San Francisco, CA
A San Francisco Ceramicist And Restaurant Team Up To Make Magic With Bespoke Tableware
![A San Francisco Ceramicist And Restaurant Team Up To Make Magic With Bespoke Tableware](https://imageio.forbes.com/specials-images/imageserve//62881c271ffc59f336c60508/0x0.jpg?format=jpg&width=1200)
Erin Hupp created this plate particularly for Jesse & Hilda’s delectable stack of blueberry … [+]
Adahlia Cole
Once you go to a restaurant, possibly you don’t take into consideration the plates. Possibly the tableware appears inconsequential, no less than in comparison with the meals. And plenty of cooks want their meals to be served on a clean canvas of white, typically black or grey.
However San Francisco restaurant homeowners Chef Kristina Liedags Compton and Rachel Sillcocks are totally different. Somewhat than taking away from the expertise of the meals, they imagine colourful dishes add a component of pleasure to a meal.
Kristina Liedags Compton (left) and Rachel Sillcocks (proper) sit at sales space seats at their San … [+]
Adahlia Cole
Take one take a look at their brunch-all-day restaurant Hilda and Jesse, and it’s instantly clear that your expertise will likely be about greater than the scrumptious and artistic meals. There may be a lot to have a look at: vivid orange and yellow sales space seating, crimson diner-style chairs, turquoise-striped partitions, and unimaginable murals within the entryway and toilet.
“It’s much more enjoyable to plate on colourful items! White, impartial and black have historically been what cooks like to make use of, identical with inside design of a restaurant,” Compton stated. “We went 110% on colour. We needed the area and all the things in it to be recent, vigorous and distinctive.”
Erin Hupp created pink, crimson, black and white mugs for brunch restaurant Hilda & Jesse.
Adahlia Cole
So after they had been searching for a brand new cereal bowl through which to serve their Nettle Smooth Scramble, they reached out to ceramicist Erin Hupp for items that might maintain their very own amidst Hilda and Jesse’s profusion of colour.
Hupp works completely with eating places to give you designs that flatter the meals however don’t disappear beneath it. The Hilda and Jesse collaboration is her boldest but.
Erin Hupp’s create ceramic vases for San Francisco brunch restaurant Hilda & Jesse.
Adahlia Cole
“Earlier than Hilda and Jesse, I had centered totally on white and black plateware, which helps present the canvas for a chef’s colourful meals to pop,” Hupp stated. “However Chef Kristina’s temporary was totally different. She requested me to make use of vivid, shiny colour—to be loud and daring.”
Hupp brainstormed with Hilda and Jesse’s inside designer Noz Nozawa, who helped her select colours that might work properly together with her design. They settled on reds and pinks for the bowl, and the identical colours wound up on mugs, plates and different items.
Erin Hupp designed and created bespoke tableware for San Francisco brunch restaurant Hilda & Jesse.
Adahlia Cole
However when it got here to the pancakes, she wanted to alter it up.
“Initially, I used to be going to go daring and colourful. Nonetheless, it simply didn’t really feel proper. So I got here in to dine on the restaurant—among the best components of my job. Because the pancakes arrived at my desk, it was clear that Chef Kristina’s smoky pancake stack deserved a extra muted canvas for the wealthy blueberry syrup to pop. If I went daring and colourful with the plate it could drown out the great thing about the pancakes. So I prototyped white plates that function muted, offset pink swirls. The tip consequence was my alabaster and lilac swirl plate now at Hilda and Jesse.”
Erin Hupp collaborated with Hilda & Jesse restaurant homeowners to create desk ware and vases … [+]
Adahlia Cole
Compton and Sillcocks have an extended historical past with the SF Bay Space’s famend restaurant world, having labored at high eating places together with Vary, Nopa, Cyrus, and Atelier Crenn and extra. And through the years they’ve established a set of classic, thrift, and off-the-shelf plates, bowls, and glassware.
“It’s much more enjoyable to plate on stunning plates! The Hilda and Jesse plate choice is kind of huge and can proceed to develop,” Compton stated. “Erin’s ceramics are an excellent addition. It was such a particular expertise working together with her to create plateware particularly meant to enhance the meals.”
