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A thousand facets sit with the incredible Alice Cicolini. They spoke about her childhood surrounded by art, her time as a curator and how jewelry found her. She has taken her travels as an inspiration for her work and she celebrates the makers behind it. About: Alice Cicolini is a designer and creative commissioner, curator of several international touring exhibitions on design and a published author, including a book on contemporary British dandyism, The New English Dandy, for Thames & Hudson. She is a Research Associate at Central St Martins, where she graduated in 2009 with a Masters in Jewellery Design. Formerly Director Arts & Culture for the British Council in India, she remains closely involved with Indian craft and design. Alice has exhibited at the V&A, Sotheby's and Homo Faber. She has collaborated with Carpenters Workshop Jewellery and CAST, as well as Peter Ting and heritage British pearl company Winterson. Alice was part of the British Fashion Council's celebrated Rock Vaults initiative, curated by Stephen Webster, from 2012-2015. Her work has been featured by Joanna Hardy (Masters of Modern Jewellery), Carol Woolton (Drawing Jewels for Fashion), Olivier Dupon (The New Jewellers) and Melanie Grant (Coveted). A chapter of Kyle Roderick's book for Rizzoli (Bejewelled: The World of Ethical Jewelry) has been dedicated to Alice's appreciation for and dedication to the sustainability of artisanal skill. Alice Cicolini is available at Liberty, Twist, Dover Street Market, Auverture and a select list of inspirational independent stores across the US, Japan and Europe. You can follow Alice on Instagram @alicecicolini or her website https://www.alicecicolini.com/ Please visit @athousandfacets on Instagram to see some of the work discussed in this episode. Music by @chris_keys__ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
En este episodio de Designaholic, Jorge Diego entrevista a Antonio Zaragoza, fundador de Liberal Youth Ministry, un creativo cuya marca ha roto paradigmas en la moda contemporánea. Criado en Guadalajara y con una infancia marcada por el aislamiento, encontró en la música y la contracultura una vía de expresión que lo llevó al diseño de ropa. Su trayectoria lo ha llevado a ser parte del selecto círculo de Dover Street Market y presentar una colección en París Fashion Week. Su enfoque ha sido tan disruptivo que su colaboración con Chivas en París se volvió un fenómeno mediático en México. Zaragoza reconoce la importancia de la paciencia y la disciplina en la construcción de una marca y no teme desafiar las estructuras establecidas. Con Liberal Youth Ministry, ha demostrado que la moda es más que ropa; es un vehículo para la rebeldía, la introspección y la narrativa personal. Antonio Zaragoza es un diseñador y director creativo mexicano, fundador de Liberal Youth Ministry, una marca de streetwear y vanguardia con una profunda exploración estética. Su trabajo ha sido reconocido internacionalmente, destacando en Dover Street Market y París Fashion Week. Su enfoque creativo está influenciado por la música, el cine y la contracultura, y ha colaborado con equipos como Juventus y Chivas. Actualmente, sigue expandiendo su visión artística y explorando nuevas formas de expresión dentro y fuera del mundo de la moda.Puedes Seguir a Antonio Zaragoza en Instagram:@antoniozaragozaa @liberalyouthministryShow Notes y Links relacionados a este episodioLibro: La muerte de Iván Ilich por León Tolstói. Película: Blue Velvet por David Lynch.Objeto preciado: Sus cámaras Contax y cartas de Pokémon.No te pierdas nuestros episodios, publicamos todos los Martes.Síguenos en: Instagram https://www.instagram.com/designaholic.mxFacebook https://www.facebook.com/designaholicmx/Twitter https://twitter.com/designaholicmx Suscríbete a nuestro newsletter semanal “Las 5 de la Semana” aquí: https://bit.ly/30yyPD0Nuestra página web es: http://designaholic.mxTambién te dejo mi cuenta personal donde además de publicar sobre mi estudio y los proyectos que hacemos, comparto mucho más sobre Arte, Arquitectura y Diseño. Instagram https://www.instagram.com/jd_etienneTwitter https://www.twitter.com/jd_etienne Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Host Danielle Radojcin chats to Carla Sozzani, a revered figurehead in the worlds of art and fashion. Known as a pioneering fashion editor, visionary gallerist, and the founder of 10 Corso Como and the Fondation Azzedine Alaïa, Carla has spent decades shaping the creative landscape.From her early days as a magazine editor in Milan during the late '60s and '70s to launching Italian Elle in 1987, Carla's career has always been driven by an unwavering commitment to creative integrity, even when it came at the cost of her own career. Along with her late sister, the legendary Italian Vogue editor Franca Sozzani, she has shaped the lives of some of the most important fashion designers and photographers of the past 50 years, and created some of the most memorable imagery, working with photographers like Paolo Roversi, Peter Lindbergh and Steven Meisel. Throughout her career, Carla has been a mentor to independent designers, offering friendship, guidance and resources. She shares heartfelt memories of her great friend, the late Azzedine Alaïa, whom she helped save from bankruptcy, ultimately founding the Alaïa Foundation to preserve his legacy.In this episode, Carla talks about fashion designers today, from the independent designer she most rates, to her thoughts on incoming Chanel creative director Matthieu Blazy, as well as discussing what makes print magazines relevant, and why you can't rely on AI to replace individual human creativity. Carla is the founder of 10 Corso Como, the groundbreaking concept store she opened in Milan in 1990. Long before spaces like Dover Street Market or Colette existed, 10 Corso Como redefined the shopping experience, becoming a pilgrimage site for fashion lovers worldwide. She is also the founder of Fondazione Sozzani, which aims to support new generations of creative talent. Carla's new book, Carla Sozzani: Art, Life, Fashion by Louise Baring, offers an intimate look at her life and contributions to the worlds of fashion, art, and design.Resources:Carla Sozzani: Art, Life, Fashion by Louise Baring (2024, Thames & Hudson)Fondation Azzedine Alaïa10 Corso ComoFondazione Sozzani
Introducing Tommy Dorfman On Why Baby Spice Was Her Earliest Style Inspiration And Snapping Up Chloë Sevigny's Vintage Chanel Bag from The Closet Digest by Vogue.Follow the show: The Closet Digest by Vogue Actor Tommy Dorfman joins British Vogue's Emily Chan to talk about how her love of fashion began, including working at the Balenciaga and Dover Street Market stores in New York. She also reveals the pieces she snapped up at Chloë Sevigny's closet sale, dubbed the Sale of the Century. DISCLAIMER: Please note, this is an independent podcast episode not affiliated with, endorsed by, or produced in conjunction with the host podcast feed or any of its media entities. The views and opinions expressed in this episode are solely those of the creators and guests. For any concerns, please reach out to team@podroll.fm.
