Mod's Hair: The French connection

Mod's Hair: The French connection

Mod’s Hair in Merivale, Christchurch transcends the idea of a hair salon.

Luminous and transcendent, it’s Christchurch’s home of French-style hair, it’s a place to relax with a glass of champagne from the fully- licensed Perrier-Jouët champagne bar, and it’s at times a transitional space or art gallery.

The stylists are sent to Paris to train in the latest cutting and styling techniques, and bring their experiences back to the salon. It’s not just about learning from the masters at the Mod’s Hair academy in Paris, says owner Julianne Liebeck, it’s about feeling the vibe of the French capital and the people who inhabit it.

“The Parisians are more self-assured,” she says. “They have a way of carrying themselves. They’re not very trend-based, they’re quite classic and they stick to the simple things. It’s a lot more natural and elegant. The French are so good at that effortless style.”

That style, and more picked up from training missions to style hubs like New York, carries across to Mod’s here in Christchurch. It’s never ‘just’ a haircut, and it’s never about overdoing it, or trying too hard. It’s about working with the natural movement of the hair to create a natural look. Chic. Soft. Subtle.

The salon also stocks a range of hair products specially selected for high performance. “We don’t just choose things with attractive packaging. Everything has to be tested and proven before we even look at it,” Julianne says. “And it’s really important for us to have a prescriptive range for real problems with people’s hair and scalp.”

Julianne first encountered the Mod’s brand when living overseas. As a hairdresser with little formal training, the cutting-edge techniques developed by Mod’s Hair were game changing. She went on to become a head educator in Europe, based in Athens. After 12 years, she wanted to bring the brand home. Julianne opened the salon in Merivale in 2003, bringing balayage – at the time a ground-breaking technique – with her from Paris to New Zealand.

This French connection supplies Mod’s with two collections every year – one for summer and one for winter – forming an extensive historical catalogue of techniques and styles from the heart of world fashion.

Julianne’s spring/summer picks and tips

Style Long hair has been in for a while, and it’s been getting shorter over time. Now it’s beautiful short bobs, which can be done in curls or straight, cut just below the chin. I’m seeing a lot of celebrities doing it.

Colours Natural is in. Go with lived-in blondes and root smudges to make it look ‘yours’.

Hair care tip Alternate your shampoos. Have two. A lot of people who use only a strengthening, protein-based shampoo find their hair gets hard and brittle over time, and alternating in a moisture-based shampoo will do the trick. People with oily hair should mix it up too, because if you always use the same type of shampoo your hair gets used to it and returns to its previous oiliness.

Something to love about spring in Christchurch It’s all about the light for us. The light, the shine, it just makes everyone feel happy.

modshair.co.nz
modstoyou.co.nz

Just say the word

Just say the word

New Zealand books, stories and writers will get their time in the sun this spring, with WORD Christchurch, the South Island’s biggest literary festival, returning to Christchurch on October 28.

The festival will showcase many of New Zealand’s best known and best loved fiction and non-fiction writers, poets and historians including Elizabeth Knox, Behrouz Boochani, Witi Ihimaera, Vincent O’Sullivan, Becky Manawatu, Dr Siouxsie Wiles, Laura Jean McKay, Annabel Langbein, Carl Nixon, Pip Adam, Bill Manhire, Tom Scott, Farid Ahmed and many more. With 65 events across the four-day festival and more than 100 of Aotearoa’s finest writers, thinkers and entertainers on the programme, the WORD Christchurch Spring Festival promises to be any logophile’s dream.

Writer, poet, and comedian Ray Shipley is on the books as a guest programmer, providing a welcome spot of relief from a turbulent year with Bedtime Stories for Anxious Adults, Stand Up Poetry: A Quiz Show and a special edition of Ray Shipley’s Late-Night Poetry Hour. Other highlights include the ever-popular Adventurous Women, featuring Selina Tusitala Marsh, Kaiora Tipene, Miriam Lancewood and Annabel Langbein telling stories from their adventurous lives. The topic of this year’s Great WORD Debate will be that ‘it’s the end of the world as we know it’, and the WORD Gala: Brave Worlds opens the festival, with six distinguished writers discussing what it means to find courage in the face of a global pandemic.

