Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas

Alice Wong doesn’t want to take up a whole lot of space. Instead, she wants to create it. And for the better part of the last decade, she has.
“I’m very mindful of making sure that I don’t take up that much space — that it’s not just about me, me, me,” the 47-year-old disability activist told HuffPost. “I really want... See more
instagram.comNearly 4 decades ago the Wah Luck House was built on 6th and H Street NW in DC, now it houses the majority of the Chinese and Chinese American population still remaining in Chinatown. 75% of its residents are seniors and all are low-income who rely on the section 8 housing voucher program for affordable rent. Many live alone with newer generations... See more
instagram.comCollection iii - Pomelo
Model @jinghanjane @xdirectn
Hair @masayoshi_n_fujita
Make Up @meekee_s
Styling @mjollyu76215
Photo @jannyyip
‘Pomelo’ is a project inspired by a 1930s Chinese women’s magazine Linglong 玲瓏雜誌. A weekly... See more
instagram.com
Up-and-coming actor Jillian Nguyen’s (@girlandthemoon) career is turning with the tide when it comes to diversity within the entertainment industry. And as the star of ABC’s show Barons (airing April 24) says to @genquigley in this week’s @sundaylifeau, she’s more than happy to go with the flow.
Set in 1971 Australia,... See more
instagram.comAt 91, Frances Ito packs her schedule with gardening, online tai chi, weekly jam sessions with other musicians, art projects, Bible class via Zoom, volunteering at her church, exercising and moviemaking, which she took up in her late 70s. During the pandemic, Ito discovered the joy of reading, and she finished 20 books (“biographies, nonfiction and... See more
Jeanne Dorin McDowell • Celebrating What's Right With Aging: Inside the Minds of Super Agers
Splitting Hairs
Chinese Immigrants, the Queue, and the Boundaries of Political Citizenship
By Sarah Gold McBride
Chinese Immigrants, the Queue, and the Boundaries of Political Citizenship
By Sarah Gold McBride
Splitting Hairs: Chinese Immigrants, the Queue, and the Boundaries of Political Citizenship
As ambassadors of aloha, Hawaiian women have been susceptible to the eroticization of their bodies and the insistent commodification of their aloha.
Adria L. Imada • Aloha America: Hula Circuits through the U.S. Empire
To make myself, and by proxy other Asian Americans, more human and a little more relevant to American culture.