Lauren and newsletter queen Becky Malinksy break down the best of Milan Fashion Week, including Bally and Bottega Veneta, and preview what's ahead in Paris. Finally, they debate the fate of Sabato De Sarno's Gucci. Lauren also reviews Dover Street Market in the Marais. By the way, to celebrate Puck's third anniversary, we're offering readers a limited-time, 20 percent discount off an annual subscription. Claim yours here: www.puck.news/laurensherman. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Hello, fashion aficionados! Welcome back to Just A Fashion Minute. I'm your host, David M. Watts, and today we have an incredible episode lined up for you. Our guest, Christopher Yu, takes us on a deep dive into the world of fragrance, sharing insights on sustainability, the art of perfumery, and the evolving language of smell. Christopher's experiences working with LMR and his passion for protecting the planet and the people within the fragrance industry truly shine through in this episode.We'll also explore Christopher's embarrassing fashion moment, discuss trending comfort scents, and delve into the global fragrance market's predicted growth. Plus, we have the latest in fashion news, from Gucci's cruise 2025 show at the Tate Modern to the excitement surrounding the opening of Dover Street Market in Paris.And as always, we have our Just A Fashion Minute News Round Up to keep you updated on the latest happenings in the fashion world.Don't forget to subscribe on your favourite podcasting app to catch all our episodes and stay connected with the world of fashion. So, sit back, relax, and let's dive into the fascinating world of fashion and fragrance with Christopher Yu.Timestamps & Topics00:00:01 Introduction and overview of the episodeJust A Fashion Minute News Round-up and overview of the podcast episode topics.00:06:01 Early interest in fragranceChristopher Yu shares how he became interested in fragrance from a young age, including anecdotes about playing in duty-free shops as a child.00:07:07 Fragrance memory triggersDiscussion on how certain smells can trigger nostalgic memories, like the smell of steamed rice reminding Chris of his childhood home.00:07:57 Career influencesChris credits influential people like Laurent Delafon and Olivier Polge who helped shape his fragrance career early on.00:09:19 Bringing Diptyque to UKIntroducing the Diptyque fragrance brand to the UK market in the late 1990s.00:10:04 Fashion/fragrance connectionExploring the connection between fashion and fragrance as projections of one's self and personal style.00:11:46 Defining fashionChristopher Hu provides his definition of fashion as an expression reflecting a point in time.00:13:38 Sustainability in fragranceIn-depth discussion on sustainability practices in the fragrance industry and Chris's perspective on what true sustainability means.00:18:57 Price variations in fragranceExplanation for why there are significant price variations between different fragrance brands.00:20:14 Describing smellsTips on how to better describe and articulate different smells beyond basic vocabulary.00:22:48 Fragrance trendsDiscussion on current fragrance trends like scents reminiscent of Play-Doh, lipstick and hemp as consumers seek out comforting smells post-pandemic.00:24:41 Growth of global fragrance marketExploring what is driving the projected growth of the global fragrance market in the coming years.00:26:54 Creating Ostens fragrancesThe years-long process Chris went through in creating and developing his own Ostens fragrance brand.00:31:11 Meaning behind wearing fragranceWhether people wear fragrance just to smell good or if there are deeper meanings and emotional reasons behind it.00:32:23 Ostens brand purposeChris shares the driving purpose behind his Ostens brand: to spotlight talented creators in the industry.00:33:09 Redefining fragranceHow Chris believes the fragrance industry should be redefined, valuing creators and respecting the product.00:33:30 Quickfire questionsRapid-fire questions about fashion/fragrance topics.00:39:01 Closing remarksClosing thoughts and appreciation for you, the listeners, as the podcast season wraps up.Guest...