WORD Christchurch’s mission is to share the joy of the written word, from stories and ideas through to poetry and song. Many of the events are free to attend, with an aim of including as many people from the community as possible and bringing people together with a shared love of storytelling.

Programme director Rachael King says this year’s festival will showcase many themes that are relevant to the changing times we’re living in. “We wanted to capture some of the shared experiences, and the challenges and opportunities from those experiences, in our programme and we also wanted to support our local publishing and book industry. Having a festival that is centred on New Zealand writing and New Zealand writers allows us to do that and to focus on that sense of community that we have all shared this year.”

wordchristchurch.co.nz

Kiwi legends Split Enz top the charts in 2020

Kiwi legends Split Enz top the charts in 2020

Talk about a comeback! The remastered anniversary edition of Split Enz’s legendary album TRUE COLOURS has reached the #1 position on the Official New Zealand Top40 Album Chart today – 40 years after the album’s initial release in 1980.

This was the album that launched Split Enz to international fame in 1980, with the iconic Split Enz hit ‘I Got You’, written by Neil Finn, as well as ‘I Hope I Never’ and ‘Poor Boy’.

TRUE COLOURS spent 76 weeks on the Official New Zealand Album Chart, and it was internationally successful too – it was #1 in Australia for 10 weeks, and reached the Top 40 Album Charts in the UK, USA and Canada.

Split Enz’s Eddie Rayner has worked with the band’s individual 24 track recordings and crafted new mixes for each of the songs. “This was our ‘iconic’ album. To depart from that too much, or to do radically new mixes, would surely incur the wrath of fans and band members alike,” says Rayner. “So I approached the project with caution and some trepidation, with the maxim ‘the same, but better’. What a fantastic result, and a great feeling to top the charts 40 years on!”

Reflecting on the success of the 40th Anniversary Edition of TRUE COLOURS, Tim Finn says “pop music is often seen as ephemeral. Something quickly replaced and soon forgotten. It’s a delight and a pleasure to know that an album we made in 1980 is in the 2020 charts. Who knew?”

The remastered 40th Anniversary Edition was released on Friday 31st July on multiple coloured vinyl configurations, as CD with an expanded tracklisting, and – being the modern version it is – available to download and stream.

100% homegrown acts announced for Rhythm & Alps 2020

100% homegrown acts announced for Rhythm & Alps 2020

The four stages at the South Island’s biggest New Year music festival will be showing off the best of Kiwi musicians, from the freshest talent to the country’s most famous rockers.

This year will mark a decade of Rhythm & Alps festivals at Cardrona Valley, Wanaka. The festival will be three days of music, camping, fun, friends and whanau from December 29 to 31, wrapping up after midnight on New Year’s Eve.

Ultimate live act Six60 will headline, and festival-goers will be treated to some of Aotearoa’s preeminent performers including Shihad and Fat Freddy’s Drop as well as international pop superstar Benee. The festival will also feature a special section called Wāhine Toa Log Cabin Club Take Over, featuring Amandamania, Cee She, Doolittle, Mama Da Funk, Mel Hey Lady and Miss B.

Image: Elliot Steven

Other artists include The Phoenix Foundation, Chaos in the CBD, Coco Solid, Wax Mustang, The Swan Sisters, Rubi Du, Beat & Path, Bassfreaks, Benthamism, Quix, Reb Fountain, Racing, Truth, Trei, Fairbrother, Ferby, K2K and There's a Tuesday.

