We make commodities and multiples, and can share them with people, and they can incorporate them into their own lives, which, to us, is a driving force. This social trading model was an amazing way for us to be young entrepreneurs without start-up capital. | | Boy Scouts of America backpacks. Left: No. 573 Haversack c.1950s. Right: No. 574 Yucca Pack, c.1970s. (davidd/Flickr) | | | | “We make commodities and multiples, and can share them with people, and they can incorporate them into their own lives, which, to us, is a driving force. This social trading model was an amazing way for us to be young entrepreneurs without start-up capital.” |
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| rantnrave:// Fashion discourse has turned to realism this year. Or rather, a reconfigured cultural conception of what “real” even is. One thing that’s too real is the way the production of clothes is trying to keep up with their representation in media. The social feed definitely comes with cognitive consequences, but there are other factors at work here. A styled image of a t-shirt can be arresting on screen, but that doesn't change whether or not a thing's poorly made. Until companies can figure out how to sell the representation of garments (AR/VR?) instead of the garments themselves, their lack of appreciation for what actually goes on bodies is disconcerting... I doubt many companies want you to see a quality index of their goods over time as they scale up, but is the only answer actually making AMERICA 1953 again?... The final segment of RICHIE SIEGEL's Scale Series is a great read. He points out a much-needed factor to consider when operating fashion and apparel businesses: know what your scale should be. A brand like NOAH isn't about to IPO, and for good reason... WWD checks in with streetwear brands like FUBU, PHAT FARM, and ROCAWEAR to gauge just where they find their businesses today, amidst a cultural wave of emulating styles they helped define 20–30 years ago. I had to chuckle at the business advice: "you can't connect with teenagers because you're 50," which isn't always true. See: the rise of dad style... T MAGAZINE debuted The Breakdown, in which editors itemize a single runway look. It debuted with one half of look #3 from MIU MIU Resort 2017. It would be cool if they’d push this to construction, textile, and trims. Along with an exploded, 3D rendered virtual view from a company like OPTITEX. Push transparency to a whole new level... You'll have to check resale markets for the latest VETEMENTS collab, because it's gone already... ICYMI, YEEZY cleats. | | - HK Mindy Meissen, curator |
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| Over the last five years, Mike Eckhaus and Zoe Latta have transformed their art school angst into one of America’s most exciting fashion labels. | |
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Even with streetwear references from the Nineties and early Aughts trending at retail, most urban streetwear brands have yet to capitalize on the moment. | |
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Everything old is new again. | |
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From the March 10, 1991 edition of the Washington Post: "Once associated with games of youth, sneakers have become a cultural phenomenon, promoted by millionaire athletes and bought by fashion-conscious Americans who last year spent $11.7 billion on 393 million pairs of brand-name athletic shoes." | |
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Tracing the evolution of the Gunne Sax prairie dress, from saccharine to stylish. | |
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For the first time, Johannes Leonardo creative director Ferdinando Verderi talks about the strategy behind the New York Fashion Week launch. | |
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If President-elect Donald J. Trump makes good on the promise of punishing overseas companies, he will take aim at his own brand, and his daughter’s as well. | |
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It is axiomatic that if someone is sufficiently eager to disbelieve something, there is no Everest of evidence too large to be ignored. This explains today's revival of protectionism, which is a plan to make America great again by making it 1953 again. | |
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It’s worth talking about the idea of scale itself: that itch that many founders and designers feel to keep getting bigger and bigger. | |
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NYPD to maintain enhanced security perimeter protecting the president-elect, while allowing limited vehicle access. | |
| Todd Snyder, a salad bar of clothing and lifestyle accessories, opens in Madison Square. | |
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The designer is trying to stay ahead with features like smart mirrors and self-checkout. | |
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Retailers that advertise sale prices in comparison with regular prices in California should ensure that the products were actually offered for purchase at those regular prices within the preceding three months, in order to avoid potential litigation. | |
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This week we’re highlighting the best of the best of 2016 from across our Unzipped coverage, featuring everything from some of our biggest product launches to the notable ways we’ve given back this year. There are collections and then there are archival treasure troves. | |
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The fashion press calls Gosha Rubchinskiy, Demna Gvasalia and Lotta Volkova's work the "Post-Soviet" aesthetic, and it's been huge this year. | |
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A open love letter to the Japanese retailer. Muji sells you a simpler life. But don't you end up with more stuff? | |
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Even in one of America’s most dressed-down cities, a few areas in and around Seattle stick out as anti-fashion hot spots. For example, in Union Hill-Novelty Hill, an Eastside community filled with tech workers, folks are 30 percent more likely to wear Tevas. | |
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An aristocratic tradition once aimed at unveiling marriageable daughters, debutante balls are now global events where China's future power brokers network in haute couture. | |
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Bomber jackets, jumpsuits, cool sneakers, and more were among the hits. | |
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Mirror, mirror, on the wall, who is the sparkliest of them all? | |
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