Explore the life and artistry of Kunle Martins, a New York-born artist whose journey from graffiti to portraiture reflects the vibrant spirit of the city. Rising through the graffiti scene as Earsnot and co-founding IRAK in 1997, Martins' creativity flourished amidst the cultural ferment of New York. In a candid conversation with Scott, Martins reflects on his upbringing, navigating identity as a gay man in the skate and graffiti community, and the cultural impact of IRAK. From the streets to collaborations with Dover Street Market, Supreme, and Adidas, Martins' artistic evolution resonates with authenticity and innovation. Represented by 56 HENRY gallery, Martins continues to inspire with his dynamic exploration of art and identity in the urban landscape. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Dominique talks about her recent The Most episode with Colin H. van Eeckhout of AMENRA. Together with Immi, she then discusses Tremaine Emory boldly releasing the Arthur Jafa collab that was previously shelved by Supreme through his own Denim Tears label. The duo also toasts to the Nike x Patta Running Team launch, marvel at its Dover Street Market installation and D's new Friends & Family status. Moving on to low/high stakes-TV, Immi needs to talk about the recent VCU (Vanderpump Cinematic Universe) expansion and gets an introduction to 'Baby Reindeer'. 0:00 COPING MECHANISMS CHECK 2:53 THE COLIN H. VAN EECKHOUT AFTERMATH 12:10 IMMI'S FRAZZLED PRAYER TO BEYONCÉ 15:31 DENIM TEARS X ARTHUR JAFA: THE CULTURE VS JJ 26:22 PATTA DOING CIRCLES AROUND EVERYBODY: NIKE X PATTA RUNNING TEAM 31:57 THE VDP CINEMATIC UNIVERSE EXPANDS 32:38 BABY REINDEER, WTF 39:36 STAKES IS LOW TV 45:01 ZONE OF NOT INTERESTED AND IMMEDIATELY YES TO ‘MONKEY MAN' 1:01:50 FAMOUS LAST WORDS: Y'ALL WANT A BOOTLEG COLOUR ANALYSIS? This episode is a Patreon Exclusive - Become a member now! FULL EPISODE only on www.patreon.com/wethemost
【目次】嬉しむ門田 / 朝でも夜でもあなたを待つ / パッパ / 【喫茶店にいないと何もできない】 / 分裂 / カフェ≠喫茶店 / 6時間ニキ / かつて無音が苦手だったnatita / 喫茶店の喧騒は一味も二味も違うぜ / 「世界に一人」 / 受験生門田 / トイレ勉 / ハリポタの階段下 / 世界で一番「押入れ」を綺麗にハモった女たち / 喫茶店が好きな理由をプレゼンさせてくれ / 文豪のようにタバコを吸う / 今いっこく堂いたよね? / 隣の席の会話に応答する / 実録!喫茶店バイト経験者門田による一番記憶に残ったお客様第1位 / 「動いた動いた動いた (高揚) 」 / 作業は家派?カフェ派? / 家派ミリイシイの自論 / お正月、新たに苦手なものが明確に / 実家の重力がすごいnatita / 今日からできる、部屋の重力の減らし方 / 好きなカフェの共通点 / 店番を頼まれてからが真の常連です / 家を拡張した門田 / 親友とさめざめと泣いた日 / 〜「汲む」ではなくもしかして「つぐ」では〜 / 【最近見つけた氣がいい場所】 / 個人情報漏洩の危機 / 等々力渓谷のとある一角に… / 未知力渓谷 / テオ・ヤンセン展 / 千葉みなと駅 / 【美術館でしか取れない疲れがある】については EP.09 「『好き』ってもっと自由でいいはず」をお聴きください / 「『このエリア苦手なんだけどこの駅はいいな』とかあるの」 / 門田的「氣がいい場所」 / ◯◯寺があちあちのあちという話 / 相性 / 中板橋駅レポ / natitaの氣の気づき最新アップデート / 陳謝イシイ / 池袋出身・在住のみなさん本当にすみません(真顔土下座) / 第六感ユーザー永遠の課題 : 池袋 / ミリイシイにスイッチを押された門田 / 土地を理由に断る / 東京芸術劇場 / 師匠 / 団地 / 地球の始まりから読み解く、マンション / デパートのトイレ / 全暮らし縦横無尽 / ドドドドドドド / 初めて話すミリイシイお気に入りの「氣がいい場所」 / その姿はほぼおじいちゃんの休日 / DOVER STREET MARKET / 中野ブロードウェイ / 「フィギュア見たい泣」/ 浄化の鈴 / 「無限回廊囚われた」 / 氣は通りを一本変えるだけで違う/ not 良し悪し / 鎌倉が合わない場合、こんなパターンも / ミリイシイのお気に入り神社3選 / 頼朝のこと同級生と思ってる? / 毎年訪れる門田のお気に入り神社 / お品書きのごとくズラリとテーマが並ぶトークリストに叫ぶ門田 / 【奄美大島には「さようなら」を意味する言葉がない】 / ベストなお別れの言葉を考えてみる / 別れ際めちゃくちゃ言葉言っちゃう系natita / さようならのパンチ / バイバイを言わずに去る方法 / 去り際、振り返るべきか否か / 振り返ってこっち向いてなかった時に寂しいってすごく自分本意な意見じゃないですか?(目次書き出し中のイシイ、反省のターン) / 一生見ている日 / 頼む、書いといてくれ / ニギハヤミコハクヌシ派 / 電車の去り際 / 「見送る」こと「見送られる」こと / それは転生ありきの言い方 / 「最後」延長癖 / 忍たま乱太郎育ち / 「すべてが嬉しい」 / ほっこり回 / 「あ〜ら素晴らしい」 / 滑り込み幸あれ
The stuff of legend, Daphne was raised in an artists' colony in Cadaques with Salvador DalÍ and the Surrealists. In this episode, she revisits her eclectic career in fashion and music.A musician, muse, artist and designer, Daphne is renowned for her work in the arts. She has collected fashion, specifically haute couture, for a number of years, and is known for her iconic appearance complete with towering heel-less shoes. She's worked with photographers such as David La Chapelle, Steven Klein and Nick Knight, who has directed most of her music videos. In the mid-1980s, she lived in New York City with her sister Catherine Guinness, a companion of Andy Warhol.Across her life, Daphne has also produced Oscar-nominated films, designed a range of clothing with Dover Street Market and released an eponymous fragrance with fashion house Comme des Garçons. She is the founder of the Isabella Blow Foundation, a charitable foundation supporting aspiring art and fashion students and facilitating research in the fields of depression and mental health. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week we pay a visit to IDEA Books in London's Soho. We talk with co-founder David Owen about the iconic publishing house and its role as a bookseller at Dover Street Market. Also in the programme: we speak with Kieran Morris from current affairs and satirical quarterly ‘The Fence'.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Garrett Leight grew up in the eyewear industry. The founder of the Venice Beach-based eyewear brand Garrett Leight California Optical is also the son of Larry Leight, founder of eyewear brand Oliver Peoples. So it's no surprise that his namesake brand has seen significant success. For example, it sells 65% direct, but it also sells in top luxury retailers including Bergdorf Goodman and Dover Street Market. What's more, it's collaborated with brands from JJJJound to Rimowa and opened nine stores. Its brand fans include Brad Pitt and Elton John. Now approaching his brand's 15th year in business, Leight still sees plenty of opportunities for growth and evolution. On the latest episode of the Glossy Podcast, Leight discusses the brand's website refresh, set for January, as well as its next marketing play, focused on turning best-sellers into classics.
