Home Authors Posts by Alyssa Konermann

Alyssa Konermann

196 POSTS 0 COMMENTS

Creative Class: William Thomas, Derrick Braziel, and Allen Woods, MORTAR

“MORTAR represents the people, because they are what hold this structure of community together.”

Creative Class: Adam Shaw, Deeper Roots Coffee

“It’s a nod to the type of relationship we’re trying to develop with coffee producers.”

Creative Class: Steve McGowan and Dan Reynolds, Brave Berlin

“Brave is the kind of client we want to work with, [those willing to try] something new or untested. Berlin is an amazing city full of dualities that define it so deeply. The art seems to seep from the sidewalks there and they embrace it as if it’s their salvation.”

Creative Class: Matt Tomamichel, Corporate

“I dreaded when ‘corporate’ would visit the stores. I never wanted that attitude in my shop.”

Creative Class: Natasia Malaihollo, Wyzerr

“We help companies become wiser through data. Wiser.com was already taken, so we took Wyzerr.com.”

Creative Class: Renee Kohl, Noble Denim and Victor Athletics

“We’re driven by quality and detail and we’re applying those principles to every new product we tackle.”

Dark Asana Yoga is as Metal as it Sounds

The darkness and the music—we’re talking space doom; black, stoner, and atmospheric metal; drone, noise, and ambient—drown out distractions and make the whole thing deeply meditative.

25,737 People Lived in Kenyon-Barr When the City Razed it To the Ground

Once a dense neighborhood in the heart of the city, Kenyon-Barr was wiped away without a trace.

5 Cincinnati Tours Every Local Should Take

For years, the Architectural Foundation of Cincinnati organized volunteer-led walking tours, which could be a headache. Executive director Stephen Sendelbeck realized an app could do the heavy lifting, and ArchiTour Cincinnati was born. You tap a dot on the maps; the building’s bio and photos pop up. Pick a tour, any tour.

In The Guineveres, Sarah Domet Tackles Youth And Abandonment

Four girls, all named Guinevere, are deserted by their parents at a convent. Bound by their name, they form their own kind of family. There are drunk priests and rigid nuns, comatose soldiers and a backdrop of war.

NEWSLETTERS

27,794FansLike
37,775FollowersFollow
42,131FollowersFollow