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London, Kentish Town, United Kingdom
Blimey! 30c... Glastonbury; Wimbledon... Strawberries & cream... Pimms & lemonade...

Thursday, 11 November 2010

Lest we forget...


Preparing to set off to the office this morning, I struggled, fingers and thumbs, as I tried so carefully to secure my poppy in situ for fear that the gusting winds and rain would cause this to become dislodged.

Today, of course, is Armistice Day. As I would expect of many, I could not envisage venturing out on this day without this most reverent symbol of respect for those that made the ultimate sacrifice in defence of the freedom that nowadays we seem to take for granted.

As I strode toward Highgate station it was to my sadness and surprise that I became aware of the number of people I passed absent of this traditional mark of remembrance.

Such was my astonishment that I took it upon myself to study my fellow passengers and see just how many were wearing a poppy and if indeed there was any consistency amongst those with poppy and those without.

Naturally, perhaps, I assumed that the more elderly folk would adhere to this tradition, but no, the first of my older generation, a well to do gent in dark overcoat and hat, was bereft of poppy and the first person I spotted with a poppy was a young girl of Asian background.

Scouring the commuters seated in my carriage and standing around me, a mixture of young and middle aged men and women of various ethnicities, not a poppy was to be seen. Then as a space appeared in my line of vision I finally spotted a man, maybe in his late 30’s, attired in suit and tie, with poppy pinned to his lapel.

After leaving the tube and taking the short walk to the office I failed to spot a single person with a poppy; passing an aged, archetypal city type in his luxurious camel coat, surely this man… but no…

Now maybe I am doing some of these people a disservice, maybe, like me, they were concerned that they would lose their poppy and instead had this hidden inside their briefcase or bag or had it pinned to their inner clothing, but surely the point of the poppy is to wear this on display.

As we approached 11.00GMT when a bugler from the Scots Guards was to mark the start of the two-minute silence by playing the Last Post, I wondered if London would indeed fall silent in remembrance. Will iPods be switched off? Will laptops be sent to sleep? Will the telephones in our office cease to ring? I recall a time some years ago when I sought to end a telephone call explaining that we were approaching 11:00 and the gruff response I received. Clearly for some business will always come first!

Perhaps it is different now that the threat is not as demonstrable as it was following the First and Second World Wars. Opinions have changed and questions are raised as to whether we should even be fighting the war in Afghanistan.

But at this time when it seems that almost every day news reports tell of another member of the armed forces lost in Afghanistan, surely the poignancy of this day cannot be lost on the nation?

As I stepped outside my office to observe the silence, the traffic continued to flow past, people went about their business and so I was simply left to stand silent in my own private contemplation.

Lest we forget… Sadly I fear many already have...

Friday, 8 October 2010

Kentish Canteen -Time out review

Time Out says - By Richard Ehrlich Posted: Oct 6 2010


Pret and Caffè Nero are both about to open branches on Kentish Town Road, but Kentish Canteen is what the area really needs: a classy local doing brunch, lunch and dinner all week.

The guiding principles are maximum flexibility and minimal expense. It's a great formula: no main course over £12, and smaller, 'larder' dishes costing around £3-5. Menus will change monthly and were still being tweaked
... More

Pret and Caffè Nero are both about to open branches on Kentish Town Road, but Kentish Canteen is what the area really needs: a classy local doing brunch, lunch and dinner all week.

The guiding principles are maximum flexibility and minimal expense. It's a great formula: no main course over £12, and smaller, 'larder' dishes costing around £3-5. Menus will change monthly and were still being tweaked on our visits.

Some of chef John Cook's food is sensationally good. Eggs Benedict on the brunch menu was exemplary.

On a separate visit, parmesan chicken - a breaded escalope - was tender and juicy within and crunchy without (no mean feat). A huge portion of wonderful vegetable soup featured a memorably flavourful broth. Accurately cooked steak came with addictively crisp, fluffy chips. Desserts and baking are fine, and nice touches - such as small pots of blue-chip Isigny butter - show careful attention to detail.

The space looks great, designed by a firm just around the corner and with one wall dominated by a Kentish Town photo mural. Wine list: short and imaginative, and starting at just £14.50.

Service is sweet and largely efficient. Expect great things of this new place, on the site that used to be RED

Thursday, 30 September 2010

Epoc Latest project wins

A Food 'Court' and Hotel in Berlin,
A 'Boutique' sports store in London,
A 'bar' for a global fashion retailer...


Tuesday, 28 September 2010

The 'Hello' view of Life


It is a shame this level of reality was not a more prevalent view in modern life.

Then perhaps we would all take the view that we need to just get on with it...!

We will not all be famous.
We will not all stay young and slim.
We will not all be premiership foootballers or lottery winners.
We will not all be wealthy or feature in 'Hello' Magazine.

We all need to work at a level befitting our skills, knowledge and abilities.