David Curtis-Ring is a British artist and designer, based in London. He specialises in creating set design and sculpture for installation, film and performance. David is known for his collaborations with Craig Green, working alongside the designer, since the brand's launch in 2013. He was production designer for Pink Floyd's The Endless River film directed by Ian Emes and in 2020 he designed the multi-sensory installation Next Landscape for C.P. Company's FW020. David graduated from Goldsmiths University in 2008 with a BA in Fine Art Textiles. His sculptures have appeared in Vogue, GQ, Dover Street Market and Harrods. While other collaborations include work with Nick Knight, Adidas, Champion, Moncler and Scottish designer Charles Jeffrey. #DavidCurtisRing #Fashionsetdesigner #charlesjeffreyxWedgwood #wedgwood --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/zara-korutz/message
I'm feeling lazy this week so here's a ChatGPT-generated episode description!In this episode of the Pair of Kings Podcast, Sol Thompson (@solthompson) and Michael Smith (@_smithstagram) delve into the world of fashion and explore what it's like to navigate this exciting, but often confusing, industry during your 20s. They discuss the importance of being true to yourself and not getting caught up in trying to fit in with the latest trends or what others expect of you.The pair also delve into the world of Dover Street Market, Honey Fucking Dijon, Thom Browne and what it takes to get featured in Vogue. They talk about the importance of building your own personal brand and making a name for yourself in the fashion world.So join Sol and Michael as they take you on a journey through the world of fashion, discussing all things cool, stylish and relevant to the fashion-conscious young adult. Whether you're just starting out in the fashion world, or you're an experienced trendsetter, this episode is a must-listen for anyone looking to stay ahead of the game in the world of fashion.(Sol's back) Sorry about that description, it's way too serious. Anyway, have fun! Love you!
Oh man, she's freakin' the allbirds man for allbirds again. Michael and Sol are back, right next door to Mr. Purple, chatting about everything from flirting with someone because they're wearing fly fishing gear to setting up a Prada Marfa but this time on the moon. This episode comes with the conception of one of the greatest ideas for a fashion game (to call this a game is a stretch) show as well: Shopping With Fashion Influencers In Dover Street Market off 8 Benadryl (with Joe La Puma). We promise, this game is a lot more interesting than you'd initially expect. Hop on in to the spider dimension with the boys and join the fellow shadow people (nightmare, nightmare, nightmare) as you try and understand what's going on with the undercover display on the third floor. The pod is an absolutely terrifying, horror-inducing, will-I-ever-be-normal-oh-god-I-don't-have-hands-anymore-why-don't-I-have-hands-anymore experience, so we hope you enjoy!Lots of Love!Also, as a disclaimer, this is a joke. Taking a lot of Benadryl is obviously dangerous, so don't do it. Thanks for being mindful, y'all.
Dry Clean Only: Conversations on Fashion + Style In this episode, fashion-insider, host Kristen Cole (in NYC) sits with rising talent, designer Kenneth Nicholson (in LA) of KENNETH NICHOLSON on "expanding the narrative of menswear". The brand is available at Dover Street Market locations in NY, LA and London. They discuss the designer's irrepressible drive to create, life in LA, their shared love of the '90s, the California desert, his Spring '22 runway show (and upcoming Spring '23 show), the CFDA support and nomination for American Emerging Designer of the Year Award, the exploration of thoughts, ideas, words and questions in his work, his intention to challenge current notions of masculinity through his collections, the mood of this moment, Prince, David Bowie, gender-fluid dressing, historic fashion and his optimistic approach to celebrating masculinity on his own terms. Kristen also touches on what's to come for NYFW S23 Collections, art week, fashion news, Rockefeller Center, the Met Costume Institute, Serena Williams and more....
Yerrr! On this week's episode of the Off The Dome Podcast, it's hard not being outside! As per usual, the weekly segments such as Pickups, Sleeper Hats of the Week, "What's Your Fit???", and "Look into the Past" get covered. OUR PIN IS COMING In Sneakers & Streetwear: Denim Tears is releasing an exclusive T-shirt in honor of the 4th of July Tremaine Emory and Denim Tears are releasing a rhinestone capsule exclusively at Dover Street Market. The capsule will release at DSM stores and websites globally. The “Dark Iris” Air Jordan 3 will release on August 24th, 2022 for $200 USD Stüssy and Cactus Plant Flea Market are collaborating once again on a capsule collection including clothing and accessories such as water bottles. Belts, hoodies, shorts, and tees. The Stüssy and CPFM collection released on July 2nd, 2022 worldwide. In Fitteds and Pins: 4UCaps's Glizzy Fitteds are the worst of the week The “Heroes Pack” Cleveland Indians fitted was the PANIC! Hat of the Week ECap City's latest six releases all come in as the Sleepers of the Week. The fitteds included come from the following teams The Arizona Diamondbacks The Baltimore Orioles The Houston Astros The Pittsburgh Pirates The Philadelphia Phillies The Texas Rangers We've got some Green Eggs and Ham 2.0's to show you! Hat Club has got some variety pack HEAT coming. Crown Legends has a Cape Cod inspired pack coming ProImage has some white dome fitteds on the way Pins of the Week come from Caps ‘n Curls Mizduck Pin Eddie Respect New Pvtchwork coming soon! Follow the “Off The Dome Podcast” on Instagram!!! Follow Yesus on Instagram!!! Follow Jelani on Instagram!!!