Festival director Alex Turnbull says this one-off festival is a selection of hand-picked Kiwi all-stars. “We are elated to be celebrating our tenth year anniversary with possibly our best line up yet, immaculate stage production set in a stunning and relaxed atmosphere. This year, we’re more proud than ever to be able to deliver a world-class festival in Wanaka’s spectacular Cardrona Valley.”

rhythmandalps.co.nz

Image: Lauren Constable

New Zealand's Top Golf Courses

New Zealand's Top Golf Courses

New Zealand is an amazing destination for golfers and offers a number of courses amongst the very best in the world, including Kauri Cliffs, Northland, and Cape Kidnappers Golf Course, Hawke’s Bay.

Many of these elite courses are linked to luxury resort accommodation, but are also open to casual green fee players. The country's other outstanding courses include Carrington Resort [Northland], Formosa Golf Resort [Auckland], Lakes Resort Golf & Country Club [Pauanui], Rotorua Golf Club [Rotorua], Wairakei International Golf Course [Taupo], Clearwater Resort [Christchurch], Terrace Downs [Canterbury], Arrowtown Golf Club [Arrowtown], Jacks Point [Queenstown], and Millbrook Resort [Queenstown].

Cape Kidnappers

The golf course at Cape Kidnappers, designed by legendary golf course architect Tom Doak, is a previous winner of  the Golf Resort of the Year – Rest of the World award (2013) at the International Golf Travel Market, a convention of 600 golf tourism suppliers, 350 buyers and 100 members of the international press who named it the best golf resort in the world outside Europe and North America.

The resort has a history of such prestige: it's previously been rated the world’s best course by Britain’s Daily Telegraph newspaper and was listed fourth in the world by Golf Magazine, and appears regularly on lists of the best courses in the world. It’s hard to disagree with all the plaudits – set on a clifftop, the course is not only amazingly scenic but also highly challenging, with severe bunkers and complex greens. 

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  • Cape Kidnappers

Wall Stories

Wall Stories

Like your art on a grand scale? Christchurch’s inner city has become one of the world’s best canvases for street art, the legacy of several internationally successful Spectrum Street Art Festivals.

While the annual festival wrapped up in 2016, the epic artwork gracing the city’s walls continues to delight. Pulling a positive out of the dramatic transformation of the city landscape forced onto it by the earthquakes, the resulting large-scale art abundance has made the city itself an über outdoor art gallery crammed with numerous photo ops.

You won’t go far in Christchurch before coming across some of Wongi Wilson’s artwork (below) – the Christchurch-based graffiti/street artist has painted hundreds of pieces all over the city. Based in the suburb of Sydenham where he grew up, Wongi has played a major part in Christchurch’s post-quake street art boom, with his work as both an exhibiting and commissioned artist popping up on interior and exterior walls around the city as well as such institutions as Canterbury Museum and CoCA Gallery. Using the old-skool spray can, Wongi mixes styles from photo realism to traditional street art/graffiti styles, resulting in colourful, spectacular and visually arresting pieces that leap off the wall.

Look out too for the spectacular word picture ‘I always knew you would come back’ (pictured top) by Sydney-based contemporary Australian artist Numskull at the corner of Colombo and Tuam streets. The phrase was the winning entry in a competition that set out to capture the way Christchurch people felt about their city. Winner Hannah Herchenbach, who beat out over 400 other entries, has described her immortalised phrase as “a bit of romance in the rubble”, and the inspiring, open-to-interpretation words and the spectacular visual treatment they have received have become a favourite with locals.

As the rebuild continues many are being hidden or are less obvious, so it pays to keep an eye out and your camera handy!

Looking for the highlights reel? There's too many to mention here, but three more to definitely check out are Tilt’s ‘Teeth Mural’ (pictured above, 50 Victoria Street, opposite the Christchurch Casino), Flox’s ‘Kiwi Jungle’ (41 Welles), Owen Dippie’s ‘Ballerina’ (at the back of the Isaac Theatre Royal, visible, though mostly obscured, from Armagh Street).

