it's the 1970s, and Ruth is married and living in California. After separating from her husband, she returns to South Africa to care for her dying father. Staying in a seaside bungalow owned by a former lover, she confronts past loves and past lives in a country that is, like her, in transition. In 'The Mirror' (1997), she told the story of Agnes La Grange, a 17-year-old English girl who immigrates to South Africa in 1920 to work as a housekeeper for a wealthy Jewish family and eventually finds her way into bed with her employer. 'The qualities with which Freed endows her heroine are fundamentally masculine, and through this comes a subtle but inescapable feminist message which makes 'The Mirror' more than a colonial family saga,' Isobel Montgomery wrote in her review for the British newspaper The Guardian. Lynn Ruth Freed was born on July 18, 1945, in Durban, South Africa. Her parents, Harold and Anne (Moshal) Freed, ran a theater company. They were certainly characters. Advertisement 'As childhoods go, it would be hard to imagine a better one for a writer,' Holly Brubach wrote in the Times, reviewing Dr. Freed's essay collection 'Reading, Writing, and Leaving Home' (2005). 'The youngest of three girls, Freed was born into a family presided over by a histrionic mother and a debonair father.' She graduated from the University of the Witwatersrand, in Johannesburg, in 1966. She moved to New York City the next year to study English literature at Columbia University, where she earned a master's degree in 1968 and a doctorate in 1972. Her books sold well, but they were never blockbusters. In 2002, she won the inaugural Katherine Anne Porter Award for fiction, among the most prestigious of literary prizes. She also won two O. Henry Awards for her short stories. In interviews, she was often asked how much of her fiction was autobiographical. 'When I am writing properly -- which, I might say, comprises only a fraction of my writing time -- I tend to disappear into the fiction,' Dr. Freed said in an interview with Sarah Anne Johnson for the 2006 book 'The Very Telling: Conversations With American Writers.' 'What is the difference between remembered experience and imagined experience? I don't know.' Dr. Freed's marriage to Gordon Gamsu in 1968 ended in divorce. Her second husband, Robert Kerwin, died in 2021. In addition to her daughter, Jessica, she leaves two stepchildren, Fiona Zecca and Killian Kerwin; a granddaughter; and four step-grandchildren. For many years, Dr. Freed taught writing at the University of California Davis. She was also a frequent -- and popular -- guest at writers' colonies. Friends said her readings were always packed. 'She was beautiful, and she was fun to be around,' writer Philip Lopate, a close friend, said in an interview. 'Her voice on the page was the same as she was in person. Her writing gave pleasure, just as she did in real life.' Advertisement This article originally appeared in

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