The simply singular Jewelry and Accessories phenomenon Stephanie D'heygere takes Dominique on the oddissey of how she broke into fashion. On her first ever podcast, the designer melds together her career from multiple rejections to securing major-league internships with JC de Castelbajac, Marc Jacobs, Lanvin, Zac Posen and Jeremy Scott to then steering the Jewelry departments at iconic labels like Maison Margiela and Dior to flying out of the gate ultra-strong as creative director of her ANDAM Accessories Prize-winning and Dover Street Market-coveted brand D'HEYGERE. Stephanie details collaborating with arguably the most important fashion protagonist working today: her good friend and mentor - and previous The Most guest - Y/PROJECT and Diesel Creative Director Glenn Martens. She and Dominique also discuss the seemingly unlimited Jean Paul Gaultier Haute Couture-budget and the reach-for-the-stars dreams Stephanie is still harbouring. Follow D'heygere here. Follow The Most: on Instagram. on Facebook.
Welcome to the first episode in the new series entitled START. The topic is Start Your Own Projects and our guest is the incredibly talented still life photographer, Kate Friend. It seems to me that it is very easy to become focused entirely on commission based work, bringing a client's vision and expectations to life. Working on your own passion projects, side hustles, ideas and vision is crucial to keeping your creativity at its best. It also gives the greatest opportunity for progression, development, stretch, growth. I discovered Kate's work at her recent exhibition at The Garden Museum entitled ‘Botanical Portraits: as chosen by'. Her work is original and beautiful, vivid yet restrained, bold and yet considered. Kate's story is one of adventurous reinvention. It all began with Kate the teenager, transfixed by the sights and smells of the darkroom at school. The subsequent chapters of her memoir would be varied and fascinating - Mongolia, China, brilliant brands such as Comme de Garcon and Dover Street Market, a magazine entitled ‘Mother', a single onion from the local grocer and the restrictions and joy of working with film. Kate then found herself photographing flowers with a minimal aesthetic but with abundant stories to tell. After two exhibitions at The Garden Museum, Kate's work was picked up by The New York Times and then by the Lyndsay Ingram Gallery. The exhibition is on from 19th November - 23rd December and shows her works on a new scale and with some new pieces.
Arguably one of the most magical and ephemeral forms of performance art in New York City is street performance.. from buskers at subway stations, to jazz bands at city parks, and even well-dressed fashionistas on Broadway. With venues closed during the pandemic, city streets became a common ground for any kind of artistry. As restrictions lifted many of these performances persisted, offering an optimistic accompaniment to the city's reopening.
L'art, la musique et la photo ont toujours été intimement liés à la mode, cependant, rares sont les points de vente en France exploitant les 4 à la fois. Nous avons rencontré Simon Faure, co-gérant du multimarques homme et femme Solar à Montpellier. Solar, c'est une affaire familiale chez qui la passion du retail se transmet de génération en génération. Charles Faure, en est un spécialiste depuis 30 ans et s'occupe des ventes en boutiques de Solar. Ses deux fils, Simon et François s'associent et lancent Solar en 2019. Cultivant l'ambiance méditerranéenne dont ils sont issus, Simon et François proposent des sélections de ce qu'ils estiment être ce qu'il y a de plus intéressant sur la scène mode indépendante. Inspirés par des points de vente comme LNCC, Good Hood ou Dover Street Market, ils distribuent entre autres Aries, YMC, Jacquemus ou Our Legacy. Un point de vente tout jeune en France, tenu solidement par des experts, bienvenus dans le Solar System ! https://solarmtp.com/ https://www.ln-cc.com/fr/ https://goodhoodstore.com/ https://shop.doverstreetmarket.com/ https://mnzstore.com/ https://www.ourlegacy.se/ https://www.youmustcreate.com/ https://manwomanshows.com/www.marsbranding.com Pour soutenir le podcast : S'abonner à Wholesale Is Not Dead pour ne pas rater la sortie du prochain épisode ! Mettre 5 étoiles et laisser un commentaire cool sur Apple Podcast pour aider d'autres personnes à découvrir le podcast. Pour nous poser des questions c'est par ici . Sur instagram : @marsbrandingagency
Charis and Eugene talk about the Comme des Garçons and Dover Street Market brand-development division called Dover Street Market Paris that is similar to an incubator for emerging brands. They also discuss digital fashion as seen in how Farfetch recently seeded influencers their latest lines of clothing via digital fashion items. 00:04:40 CdG 00:26:45 Digital fashion ‘Lack of strategy is the strategy': what Comme des Garçons did next by Alexander Fury published in Financial Times Influencers are wearing digital versions of physical clothes now by Maghan McDowell published in Vogue Business Patreon supporters receive exclusive discounts on online products as well as access to the members exclusive tee. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/maekanitup/message
The fashion system has been broken for some time, said trend forecaster Li Edelkoort at VOICES 2016. But, it can still regain its cultural cachet, and fix its exploitative practices. When trend forecaster Li Edelkoort first published a manifesto called “Anti-Fashion” in 2015, people across the fashion industry told her that her critique had finally put how they felt into words. “Fashion is old-fashioned,” said Edelkoort. But she believes the system can evolve to fit today's reality and regain the cultural value it has lost over the years. On the latest episode of The BoF Podcast, we revisit Edelkoort's talk on the BoF VOICES stage in 2016. Her prescient ideas have only become more urgent and applicable in 2021 as the world emerges from a pandemic that forced the industry to further reevaluate its systems, values and place in society. Fashion's tendency towards individualism, which sees the industry place near-exclusive focus on the creator, doesn't fit with today's society, which is “hungry for consensus and altruism,” said Edelkoort. The problem stems in part from fashion schools, which, for the most part, have not updated their curriculum to reflect the current issues plaguing the industry. The race to the bottom regarding prices is destroying fashion's cultural value as well as harming garment workers. “How can a product that needs to be sewn, grown, harvested, combed, spun, knitted, cut and stitched, finished, printed, labeled, packaged and transported cost a couple of euros? It's impossible,” said Edelkoort. As a starting point, she suggested implementing legislation on minimum prices. The retail experience also needs to be reinvented to be more focused and better presented to consumers. Edelkoort points to Dover Street Market, whose curated approach sets it apart from traditional department stores. “Everything we do is from the 20th century. Even concept stores and online commerce were from the last moments of the 20th century,” said Edelkoort. Related Articles: Chasing the Holy Grail of Circularity Brands Face New Pressure on Labour Rights The Green Global Age of the Information Revolution Join BoF Professional for the analysis and advice you need. Get 30 days for just $1 or explore group subscriptions for your business.