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San Francisco, CA
‘The power of fiction’: San Francisco store sends LGBTQ+ books to states that ban them
![‘The power of fiction’: San Francisco store sends LGBTQ+ books to states that ban them](https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/34973006331eb7c6e37cc30c7cef17ec090d657f/0_185_4032_2419/master/4032.jpg?width=1200&height=630&quality=85&auto=format&fit=crop&overlay-align=bottom%2Cleft&overlay-width=100p&overlay-base64=L2ltZy9zdGF0aWMvb3ZlcmxheXMvdGctZGVmYXVsdC5wbmc&enable=upscale&s=60a99ee8cbbe9e9a844f6e0f41f67979)
A San Francisco bookstore is fighting back against escalating anti-LGBTQ+ book bans across the US by sending prohibited queer texts to communities battling censorship.
Fabulosa Books, located in the Castro, the city’s historic gay neighborhood, has received widespread support during Pride month for its Books Not Bans program, which allows customers to buy and send books to LGBTQ+ organizations operating in conservative parts of the country.
Becka Robbins, founder and director of the program, and the bookstore’s events manager, launched the initiative last year, inspired by repeatedly witnessing how impactful it can be when youth discover queer literature for the first time: “At the store, I’ve seen young people who don’t have access to these books, and it’s definitely a cinematic moment, where they are like: ‘Oh my god!’ … This should be ordinary. They should see this queer lit in their own libraries, in their classrooms, on their parents’ bookshelves. But they’re not.”
She decided the most practical way to push back against bans, which have become a priority of anti-LGBTQ+ school boards across the country, was to send books directly to groups that could provide them to readers who might not be able to access the texts in their schools or through their families.
The project is a grassroots effort that operates out of a closet in Fabulosa, and since launching, Robbins said she has sent more than 700 books to states across the US, including Texas, Florida, Alabama, Arkansas and Oklahoma.
“I really believe in the power of fiction as a driving force for connection, resilience and empathy. It gives you the capacity, in a way that nothing else does, to connect with people who are different than you,” Robbins said. “There’s been times in my life where fiction has really kept me going.”
She has more boxes ready to ship, and since the program got recent news coverage in the Los Angeles Times, the Associated Press and local television stations, donations have been pouring in, with more people stopping by the store wanting to buy books for other communities: “It’s been a community effort. Customers come in and pay for entire boxes and say: ‘Send this to Florida.’ They leave a note that says: ‘Hang in there, you’re going to get out of that place.’ It’s encouraging and also a little heartbreaking. People shouldn’t have to leave to find safety and comfort.”
The American Library Association (ALA) reported in March that more books were banned in 2023 in US schools and libraries than any other year on record – 4,240 titles censored, which was more than the previous two years combined. Many targeted books are about race and LGBTQ+ people.
Last week, South Carolina adopted one of the harshest book ban laws in the country, with a vague policy requiring books to be “age or developmentally appropriate”, an edict that could impact a broad range of texts. Public school textbooks have also increasingly been targeted, with literature on the climate crisis, vaccines, history, racism and sex education facing censorship.
Fabulosa owner Alvin Orloff said some of the local patrons supporting Books Not Bans come from the communities that are now facing rising censorship: “Our customers live in San Francisco, but they know what it’s like to grow up in a small town where everybody’s bigoted. So they feel really strongly that they want to do anything they can to make life easier for the next generation.”
The program is also designed to show solidarity with transgender and queer groups that are sometimes faced with significant backlash and violent threats over their efforts to defend people’s rights, Orloff added: “There’s a psychological thing for them to just know there’s people out there who are thinking about them and care about them, that they’re not invisible, that there’s a world beyond their community that values them.”
Watching the escalating book bans has reminded Orloff of the 1970s campaigns of anti-gay activist Anita Bryant, who claimed her efforts were about “saving the children” and promoting parents’ rights: “Politicians just want to whip up the fear. It’s a big, symbolic thing for them to say we’re ‘protecting the children’. It’s the same thing they were saying 50 years ago when I was growing up.”