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  • No place like home by Flox | Photo: Casey Horner

The 2018 New Zealand Cuisine Good Food Awards' top 100 restaurants

The 2018 New Zealand Cuisine Good Food Awards' top 100 restaurants

The only nationwide restaurant awards programme of its kind, the New Zealand Cuisine Good Food Awards identify and celebrate the very best dining experiences the country has to offer each year.

The restaurants that made it into Cuisine’s top 100 for 2018 will be celebrating the coveted accolade of being included in the annual Cuisine Good Food Guide.

At the October 2018 awards night, Auckland restaurant Cocoro took the top accolade as Vittoria Coffee Restaurant of the Year, with chef and co-owner Makoto Tokuyama being fêted for his sophisticated and inspiring Japanese food. Famed for using only the freshest sustainable seafood, the restaurant also earned three coveted hats.

“This team gets our highest honour in 2018,” said Kerry Tyack, lead assessor of the Cuisine Good Food Awards 2018. “With it comes our respect and our appreciation for a job being done quietly yet superbly.”

Santa Vittoria Chef of the Year Giulio Sturla was lauded for his skill balancing intense flavours that truly respect premium ingredients. “Giulio has so many layers to his work. Through his authentic and clever food,  through his mentoring and continuous support of his team, through the telling of the New Zealand food story within his organisation Eat New Zealand and through his never-ending push to learn and to teach and to be excellent. We are so proud to be able to shine a well-deserved light on Giulio Sturla this year.”

With competition for the top awards being so intense, it’s remarkable that one chef should take out two of the major gongs. The ingenuity and sheer imagination of Vaughan Mabee of Amisfield Bistro was recognised for the second year running with the Ōra King Salmon Innovation Award, and his dish, The Paua Pie, won the Whitestone Cheese Best NZ Dish.

Also demonstrating a wide-ranging talent, two of Auckland chef’s Sid Sahrawat’s stable of restaurants were awarded two hats this year, with Cassia winning the Best Metropolitan Restaurant.

Not only applauding the newest, hottest spots, Wellington’s abiding favourite fine-diner Logan Brown was applauded, winning the Pead PR New Zealand Long-Term Player award for their commitment to consistently serving up elegance and pure class.

At the other end of the longevity spectrum the spotlight turned on up-and-coming chef Monique Fiso, about to launch her restaurant Hiakai, which celebrates Māori cuisine and indigenous ingredients.

“Transcending trends while remaining the hallmark of success are the twin features of quality and consistency. Our hat and category winners this year deliver both. They have shown a sure-footedness, a confidence that survives and grows without need of gimmicks or extreme positioning,” Kerry Tyack said.

The theme of ‘Pure and Premium New Zealand’ carried throughout the night, from the food by Lizzie Pearson of Urban Gourmet to the sheer array of Kiwi talent that gathered to hear the likes of Auckland’s Cassia, Gemmayze St and Depot and Hamilton’s Palate restaurants take out well-deserved awards. Also gathering major accolades were Elephant Hill in Hawke’s Bay and Wellington’s Noble Rot and Charley Noble.

Wellington restaurants took three of the top honours and five went to Auckland, with the rest going to teams in Hamilton, Hawke’s Bay, Canterbury and Central Otago.

More information can be found at: cuisine.co.nz/good-food-awards

THE TOP 100 FOR 2018

AUCKLAND

  1. Amano
  2. Antoines
  3. Apero
  4. Azabu
  5. Baduzzi
  6. Bracu
  7. Cassia
  8. Cazador
  9. Cibo
  10. Clooney
  11. Coco’s Cantina
  12. Cocoro
  13. Cotto
  14. Culprit
  15. Depot
  16. Euro
  17. Federal Delicatessen
  18. Gemmayze St
  19. Gusto at the Grand
  20. Harbourside
  21. Hugo’s Bistro
  22. Kazuya
  23. Lillius
  24. Masu by Nic Watt
  25. O’Connell St Bistro
  26. Orphans Kitchen
  27. Ortolana
  28. Pasta & Cuore
  29. Pasture
  30. Ponsonby Road Bistro
  31. Prego
  32. Satya Chai Lounge
  33. Sid at The French Cafe
  34. Sidart
  35. Soul Bar & Bistrot
  36. The Engine Room
  37. The Grill by Sean Connolly
  38. The Grove
  39. The Hunting Lodge
  40. The Sugar Club
  41. White + Wong’s – Auckland