What's it mean that Kanye is back in LA and visiting Dover Street Market? How does that location relate to the DONDA song Off the Grid? What can we expect for the album now? What is Dover Street Market? We get into all of this in more in the latest video. Cheers. If you'd like to watch this in video form, then check out our YouTube channel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A note from Talking Taiwan host Felicia Lin: My guest on this episode of Talking Taiwan, Lisa Cheng Smith, has channeled her love of Taiwanese food, cooking and premium ingredients into creating Yun Hai Taiwanese Pantry. Yun Hai sources premium ingredients for Taiwanese cooking, directly from artisans, farms, and soy sauce breweries in Taiwan. In this interview Lisa not only talks about how and why she started Yun Hai, and her vision for the business, but she shares her favorite Taiwanese restaurants, cookbooks, and some great resources for tips on Taiwanese cooking. Taiwanese food lovers, this episode is definitely for you! I initially spoke with Lisa earlier this year but so much has happened with Yun Hai since then, so a week or so ago we spoke again to get some updates. Be sure to listen to the end of the interview to hear about all of the exciting developments. Here's a little preview of what we talked about in the podcast: What inspired Lisa to start Yun Hai Taiwanese Pantry Where Lisa's love of Taiwanese food comes from The chili sauce that inspired her to start Yun Hai The slow food movement What Lisa loves about the food in Taiwan How long it took Lisa to set up Yun Hai The story behind the name Yun Hai The challenges of running a small online business How Lisa met her business partner Yun Hai's collaboration with Rose Bakery for the Lunar New Year Lisa's favorite Taiwanese holidays and festivals Lisa's Taiwanese cookbook recommendations Other sources recommended by Lisa for Taiwanese recipes (blogs, YouTube) Products offered by Yun Hai New products How Lisa choses products for Yun Hai Yun Hai's connection to Win Son Lisa's Taiwanese restaurant recommendations Future plans for Yun Hai The short documentary that Yun Hai produced about soy sauce makers in Taiwan The newest developments with Yun Hai since the initial interview with Lisa earlier this year Yun Hai's Kickstarter campaign for Yun Hai Selection Dried Fruit Line (pineapple, mango, guava) New products that Yun Hai is introducing How Yun Hai has been growing Yun Hai's plans to open a store in East Williamsburg Brooklyn, NY The Yun Hai Stories newsletter Related Links: Yun Hai Taiwanese Pantry website: https://yunhai.shop/ Yun Hai Taiwanese Pantry on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/yunhaishop/ Sign up for the Yun Hai newsletter: https://yunhai.substack.com/ Yun Hai's mini-documentary, Time, Terroir, Taiwan: Soy Sauce Brewing in XiLuo: https://youtu.be/UhJ5wU1jY0E Yun Hai Taiwanese Pantry on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/yunhaishop “9 Recipes for a Vibrant Lunar New Year Celebration” by Lisa Cheng Smith for Bon Appétit Magazine: https://www.bonappetit.com/gallery/lunar-new-year-menu-lisa-cheng-smith Taipei Times article about Yun Hai Pantry: https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2019/07/13/2003718573 Yun Hai + Rose Bakery Year of the Ox Collaboration: https://yunhai.shop/blogs/articles/year-of-the-ox-yun-hai-rose-bakery Dover Street Market: https://www.doverstreetmarket.com/ Alice Waters: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alice_Waters Food of Taiwan by Cathy Erway: https://www.amazon.com/Food-Taiwan-Recipes-Beautiful-Island/dp/0544303016/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=Food+of+Taiwan&qid=1623571715&s=books&sr=1-1 All Under Heaven cookbook by Carolyn Phillips: https://www.amazon.com/s?k=All+Under+Heaven&i=stripbooks&ref=nb_sb_noss_2 Carolyn Phillips' blog, Madame Huang's kitchen: https://www.madamehuang.com/blog Choochoo-ca-Cchew (Taiwanese recipes with locally sourced ingredients): https://www.choochoocachew.com/ Taiwan Duck (Taiwan Cooking) on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/TaiwanCooking Win Son Restaurant and Bakery: https://winsonbrooklyn.com/ Trigg Brown and Josh Ku of Win Son: Taiwanese Restaurant in NYC: https://talkingtaiwan.com/trigg-brown-josh-ku-win-son-taiwanese-restaurant-nyc/ Ho Foods restaurant: https://www.hofoodsnyc.com/ 886 restaurant: https://www.eighteightsix.com/ Happy Stony Noodles (restaurant in Elmhurst Queens): https://www.happystonynoodle.com/ Q Town restaurant: https://www.qtownasiancuisine.com/ Pulau Pinang restaurant: https://menupages.com/pulau-pinang-malaysian-and-taiwanese-cuisine/82-84-broadway-elmhurst Taipei Times Columnist Michael Turton Talks About the Taiwan Pineapple Ban by China: https://talkingtaiwan.com/taipei-times-columnist-michael-turton-talks-about-the-taiwan-pineapple-ban-by-china-ep-119/ Taipei Times article about China's ban of Taiwan's pinapples, “PRC bans import of Taiwan pineapples”: https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/front/archives/2021/02/27/2003752913 Yun Hai's Kickstarter campaign for Yun Hai Selection: Dried Pineapple, Mango, Guava from Taiwan: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/yunhaishop/dried-fruits-made-in-taiwan
This week's episode is the first of four produced in partnership with Portman Marylebone (@portmanmarylebone). We sit down with Rachel Wythe-Moran and Simon Watkins, the co founders of cult design store Labour & Wait.Rachel and Simon began their careers in men's style before opening what they call ‘their ideal general store' in 2000. We talk to them both about why they left the seasonal world of fashion to move at their own pace, what they look for in a well-designed product, and why a slow, guarded approach to growth has served them well for all these years. We really enjoyed this conversation, and hope you'll enjoy an interview with a slightly different kind of business this week.If you enjoy listening, don't forget to follow us on Instagram @handcutradio, and get involved in the conversation. Please do rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, or subscribe to HCR on Spotify, either action helps to boost us up the podcast charts.---HandCut Radio is produced by Birch, the London based creative office of James Allen. Our theme music is by Joe Boyd.This episode is produced in partnership with Portman Marylebone, an elegant central London retail destination that is home to many of the city's most characterful restaurants, galleries and independent fashion brands. Portman Marylebone has been meticulously maintained by the Portman Estate for just under 500 years.---Show Notes:Labour & Wait — Instagram | WebsitePortman Marylebone — Instagram | Website[10:00] TOAST Circle[13:38] Edward Sexton[13:39] Tommy Nutter[17:08] ‘A Psalm of Life' poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow[28:50] Dover Street Market[31:50] Chiltern Street Deli[31:58] Shreeji Newsagents, Chiltern Street[33:57] HandCut Live with David Hieatt[35:49] Enamel Lidded Bin