Be proud of what you can realistically do, Live your life and enjoy each minute.

'Photoshop' is a mask, not a reality and too many, spend too long, in the Media led world of fame fantasy.

Thought for today R4

Monday, 20 September 2010

Chin Chin Laboratories




London has finally got its first nitro icecream bar. They designed the interior of the new Chin Chin Laboratories’s nitro icecream bar in Camden.

As a key idea behind their work they developed a mad scientists lab environment, where preparation area, display cabinet and lightning devices are all inter-connected with a lot of playfulness.
No wire on the floor; everything goes trough the pipes seems to be one of the main very practical feature. Details amongst others, that I really liked, the cords of the swing have been partially un-woven and re-woven on themselves – there’s no knot!


The confectionning and preparation areas, cabinet and display are all hold together by the tubular structure.

The light bulbs are directly plugged on the structure.
even the drinks had that mad scientists feeling (kir royal in a pipette)


** Andrew Haythornthwaite and Shai Akram began their collaboration shortly after graduating from the Royal College of Art in 2006 on the Design Products course headed by Ron Arad. Their projects have taken them to China, New Zealand and now, back to the UK.
They presented their Fruit Fishing for FoodMarketo in Milan 2010; which is based on the scientific fact that apples float and pears don’t.

* Chin Chin Laboratories are located in Camden – the address is 49 Camden Lock Place.

Thursday, 9 September 2010

Kentish Canteen

This Monday, 7th September, saw the opening of the new “Kentish Canteen” restaurant at 300 Kentish Town Road NW5.











Now it would be all too easy to slide into food critic mode and rave about this being a great place to pop in for a quick meal and a glass of wine. We could enthuse about the
Head Chef, late of Vinoteca and his able Sous Chef who was previously Head Chef at the Acornhouse Restaurant. Oh and not forgetting the owners, Owen and Wendy, who already operate PJ’s Bar & Grill in Covent Garden and their passion for food. Then there’s the wine list put together by a friend of Wendy's who's a master of wine with his own vineyard in the South of France….

At this stage you’d probably be forgiven for thinking you’d stumbled upon one of those restaurant review websites or suspect that we have some ulterior motive for promoting the place.

Well the truth is we do!

From the initial brand concept through to the design and implementation Epoc were immersed in this project. We were even responsible for locating the site on behalf of the owners!

So should you ever find yourself in the area and in need of refreshment we would certainly recommend a visit to Kentish Canteen and whilst you’re enjoying your meal take in the design as well. Should you then feel predisposed to find out more of what we do here at Epoc, simply walk around the corner from the restaurant and you’ll find our studio here in Leverton Place!

Friday, 30 July 2010

Did you see?

For those of you who saw the last episode of "Mary Queen of Shops" on Monday, 15th July featuring Lightwater Home Care, but just happened to miss the credits at the end, we thought we should mention that yes, it was EPOC that put together the new design and graphics for the store.

A special mention should also go to Denise Tisdale at Sign Specialists Ltd who did a magnificent job of pulling together all the new signage for the unit.

Friday, 25 June 2010

It's all about attitude!



Whilst most of us were fixed on England’s crucial game against Slovenia, down in SW19 two relatively unknown tennis players were locked in a gladiatorial battle of wills in what became the longest tennis match in history.

Suffice to say the stamina, courage and sheer dogged determination of these two players namely John Isner and Nicolas Mahut belies belief. Although it was highly unlikely that either player would ultimately progress to win the tournament it is testament to their character that their refusal to concede defeat was founded solely on the will to win rather than the promise of a hefty pay cheque. In fact for his part in this 11 hour epic, Mahut received just £11,250 in prize money.

That though is of little consequence as he will forever be remembered for his participation in what has been described as the greatest match of all time as well as his indefatigable attitude and graciousness even in defeat.

In stark contrast his fellow countrymen representing “Les Bleus” at the World Cup have been vilified in the French press both for their failure to progress from the group stages but more particularly for the farcical events off the field. This has even escalated to the political hierarchy prompting one Socialist to comment

"The atmosphere that prevails in the French team is one that Nicolas Sarkozy exults -- it's all about individualism, egotism, everyone for themselves, and the only way to judge human success is the cheque you get at the end of the month,"

Not that the England team have exactly covered themselves in glory. After two uninspiring performances against the USA and Algeria and the stories of divisions within the squad, a victory against a Slovenia team ranked 25th in the world should not convince us that we have suddenly been transformed into potential World Cup winners. But at least the team finally showed a sense of spirit and desire previously lacking.

Of course Sunday’s match against Germany will prove to be a far sterner test of our resolve with history very much against us.

Whilst the England players should certainly require no greater motivation than the opportunity to achieve a victory against our old adversaries, if they require any form of paradigm for all that is expected of them when they take to the pitch on Sunday they would do well to reflect on the performance of Isner and Mahut.

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