Low Budget Sleeper by Charlene Wang de Chen

Our low-budget take on the Sleepers aesthetic

Our low-budget take on the Sleepers aesthetic

In episode 4 of High Maintenance Season 3 on HBO, we had a set that was meant to be a set dressed into a homeowner’s home on a fictional filming crew’s set. (yes, very meta.)

We needed something that quickly read as drastically different than an ordinary residence’s furnishings so our designer Tommaso came up with the creative idea of doing a sleek futuristic look based on Sleeper to create a high contrast with the existing home.

the original inspiration from the set of “Sleeper”

the original inspiration from the set of “Sleeper”

The existing room we were working with looked like this:

BEFORE

BEFORE

AFTER with just some white linoleum, plexi glass, light boxes, table and chair set plus plants

AFTER with just some white linoleum, plexi glass, light boxes, table and chair set plus plants

For a set you see maybe for 2 seconds on screen and the reason it is there is not entirely readily apparent if you are just watching the show without knowing the script. The idea is that the homeowner is answering the door to let some set dressers in to put the finishing touches on the set.

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Mother-in-Law's Brainscan as Art by Charlene Wang de Chen

On the window above the taped “HELP” is the brainscan also taped to the window.

On the window above the taped “HELP” is the brainscan also taped to the window.

In episode 2, in Season 3 of High Maintenance on HBO one of the characters is Darby who among other hustles she has going on around town, steals items from our corporate office job to resell on Craigslist. If you look closely, the items laying around her apartment ready to sell match items in her office.

We wanted to flesh out her character as a strange, dark, and creative woman with many little art projects in and around her apartment.

On the desk are many little art projects we created as we imagined Darby would have started

On the desk are many little art projects we created as we imagined Darby would have started

After gathering a bunch of elements to put together these aspects of her character, we still needed somethings that were off-kilter and a bit off.

So I searched around my own apartment for things that might add to this part of Darby’s character and then I saw my mother-in-law’s brainscan and was like hmmm this could work. And it ended up being a star.

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High Maintenance Season 3 Premiere by Charlene Wang de Chen

High Maintenance’s Season 3 Premiere airs tonight on HBO.

On set in one of the sets from tonight’s episode.

On set in one of the sets from tonight’s episode.

This set is supposed to be the home of a 1970’s hippie and the script called for “anti-establishment vibes, his home is a shrine to 60s and 70s counterculture, instruments from around the globe and protest signs from the distant and not so distant past”…

Seeing as we are very low budget and getting clearance on the more famous music activism images is challenging, we were pretty much relegated to what I could find on Library of Congress images. We were filling the house with these posters and images so I had a ton of things that were good, but I still hadn’t found the right music concert that typified that era yet.

I was searching and searching trying my best to come up with something that really represented that era to this character, thinking of all the activist musicians of that era I could think of. Often I would search and no good images, or just black and white photos of them would come back. And then I had a moment of inspiration when I thought about searching for “Joan Baez.”

And no joke, one of the best moments in my relationships with Library of Congress images appeared after that search when I came across this.

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Exactly what the script called for, the total kind of concert our character Berg would have been at, but most of all: the aesthetic and fonts of this poster were just perfect.

It is the little triumphs that can make you ecstatic.

Designer Bags on Canal Street by Charlene Wang de Chen

Worked on a pilot last year at this time about the high fashion world and just remembered this hilarious experience shopping for designer bags. I felt conflicted about posting this or not when it happened, because of the legality of buying imitation designer bags, but since the pilot hasn’t aired yet, feels like it is fine.

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Had the funnest and funniest peak Chinatown Canal St experience.

I needed to find eight or so different purses in the manner of the hottest luxury designer bags for a set I’m working on. Buying them was out of the question, even renting the real thing was out of the question budget wise (it is like $500 each to rent a real designer bag!), and no brands wanted to product place with this pilot.

So I walked to the intersection of Canal and Centre St and approached two middle aged ladies loitering at the corner. I asked them if I could buy purses and they gave me a nod of “yeah we got that.”

They asked me what kind and I showed them some reference photos—looking at the photos they were like oh those are the latest styles we don’t have those yet.

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So then we switched to Chinese and they asked me if I wanted “A” level purses the kinds that are super good almost indistinguishable knock offs that are $300-$500 each. I said nah I just need regular quality that will look convincing in the background.

