Zine resurrection
Aloha Friday / Remember when you could touch a photograph? Aloha Friday is photographer Grady Gillan’s debut zine of sun-kissed black-and-white imagery shot on 35-mm film–instant nostalgia at your fingertips. Whatever the snapshot–grainy palm trees, hiking 20-somethings, a masked tiger clutching American Spirits–Gillan’s sensibility for pure and timeless fun is what unites them all in this charming, tangible format.
“I think [zines] are a little bit of a lost art,” Gillan says. “Blogs, and Tumblr especially, are the zines of today, but they’ll never replace a stapled stack of photocopies.”
In today’s digital age documented weekends pop up on Facebook newsfeeds instantaneously, making it hard to even reminisce properly. So, it’s rewarding to flipping through Gillan’s most recent project. Inspired by vintage party photography (which he chronicles on his site [keggersofyore.com]), Gillan pulls from the simple spirit of friends kicking back and hanging out.
“Hawaii is a beautiful place filled with beautiful people,” Gillan says, “so you’ve got a great head start the minute you start taking pictures. My favorite subjects are my friends or people I’ve just met. I’ve found I take better pictures when I’m having fun–just living my life and having a good time, but I have a camera in my hand too. For me, the best photos make you think about what was going on when it was taken, whether it only takes a second or two to figure out or if it’s impossible to ever know.”
The result is just that. Thirty-five pages that unfold as an of-the-moment narrative that’s both immediate and timeless, ambiguous and familiar, thoughtless and memorable, all shot with a breezy stolidity that remains true to the zine’s slice-of-life namesake.
“When you come to Hawaii from some place else, Friday rolls around and everyone’s wishing each other a ‘Happy Aloha Friday’ and you keep wondering what makes it different from a regular Friday,” Grady recalls upon moving to Oahu from Chicago four years ago. “Pretty soon you realize that every Friday is ‘Aloha Friday’–it doesn’t really mean anything. I know there’s this history with Casual Fridays and aloha shirts, but I just like the idea, the simple act of deciding that something is special is enough to make it special.”







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