The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, April 10, 2014 - 3B The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, April 10, 2014 - 3B SHEI From Page 1B Invariably, once every semester or so, a series of high- quality pictures of my more well dressed acquaintances lands on the front page of my Facebook feed. They're at one of those parties I hear about but never get invited to, the kind with a professional photographer taking pictures at the front door. The backdrop of these pictures is always the same - the ubiquitous white, logo-emblazoned curtain, present at every award show and film premiere - but, unlike all the others, this curtain only has one name: SHEI Magazine. These pictures are, as it turns out, from SHEI's semiannual launch parties, celebrating the publication of its print magazine at the end of each semester. I am also not the first person to be impressed by the professionalism of the events and the magazine behind them, as one of SHEI's two fashion editors, Art& Design senior Tara Ellis, pointed out. "The second I tell people that it's all student-run, they're like 'What?,'"she said. Their incredulity is understandable. SHEI Magazine is, for all intents and purposes, a professional fashion magazine - 85 pages of high-quality, glossy pages featuring seven different photo shoots and upwards of 15 articles tied around a single theme unique to each issue. It's the product of three-and-a-half months of work, done by a staff of around 150 writers, designers, photographers, models and managers. Unlike a professional fashion magazine, however, SHEI's employees aren't working a nine to five job. They're putting in those hoursafter going to classes, clubs, sports and meetings. "It's all students," said LSA junior Anna Fuller, SHEI's brandingdirector."Theonething that I usually say about SHEI is that it's run completely by the students. The photographers, the models, the writers, the directors, everything is students. Everyone but the printers.' That's something that we really pride ourselves on - that it's all student-run." The Inner Workings of SHEI four teams working under the creative director. "The creative director oversees the photo teams, the fashion team, the literary features team and the design team," Corrigan said. "Each of those teams then has one or two editors who organize the work they do, and the teams range anywhere from 10 members to, I think we have around 60 on the fashion team." Needless to say, this is a complex operation. A complicated organization made all the more convoluted by the fact that SHEI doesn't have a central office. "We currently have a room upstairs in the Union, but it's more of a storage space than a place that we meet to do things," Corrigan said "We have that room and then we have a standing reservation in the undergraduate library for our board meetings." As SHEI's editors are quick to point out, the lack of a central meeting space requires a great deal of flexibility and communication to keep things running smoothly and to builda sense of community among the staff. "We're pretty good at (working around that problem)," said LSA senior Tanika Raychaudhuri, one of SHEI's literary feature editors. "I guess one thing is that we have a lot of small communities within SHEI. For example, the lit team, we have our meetings in a certain location and we've always had them there and everyone goes. We do bonding activities as a team and bonding activities as a board." But, unsurprisingly, the amount of work necessary to keep the magazine's production on schedule while putting together runway shows and maintaining relationships with retailers in the community is daunting. "We spend 20 to 30 hours a week working on SHEI-related activities by the time you coordinate models, coordinate our 55 team members and run the meetings," said Lexie Miedema, LSA junior and co-fashion editor. "When we do photo shoots, that's our entire Saturday - pick up the models, bring themto hair and makeup, communicating with stores, organizing clothing, going to fittings, organizing photographers to make sure that they're on the same page as us, sHEI SHEI sponsors an annual student-run fashion show. As SHEI's editor in chief, LSA talking to the design editors to' senior Shae Corrigan, explained, make sure they're on the same the magazine's current success is page as us, communicating with the cumulative product of years each other to make sure we're of work by its student staff, and on the same page. It's seven during that time the magazine different photo shoots each has undergone significant semester and there's always an rebranding. event comingup." "We were founded in 1999 as an Asian culture magazine - A Global Fashion Magazine which is where the name comes inAnn Arbor from - it means 'whom' in one of the Chinese dialects," Corrigan SHEI is built on its student said. "So somewhere along the staff, but, like any other fashion way it kind of evolved, in that magazine, it runs on clothing. the staff and the interest in it as Ensuring the clothes keep exclusively Asian culture kind of coming takes up the majority of fell by the wayside." Brand Director Anna Fuller's After shifting its focus, SHEI work. expanded into a general pop Fuller serves as the liaison culture magazine with a focus between SHEI and the Ann on fashion. SHEI's website went Arbor fashion community, live in 2001, and in the years setting up partnerships with since then the publication has local retailers, designers and increased its presence both salons. Some of the most online and on the ground in Ann successful collaborations have Arbor through its fashion shows, been with the stores closest to retailer profiles and, of course, campus. magazine launch parties. "One of the things we have "InthepastfouryearsthatI've done in the last three years is been with SHEI and particularly we've partnered with the State in the last year we've picked up Street Organization and done more emphasis on developing a State