On this episode of Raw & Real NYC, Sam and Meghan talk with Danielle Rootenberg, e-commerce expert who has worked at Dover Street Market, Chanel and is currently at Pixie Mood. We talk about what it was like moving to NYC right out of high school, how she decided to go down the e-commerce path and what the day-to-day looks like in an e-commerce role! Please make sure to rate, review and subscribe if you haven't yet! Hope you enjoy! follow @djrootenberg follow @rawandrealnyc follow @samijenkins follow @meghancaseyloftus follow @doverstreetmarketnewyork follow @chanelofficial shop at pixiemood.com
This week, Craig and Lee discuss Toronto's lockdowns, Nordstom's Dover Street Market, Toronto's Cartier renovations, WEM's Gucci opening and La Vie en Rose's expansion. The Weekly podcast by Retail Insider Canada is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, TuneIn, Google Play, or through our dedicated RSS feed for Overcast and other podcast players.Discussed this episode:Anger and Frustration as New Lockdowns Expected to Have Devastating Impact on Canadian Businesses: ExpertsNordstrom Brings UK-Based ‘Dover Street Market’ to CanadaBRIEF: Cartier Shuts on Bloor for Renovation, Nordstrom Launches BEAUTYCYCLE in CanadaGucci Opens 1st Standalone Store in Alberta at West Edmonton Mall [Photos]La Vie en Rose and Bikini Village Launch Expansion by Acquiring Vacated Retail Spaces in Canada Subscribe, Rate, and Review our Retail Insider Podcast!Follow Craig:LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/CraigPattersonTorontoInstagram: @craig_patterson_torontoTwitter: @RI_EIC Follow Retail Insider:LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/Retail-InsiderFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/RetailInsider/Twitter: @RetailInsider_Instagram: @Retail_Insider_Canada Listen & Subscribe:Apple PodcastsSpotifyOvercastStitcher Share your thoughts!Drop us a line at Craig@Retail-Insider.com. You can also rate us in Apple Podcasts or recommend us in Overcast to help more people discover the show!Background Music Credit: Hard Boiled Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com). Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
This week, Craig and Lee discuss Toronto's lockdowns, Nordstom's Dover Street Market, Toronto's Cartier renovations, WEM's Gucci opening and La Vie en Rose's expansion. The Weekly podcast by Retail Insider Canada is available on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, TuneIn, Google Play, or through our dedicated RSS feed for Overcast and other podcast players.Discussed this episode:Anger and Frustration as New Lockdowns Expected to Have Devastating Impact on Canadian Businesses: ExpertsNordstrom Brings UK-Based ‘Dover Street Market' to CanadaBRIEF: Cartier Shuts on Bloor for Renovation, Nordstrom Launches BEAUTYCYCLE in CanadaGucci Opens 1st Standalone Store in Alberta at West Edmonton Mall [Photos]La Vie en Rose and Bikini Village Launch Expansion by Acquiring Vacated Retail Spaces in Canada Subscribe, Rate, and Review our Retail Insider Podcast!Follow Craig:LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/CraigPattersonTorontoInstagram: @craig_patterson_torontoTwitter: @RI_EIC Follow Retail Insider:LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/Retail-InsiderFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/RetailInsider/Twitter: @RetailInsider_Instagram: @Retail_Insider_Canada Listen & Subscribe:Apple PodcastsSpotifyOvercastStitcher Share your thoughts!Drop us a line at Craig@Retail-Insider.com. You can also rate us in Apple Podcasts or recommend us in Overcast to help more people discover the show!Background Music Credit: Hard Boiled Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com). Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Tremaine Emory is a boundlessly talented jack-of-all-creative-trades. Following a lengthy tenure at Marc Jacobs, he co-founded creative collective No Vacancy Inn, throwing legendary parties at Tom Sachs' exhibition spaces, and designing exclusive t-shirts for Dover Street Market. At a dinner in London, an inside joke about a beat up pair of jeans became Denim Tears, a moniker for Tremaine and a lifestyle brand in its own right. Collaborations with Converse and Levi's soon followed, but these projects weren't just about selling Chuck Taylors or 501s. Like everything he does, Tremaine's work with bigger brands has aimed to open up a dialogue about the black experience.Tremaine, at heart, is a storyteller and a change maker. He has served as a nurturer of talent across the industries of fashion, music, culture, and art, working with the likes of Frank Ocean, Stüssy, ASAP Rocky, Virgil's label Off-White, and Kanye West, who entrusted Tremaine with the roll of creative consultant and brand director of Yeezy from 2016 to 2018, calling him a “creative gardener”. His perspective serves as a reminder that we should never doubt the potential impact of an individual, that where we're from is just as important as where we're going, and that sometimes, the best things really do happen after 10pm.Tremaine Emory // https://www.instagram.com/denimtears/?hl=en Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Jun, better known as Jenny is one of Steph's pillars in life and has been living as an expatriate most of her life. Steph talks to her about adaptability when moving and how life is life as a fashion merchandiser post covid.
