SF Germany and Akomplice colab on this tasteful new tee and shoelace pack! Details here.
Day two of our adidas Adistar Racer sneaker giveaway. Did you win?
Pick up Sneaker Freaker Issue 24 for a mind-blowing vintage Ewing feature!
Knicks guard JR Smith gives us a peek at his collection on Twitter. See it here!
Check some of the scorching sneakers on display at the Frshr Than Your Avrg Sneaker Battle! Pics inside. ...
Adidas Originals unveil the official fan apparel for the upcoming Euro 2012 tournament. Pics inside.
We've drawn the winner for day one of our adidas Adistar Racer sneaker giveaway... was it you?
For The Homies return with a new collection of caps! Pics and details inside.

in production ........ woop woop
also [an:other]" shorts are on sale at AU$40 a pop


email info@anotherinch.com or PM
with colour and size
www.anotherinch.com
www.anotherinch.com/2006/Blog
the long awaited much debated sometimes confiscated [an:other]" shorts ...... $69 fuck yeah my grandma has like 5 prs
www.anotherinch.com
if your down in melbourne please support our family provider who will get them soonish
www.provider.com.au
and up in brissy our fam @ apartment who will also get them soonish
www.aptmnt.com


finally got the shit that we were meant to get for our 1st birthday
the new bags

and bandana's

welcome mother fucker summer
begin with one [an:other]" store

add super special limited collectors edition lucky fortune golden tees and print

turntables and disc jockeys for noise



here's the delicate bit, add 30 cases of beer

to your auntie's, uncle's, pets, girl you pashed in 7th grade, 3rd and 4th cousins are also acceptable





depending on how you like your party served you may also want to add azn hypebeasts and/or hot chicks


and if all goes well you should have at least one of these

or maybe one of these

so i need to say some thank you's as well .......
thank you to : tom@futura, david@mhi, tabo@fiberops, mark&soda@sbtg, liz@levi's, greg&mikhail@mishka, johan&rex@roguestatus, christo&caine&alex&sol&jagi@shadow, ashley@singha, roger&case@playcreative, mason@7shadows and the sneakerfreaker boys who helped set up and clean up and destroy ........ last and definately not least to my customers who have supported us over the last year
peace
-[an:other]"
www.anotherinch.com
so kids, some did know some didnt .... now you do


our all sorts anniversary tee .....

fiberops x another : 6 colours this shit is insane clear gel eyes print

mishka x another : colossus, black flag in the colours of the artist mondrian

rogue status x another : gun show print .... nice on bruvva

sydney kids know the china heights steez, these prints will come framed and unframed