WAIHEKE ISLAND

  1. The Shed at Te Motu

HAMILTON

  1. Chim Choo Ree
  2. Hayes Common
  3. Palate

TAUPO

  1. The Bistro

HAWKE’S BAY

  1. Bistronomy
  2. Black Barn Bistro
  3. Elephant Hill
  4. Pacifica
  5. Te Awa Winery Restaurant
  6. Craggy Range Restaurant

MARTINBOROUGH

  1. Pinocchio
  2. Union Square

NEW PLYMOUTH

  1. Social Kitchen

MANAWATU

  1. Amayjen

WELLINGTON

  1. Boulcott St Bistro
  2. Capitol
  3. Chameleon
  4. Charley Noble
  5. Egmont St Eatery
  6. Field and Green
  7. Havana Bar
  8. Hillside
  9. Hippopotamus
  10. Logan Brown
  11. Loretta
  12. Monte Cervino
  13. Noble Rot
  14. Oikos Hellenic Cuisine
  15. Ortega
  16. Pravda
  17. Rita
  18. Salty Pidgin
  19. Shepherd
  20. Tinakori Bistro
  21. WBC
  22. Whitebait

NELSON

  1. Hopgood’s Restaurant
  2. Urban Oyster Bar & Eatery

MARLBOROUGH

  1. Arbour

CANTERBURY

  1. Twenty Seven Steps
  2. Black Estate
  3. Chillingworth Road
  4. Gatherings
  5. Inati
  6. Pegasus Bay
  7. Pescatore
  8. Roots

NORTH OTAGO

  1. Riverstone Kitchen
  2. Fleurs Place

CENTRAL OTAGO

  1. Amisfield Bistro
  2. Bistro Gentil
  3. Botswana Butchery
  4. Fishbone
  5. Kika
  6. Ode Conscious Dining
  7. Rata
  8. Sherwood

DUNEDIN

  1. Bracken

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  • Vittoria Coffee Restaurant of the Year - COCORO

Action & adventure

Action & adventure

If you’re looking for action and adventure, then you’ve definitely come to the right place! New Zealand boasts a selection of white-knuckle adventures for all ages and experience levels.

Any adrenaline-pumping itinerary has to include the adventure capital of Queenstown. Famous for bungy jumping, jet boating, heli skiing and much more, Queenstown makes your wildest dreams come true. On the West Coast, try glacier climbing, and in Rotorua have a go at globe riding and mountain biking. In the Waikato’s Waitomo Caves, cave systems and underground rivers are waiting to be explored, while white-water rafting will get your heart racing in Tongariro National Park. Taking to the hiking trail is, of course, an iconic New Zealand adventure. Fiordland National Park is home to some of the most well-known multi-day walks, but there are numerous other hiking trails around the country. And there’s no need to come down from your adrenaline rush as you travel from one adventure hot-spot to the next. Rent a motorcycle for the ultimate road trip or book a 4WD to get off the beaten track along the way! For overnight stays, choose a self-contained holiday apartment with plenty of room for all your gear, rent a camper, or try wilderness camping for maximum adventure.

 

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  • Jumping off NZ's tallest building | Photo: Mark Downey, Tourism New Zealand

Family Trips

Family Trips

New Zealand is a great place for a family adventure. Pack everyone up into the car, or fly to a new destination and pick up a rental.