So one lady Ms. Ye took me a block or two away to another young woman who I showed the photos I brought. She said they didn’t have that and then quickly darted away to surreptitiously finish another transaction 20 feet away.

Ms. Ye was getting annoyed with me and asked me how many I needed. And I tried to explain in more detail what I needed and she brought me across the street to another guy Mr. Hai standing in Canal St who started showing me photos on his phone.

Mr. Hai. He knew what was up he got what I was looking for and we browsed the catalog of bags he had on his phone and chose 8. The whole time Ms. Ye is standing a few feet away as the look out.

I’ve been on the street the whole time.

We are getting close to closing the deal but I want to send photos of the photos to my boss for approval, so all three of us walk two blocks up away from canal behind some phone booths so I can use my phone to take photos of his photos.

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Boss likes them we are good to go, I go get my car and pull up to near the warehouse door and then I realize oh no I need more cash.

These are Chinese entrepreneurs—they don’t mess around so Mr. Hai offers to sit in my car for me since I’m illegally parked while Ms. Ye offers to escort me to the closest Bank of America. We all trust each other somewhat now after spending the last 20+ min working out this deal together so ok sure. We get that done. Ms. Ye walks me to the bank and waits outside.

She’s from Wenzhou and she’s going back in 20 days to visit her 80+ year old parents for Chinese New Yesr. Mr. Hai is from Hangzhou. She told me there is a new police person on counterfeit bags duty and not everyone knows what he looks like but word on the street is he already made his rounds for the day.

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We head back, I get inside the car Mr. Hai gets the bags, brings them to the car sits in the passenger seat and we look over the merchandise together. Looks great! Like really impressive for the price. I give him the cash, we work on the receipt I need to turn in, and we become Wechat friends then he gets out the car and leaves.

You guys I loved every minute of it.

High Maintenance Season 3 Wrap by Charlene Wang de Chen

Season 3 Art Department with our “Just Ask Jackie” shirts I made for everyone at the wrap party

Season 3 Art Department with our “Just Ask Jackie” shirts I made for everyone at the wrap party

We made it! I finished decorating my first whole season of a TV show HBO’s High Maintenance.

As a wrap gift I made “Just Ask Jackie” shirts for the Art Dept because our Art Coordinator Jackie Gonclaves was a phenomenon. She was the most on-top of it, unwaveringly calm, somehow omniscient, and always two steps ahead person I’ve ever worked with.

A common refrain for all of us whenever trying to solve a problem or not knowing an answer was “just ask Jackie” so I felt we needed a shirt as a tribute to how much we all treasured her.

Heat Advisory in a Junkyard by Charlene Wang de Chen

Some days you are dressing a set in a historic mansion, a five star hotel in a penthouse suite, and some days you are outside in a literal junkyard all day.

Leadman Deon Philipps literally jumping out of a dumpster

Leadman Deon Philipps literally jumping out of a dumpster

I was so grateful to our set dressing crew for really rallying for a long day under the sun in heat advisory (HEAT ADVISORY!) weather to put together this unconventional and creative set. Shooting crew was filming in there overnight.

I was so grateful to our set dressing crew for really rallying for a long day under the sun in heat advisory (HEAT ADVISORY!) weather to put together this unconventional and creative set. Shooting crew was filming in there overnight.

Not going to lie, it was a really tough day for me. But this was a real highlight that gave me faith in humanity:

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At lunch I walked to the nearby deli but wasn’t feeling it.

Remembering that I saw some Chinese workers eating a rice dish at the warehouse down the street I walked over and asked them where they got that Chinese food (we were in deep industrial Ridgewood where cinematic junkyards still exist in NYC.)

They told me the warehouse provides lunch to them but if I walked a couple of blocks there was a Chinese place. I was about to start walking when the lady of the group said to one of the truck drivers “you want her to walk blocks in this weather?”

And she rushed inside and gave me two boxes of the homemade food she made for everyone’s lunch at the warehouse. We chit chatted about 老家 and the 麻烦 when filming is on your street and then I walked back to the junkyard to eat lunch.

The food was so good and I felt so grateful I totally forgot how utterly disgusting it is that I ate lunch outside in a toxic junkyard. I went back to the warehouse with some oranges from crafty to say thank you. Best pay off of learning Chinese to date.