enough said ............
and our website is finally up .....
www.anotherinch.com
Sing a song of sixpence
A pocket full of rye
Four and twenty blackbirds
Baked in a pie When the pie was opened
The birds began to sing
Was that not a tasty dish
To set before a king?
The King was in his counting house
Counting out his money
The Queen was in the parlor
Eating bread and honey
The Maid was in the garden
Hanging out the clothes
When down came a blackbird
And snapped off her nose!
The surprising truth is that this innocent little rhyme, which dates from the early 1700s, actually represents a coded message used to recruit crew members for pirate vessels!
Pirates (or corsairs, privateers whose activities were sanctioned by letters of marque from a sovereign) did not
spend all their time at sea: they cruised the waters in areas such as the Mediterranean, the Spanish Main, or the Atlantic coast of North America, looking for prizes, and they returned to port when the need for supplies or repairs demanded it. Upon reaching port, the ship's captain paid off the crew (primarily by dividing the spoils of whatever they had captured), and the crew members then dispersed ashore (usually to spend all their pay on alcohol and prostitutes as quickly as possible). Some crewmen tended to stay in the vicinity, but others left for other regions, caught on with other ships, died, were killed, or simply disappeared. Thus, much like the captains of naval vessels and merchant traders, the captains of pirate ships needed to recruit new crew members whenever they embarked on yet another venture. Since piracy (as opposed to privateering) was against the law, pirates devised codes that could be used to advertise for crew members without openly revealing their illegal affiliations.
The nursery rhyme "Six a Song of Sixpence" was a coded message that evolved over several years' times and was used by confederates of the notorious pirate Blackbeard to recruit crew members for his prize-hunting expeditions. Like many other messages passed down to us over hundreds of years by oral tradition, there is no one "official" version, nor is there a "correct" interpretation for any particular variant. In general, however, the most common form of this rhyme bore these veiled meanings:
Sing a song of sixpence / A pocket full of rye
Blackbeard's standard payment of sixpence a day was considered good money in the 1700s, especially since most pirate vessels did not pay a salary: the crew only received a share of the spoils if they were successful in capturing prizes (and many a pirate ship had to return to port empty-handed after spending several fruitless months at sea). As well, his crew was promised a pocket (a leather bag somewhat like an early canteen which held about a liter) full of rye (whiskey) per day. Not bad, considering that alcohol was the average sailor's raison d'etre.
Four and twenty blackbirds / Baked in a pie
As Henry Betts points out in his book on the origins and history of nursery rhymes, "It was a favourite trick in the sixteenth century to conceal all sorts of surprises in a pie." Buccaneers, too, were fond of surprises, and one of Blackbeard's favorite ruses to lure a ship within boarding range was to make his own vessel (or crew) appear to be in distress, typically by pretending to have been dismasted in a storm or to have sprung a leak below the waterline. Passing ships — both honest sailors wanting to help and other pirates looking for an easy catch — would sail in close to offer assistance, whereupon a crew of two dozen heavily-armed seamen dressed in black would board the other vessel (via a boat in darkness or fog, or by simply jumping into the other ship when it came alongside if no other means of surprise attack was possible) to quickly kill or disable as many crew members as possible. Thus the four and twenty "blackbirds" (i.e., Blackbeard's crewmen) "baked in a pie" (i.e., concealed in anticipation of springing a trap).
When the pie was opened / The birds began to sing
This follows from the previous line. Once the victim's ship was lured in for the kill, the "blackbirds" came out of hiding and attacked with a fearsome din.
Was that not a tasty dish / To set before a king?
This line is commonly misinterpreted. The King is not a reference to any real king, but rather to Blackbeard himself, the king of pirates. And the tasty dish is the plundered ship that was so easily captured.
The King was in his counting house / Counting out his money
Again, the King is Blackbeard (no real king would take on such a mean task as counting money). This line of the message signals that Blackbeard had the cash on hand to pay a crew on salary rather than strictly on divided spoils.
The Queen was in the parlor / Eating bread and honey
Blackbeard's main vessel was a French merchant ship named "Le Concorde de Nantes" that was jointly captured by Blackbeard and Captain Hornigold in the Grenadines in November of 1717. Upon his retirement from pirating, Hornigold presented the ship to Blackbeard, who renamed it "The Queen Anne's Revenge". Thus the "Queen" referred to here is Blackbeard's ship, and "eating bread and honey" meant that it was in port taking on supplies in preparation for a cruise.
The Maid was in the garden / Hanging out the clothes
The use of the word "maid" indicated that the location/route of one or more prize ships was known, and they were going to be specific targets of the upcoming cruise (this greatly enhancing the probability of the crew's collecting prize money). The waters around the Carolinas down to the Caribbean were referred to as the garden, as this was an area where pirates would often cruise for easy pickings. "Hanging out the clothes" meant the targeted ship was already at sea or just about to leave port (thus its sails — or "clothes" — have been hung).
When down came a blackbird / And snapped off her nose!
There is some scholarly debate in literary and maritime circles as to whether the last part was originally "and snapped off her nose" or "and snapped off a rose." Either way, the passage is taken to be a Blackbeard's bragging about his plans to swoop in and have his way with the targeted ship.
www.snopes.com
today though piracy still exists without the wooden legs and shit, they can usually be found in places such as STH east Asia, caribeans, africa's .......... and apparently theres one in melbourne under the guise of "Memphis the Beer Gut"
Darlinghurst is an inner-city, eastern suburb of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. It is located immediately east of the Sydney central business district, within the local government area of the City of Sydney. The postcode is 2010, shared with Surry Hills and East Sydney.
Darlinghurst is a densely-populated suburb with the majority of residents living in apartments or terraced houses. From a slum in the 1920s and a red-light prostitution district, Darlinghurst has undergone urban renewal since the 1990s and early 2000s to become a rather upmarket, cosmopolitan and diverse area.
History
The suburb was originally known as Eastern Hill and then Henrietta Town, after the wife of Governor Lachlan Macquarie, whose second name was Henrietta. The loyalties changed with the change of governors and the suburb became Darlinghurst in honour of Elizabeth Darling, the popular wife of Governor Ralph Darling, during the early 19th century. The 'hurst' is an old English word for a wooded area.
Landmarks
Darlinghurst has two of Sydney's museums: the Australian Museum (a natural history museum) and the Sydney Jewish Museum. The suburb also features St Vincent's Hospital, and is associated with the Sacred Heart Hospice on Darlinghurst Rd, and the Garvan Institute, a medical research institute. The Darlinghurst Court House at Taylor Square is one of Sydney's most historic buildings. It is adjacent to historic Darlinghurst Gaol, which is now the East Sydney campus of the National Art School formerly the Sydney Institute of Technology.
Darlinghurst Gaol
Darlinghurst Gaol, the large sandstone penal complex in the middle of Darlinghurst was built between 1836 and 1840. The large sandstone walls still bear convict markings, and the complex features six wings surrounding a circular chapel. Australian poet Henry Lawson spent time incarcerated here during some of the turbulent years of his life. The site is now open to the public as the Sydney Institute of Technology. The last hanging at the gaol was in 1907 (Jahn, 1997). Captain Lightfoot, a bushranger, was hanged outside the gaol, on Forbes St, Darlinghurst
the first time is always kinda giddy and kinda warm and fuzzy and i get a little sweaty around the ______
anyways so im having a party and well i guess your invited ... you were arsed enough to read this shit and ill probably continue drabbling on shit for the next few paragraphs
so bear with me
we opened about a yr ago, back then i think i was a really nice now, now im verging on the obnoxiously homosexual, it's been great i had a good time but i realised that somewhere along the lines i wanted to be a greyhound racer, i would call that dog "dog" and he would be the fastest, the only drawback would be however whenever anyone mentioned "dog" he would instantly run towards them and bite their balls .... dog had been trained well, thats however how i came to meet my child from my 15th wife, dog had bitten her balls, as she had grown older she had become insanely ballsy and her body had adopted this attitude in a physical form, 2 strange lumps forming then growing daily
oh yeah the party is on the 13th of october starts at 6, we have these follwing items
30 cases of singha
4 collab tees with fiberops, mishka, rogue status and shadow
1 "sPeCiAL" anniversary tee
1 collab print with the boys from china heights
1 lifestyle with red g-string
and a patridge in a pear tree
heres the details

and we have that shit youtubed ... apparently it's the "in" thing right now more inner than myspace which was apparently so lining up for 5 weeks to get some sneakers then ebaying that shit for millionaire poon juice
thank you for reading this rubbish ...... hsibbur siht gnidaer rof uoy knaht