Family-friendly accommodation

Self-contained motels or apartments (with kitchen and laundry facilities), camping grounds and holiday parks are all excellent options for families. Many of the holiday parks dotted around the country have great playgrounds for kids.

Once the practicalities are sorted, it’s all about fun for the family – fortunately many of New Zealand’s iconic activities are suitable for all ages.

Family activities

Animal encounters rank highly among the young ones, whether it’s horse trekking, a visit to a zoo, or farm-stay activities. Auckland Zoo is a great visit for all ages, kids will love trying to spot tuatara and playful kaka in Zealandia in Wellington, and Orana Park open range zoo is a highlight for any Christchurch visitor. Adventure and theme parks are popular, and so are beach visits and water activities like boating and kayaking. Kids will love some of the country’s best adrenaline activities, like luges and zorbs in Rotorua.

Rainy day activities

On rainy days take your pick from myriad museums and kid-friendly educational attractions, like Te Papa in Wellington or Puzzling World in Wanaka. With interactive displays and science attractions, touch-tanks, hands-on exhibits and museum activities for kids, boredom is out of the question – guaranteed!

All Aboard the TranzAlpine

All Aboard the TranzAlpine

Forget the Trans-Siberian train journey: book yourself a ticket to ride on New Zealand’s TranzAlpine! Regarded as one of the world's greatest scenic rail journeys, the TranzAlpine train operates daily between Christchurch and Greymouth, transporting passengers from one coast of the country to the other. Some use it as a fast and convenient mode of travel; others simply come along for the beautiful ride.

While travelling on an anti-clockwise circuit of the South Island, I arrived into Christchurch and, saddened that I was almost at the end of my tour, decided to return to the West Coast to do it all over again! Instead of heading north up to Kaikoura as my bus tour dictated, I decided to book myself on the TranzAlpine train and instead, head west back to Greymouth.

Hopping on-board at 8am, ticket in hand, I checked my seat number and found my location for the next four and a half hours. With my copy of the local paper in one hand and a strong coffee in the other, I happily sat gazing between the news and the sights out of the window as we pulled away from the station. It wasn't long before I put the paper down altogether however, as no amount of exciting world news was going to divert my eyes from the Canterbury Plains, gorges and the beautiful clear turquoise-coloured waters of the Waimakariri River. From here, I was treated to a journey through the Southern Alps mountain range, where the great outdoors transformed from clear skis to a cloud of thick fog. Out on the open-air viewing deck, I was fortunate to snap some fabulous mystic photographs, each with an eerie backdrop. Rather than camouflaging the views, the fog simply added to the atmosphere and beauty.

Chugging along a little further, the fog seemed to disappear almost as fast as it had arrived, revealing the stunning beech-forested river valley, giving way to Arthur's Pass National Park. After a quick stop at Arthur's Pass itself (a small village), the train then entered the longest tunnel of the journey, the 8.5km Otira, burrowing under mountains to the West Coast. Once through the tunnel, the views were again incredible, passing the Otira, Taramakau and Grey River valleys as well as Lake Brunner, before finally arriving on the West Coast, into the town of Greymouth, around 12.45pm.

While this was sadly the end of the journey for me, many other passengers on board simply used the stop in Greymouth as an opportunity to grab a bite to eat and stretch their legs. An hour later, as I was checking in to my hostel, they were jumping straight back on that same loyal train and returning to Christchurch that same evening.

After a 223.8km journey, meandering through 16 tunnels, over five viaducts and enjoying a delicious afternoon tea of scones, clotted cream and Earl Grey tea with a fellow passenger, I was finally back at the start of my trail and ready to start my adventures around the South Island all over again.

The TranzAlpine train journey offers an opportunity to sit back, relax and soak up some of New Zealand's most spectacular scenery, all from the comfort of your window seat. For more information on the TranzAlpine train, see the TranzAlpine website.

Jeff Wells

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  • The TranzAlpine crossing the Bealy River | Photo: KiwiRail