“Books offer a wider variety of role models and a greater understanding of queer communities than you’re going to see in the movies,” Orloff added. “It just makes you feel so much better to know that there are people like you out there and that you don’t have to have a life constricted by people who don’t value you.”
San Francisco, CA
South Bay residents, fire crews bracing for high temperatures
![South Bay residents, fire crews bracing for high temperatures](https://assets1.cbsnewsstatic.com/hub/i/r/2024/07/02/4e2d7157-4b23-4aee-b088-db9649c76988/thumbnail/1200x630/0db8306c8f42e770b93ba2c7bcea2157/snapshot-33.jpg?v=57e8061b2038d609da26e467de5ddfb8)
The heat is on in the South Bay with temperatures expected to exceed 100 degrees over the next few days, and people are already finding creative ways to beat the high temperatures.
Some people are beating the heat with a splash through the fountains in downtown San Jose
“It’s always nice and cool in the water, and you know we’ve got shade over here under the trees too,” said Javier Cascaneda.
KPIX First Alert Weather: Current conditions, alerts, maps for your area
Families flocked to the fountains Monday as temperatures hit the 90s.
And this is just the beginning, the heat is expected to top 100 degrees over the next few days.
“I have a pool at my apartment so probably swim there. We’ll maybe go to the beach,” said Jeneva Alvarez and Luis Ponce.
That seemed to be a common theme, many people told KPIX they’re already making plans to head out of town towards someplace a little cooler.
“Go to the Ocean. Yeah, Half Moon Bay or maybe Santa Cruz,” said Paul Padilla and Jennifer Liu.
But while some are escaping to cooler temperatures, first responders back are preparing for what could be a dangerous combination, a heat wave and the Fourth of July.
San Jose Police posted on social media reminding people that all fireworks are illegal in the city and can be very dangerous in conditions like this.
People said they understand that but still expect to see some people breaking the rules.
“I feel like there’s always more fireworks every year and just about the same amount of fires. But there’s not much that I think is going to change honestly. It’s just going to be keep on going unless we get more rain hopefully,” said Javier Cascaneda
Of course, the hope, especially in conditions like the ones expected this week, is that people will be extra careful celebrating the holiday this year.
San Francisco, CA
After Missing Housing Goals, SF Has Permit Process Slashed Under New State Law | KQED
![After Missing Housing Goals, SF Has Permit Process Slashed Under New State Law | KQED](https://cdn.kqed.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/10/2024/07/032_KQED_UkraineRally_02242022_qed-1020x679.jpg)
Under SB 423, which passed last year, cities that miss their state goals on planning for new housing must provide an expedited path for approving permits for new developments that meet existing planning standards.
San Francisco will be the first city where the law is triggered after Wiener included language making it the only city with an annual review of its housing permitting goals. Other cities are reviewed every four years.
On Friday, the California Department of Housing and Community Development ruled that San Francisco was falling short of its goal to plan for building 82,000 new units of housing by 2031. Last year, the city authorized just over 3,000 units, according to the San Francisco Planning Department.
Rich Hillis, director of the Planning Department, called the streamlined process instituted by SB 423 “a new era.”
“You could come in today online and apply for a housing project that will be approved by the end of this summer,” Hillis said at a press conference Monday. “And that is truly a game changer, where that would have normally taken a year, two years — or, as Mayor Breed pointed out, sometimes 10 years or more if CEQA is involved and appeals are involved.”
Critics say the penalties instituted by SB 423 were always part of a plan to do away with local control in favor of market-rate developers.
Lori Brooke, co-founder of anti-upzoning group Neighborhoods United SF, called the state’s goal of 82,000 new units for San Francisco “unattainable” and said the city was unfairly singled out by SB 423, which she said “forces the city to haphazardly make changes to zoning and planning that will be felt for the next 100 years.”
“San Francisco is being punished for actions beyond its control — cities don’t build housing; developers do,” Brooke said in a statement.
KQED’s Sara Hossaini contributed to this report.
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