Street fashion show SHEI as a resource for students towards the beginning of the who are interested in fashion year in the fall," Fuller said. "So and for people in the Ann Arbor that involves all of the stores community," Corrigan said. in the State Street Association, "We've put more emphasis on from M Den to Renaissance to community involvement, setting Van Boven, Pitaya, basically all up shows and fostering that of the stores on that strip." kind of relationship between the These arrangements are stores here and the students on mutually beneficial and have campus." helped to cement SHEI as a The 150 students that make leading voice in the Ann Arbor up SHEI's staff are led by an fashion scene. executive board made up of "We've been lucky enough the editor in chief, branding over the years to establish director, business director and contacts with (retailers in Ann creative director. The board is Arbor)," said Art and Design responsible for the magazine's senior, Fashion Editor Tara Ellis, administrative functions - "so they've come to know SHEI lining up funding, managing as a presence on campus and a SHEI's relationships with the lot of the stores are really great University, local businesses, and really eager and willing to charities and corporate work with us, which has been sponsors, and making the final wonderful. They send us their decisions on each issue's theme. clothes, whether for a photo But the majority of the staff shoot or a fashion show, and then and the work of assembling the we return them and, yeah, it's a magazine's content fall into the nice little deal. They get some advertisement and we get to display their clothing." SHEI's charity fashion shows have also helped to expand its presence in Ann Arbor. The magazine has worked with several charities, and last year the staff partnered with Merit on South University, which donates 20 percent of its profits to fund scholarships for Detroit students. "We did a success issue as our theme a couple of years ago, and David Meiritt was one of the people that we profiled," Corrigan said. "He told us about his line, it was in its nascent form them. We went in and talked to them, he was a University alum, he has a history with SHEI, so it just seemed like a perfect fit. He has a charity that goes along with it, so it was just the clothes, the organization, just doing something fashionable and passing the money along." Though the Ann Arbor community is essential to SHEI's work on the ground and its runway shows, its executive board doesn't view it as an Ann Arbor fashion magazine. "Even in brainstorming what we wanted our tagline to be, we kind of debated whether to tailor it directly to the University of Michigan or keep it separate," Fuller said. "I look at us as a global fashion magazine. We're very proud of Ann Arbor and the University of Michigan, but it's not our defining factor, I would say." "The slogan we came up with this past fall is 'Flipping pages, turning heads,"' Corrigan said. "It starts with the actual product, the magazine. And then with 'turning heads,' we want to get people's attention for new fashion trends, articles and concepts - our content, we really want to draw people's attention to that." Pride in the Product For an individual member of a large organization, it's easy to feel like just another spoke in the wheel - you get caught up in your day-to-day routine, focus on the task at hand and lose sight of where it's all headed. At SHEI, however, that feeling of malaise is countered by the magazine's ability to provide an inclusive community for its members. "We really want to be a resource for students on campus who are interested in fashion and the publication world," Corrigan said. "It's for people who are interested in fashion and culture and self-expression as an industry and as a creative outlet, and just helping them develop the skills and interests that brought them to us in the first place." "I really like to say and let people know that there's a place for everyone at SHEI, and no matter what your interest is you can contribute to the magazine in some way," Fuller added. But, ultimately, SHEI's staff is driven by their pride in the product and the organization as a whole embodied in the physical magazine. "I think it's really wonderful to have everybody working so hard, almost individually, but then to have the team meetings and really see that everyone's on the same page," Ellis said. "But just everyone's combined efforts over a semester-long period ... it doesn't seem like it's going to ever actually happen, that we're going to actually have a SHE[ SHEI runs on clothing donations from Ann Arbor's fashion community. magazine, but then it just comes together and it's really beautiful S HUSSFTHEATRE to see all of the teams' efforts UNIVFRSITYFMICHIGAN and energy come together into this final product." The magazine is a trophy to " and show potential employers - a former editor in chief reportedly brought it to an interview for GQ and was offered a position on the spot. The magazine is a testament both to the months of work needed to produce it and to the personal growth of each person on the staff. "I've still got the first magazine that I had an article" ., in. I can look through it and see my writing, the layout and look all of the shoots that we had, and then I can look at our current issue and see a real progression in terms of the magazine itself and certainly my own growth," Corrigan said. But, above all, the magazine is a monument: the physical embodiment of a moment in time and a rallying point for the community that built it. "What I love about SHEI is working with a really good An edyp yb team of people and making a Dept. Theatre lot of lifelong friendships," said Directed Linda Raychaudhuri. "Just knowing that everybody is putting their r 1 1 2 full energy into a product G A $ because they really love to do it and not for any other reason." Le uTke ff No wonder they throw so F R MATURE A 1 many parties.