Estelle Bailey-Barbenzien is the cofounder and creative director of fashion and lifestyle brand Noah and Dream Awake Design. She’s responsible for building the Noah brand and retail environments, including its downtown New York City flagship, shops within Dover Street Market in Los Angeles and London, and locations in Osaka and Tokyo. The company donates a portion of its profits to causes it cares about. Estelle’s interiors prioritize fabric, a meaningful lifestyle, and conscious consumerism, and they’re classic, soulful, and timeless. Her choice of materials leans on the education she received at Central Saint Martins in London, and her recent project—a sustainably driven townhouse for actor Adrian Grenier in Brooklyn—will be revealed on Domino next month. Noah isn’t just good retail; it’s become a community gathering spot (pre-COVID, of course) for local design and inclusive activism. Listen in as Estelle shares her thoughts on sustainability in design and creating environments that build community and connections.
'Don't care about what other people think of you', Creative Director / Designer / Artist / Comedian PZ Opassuksatit tells Writer / Editor / Broadcaster Lara Johnson-Wheeler. 'I give them what they want, but adding my universe.' The work of PZ Opassuksatit has been described by Highsnobiety as 'absurd, bizarre, bonkers and ironic'. The Thailand-born Paris-based fashion slashie sells design and concept through her company, PZToday. Her object-based wares include a champagne glass candle, a necktie indicating whether you're single or taken and a loo seat scarf designed to reveal the life of a toilet - so you can see Highsnobiety's point. After finishing studying at Institut Français de la Mode in 2015, PZ secured a role in visual design at Vetements. In this episode of The Fashion Slashie: A ClickerMe Podcast, she tells Lara of the freedom she had at the role and how she secured it simply through emailing Demna Gvasalia. This year alone, PZ has collaborated with Helmut Lang and was named one of 2020's New Wave Creatives by the British Fashion Council as part of the Fashion Awards. PZ and Lara discuss her collaborative work for the podcast; installations at Dover Street Market and her book — a partnership with IDEA — which features contributions from Martine Rose, Kim Chi and Virgil Abloh. ClickerMe is the fashion network, helping creatives connect and collaborate better. https://clickerme.com/ The Fashion Slashie: A ClickerMe podcast has been recorded remotely, due to circumstances inflicted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Interviewer: Lara Johnson-Wheeler Producer, Editor: Tom Zambaz
My guest this week is Mark Cho, co-founder of The Armoury.Mark and I discuss 10 years of The Armoury, including how they built partnerships with Ring Jacket and Liverano, why a higher price tag doesn’t necessarily mean a superior product (just a different one), and why relationships have always been at the center of their success.NOTES(00:30) Dover Street Market(00:37) Colette(02:36) Chris Gibbs of Union LA (Blamo! Interview)(04:08) Alan See (co-founder of the Armoury)(05:09) WW Chan(05:33) StyleForum(05:55) George Wang (Blamo! Interview)(06:15) Ethan Newton (Blamo! Interview)(16:56) Ring Jacket(19:55) Carmina(22:16) Liverano & Liverano(23:20) Scott Schuman (Blamo! Interview)(30:49) Gaziano & Girling(34:46) Jon Moy (Blamo! Interview)(34:49) Lawrence Schlossman (Blamo! Interview)(38:37) Jack Grantham (Blamo! Interview)(50:00) The Armoury on YouTube(55:50) Dressed to Ingest(1:02:16) Stefano Ricci(1:08:55) Aime Leon Dore(1:09:12) Aime Leon Dore x Drake's**This episode is sponsored by P. Johnson**Want even more Blamo? Join the BlamFam on Patreon and get access to additional interviews, a community slack, special events, and more!
Luke Walker is a freelance menswear designer and creative, with a wealth of experience designing for both global designer brands and cult-favourite independents. He’s also embarked on the process of creating his own brand, L.E.J, which is gaining much plaudits from fashionistas just a few seasons in.L.E.J focuses on the intersection of ‘utility and luxury’ in menswear design, so Aleks quizzes Luke on just what the philosophy that underpins L.E.J is. Luke also talks Aleks through some of his early experiences working at Lanvin and Dunhill, and reflects on why he’d rather feel comfortable than look pristine.As always, if you enjoy the episode, please do leave us a review – it really does help like-minded menswear-heads to discover the podcast.---Show Notes:Luke Walker — Instagram | Website[04:14] Alber Elbaz[04:20] Central Saint Martins[05:57] Dover Street Market[07:43] Lucas Ossendrijver[12:01] John Ray (Dunhill)[19:49] Luke’s Father’s Hand-drawn Plan[38:55] Wales Bonner[39:23] Craig Green---HandCut Radio is produced by Birch, a London based creative agency. Our theme music is by Joe Boyd.
Artist Dan Colen built Sky High Farm in the same way all his ideas are realized: intuitively, and with the faith to see it through. A 40-acre self-sustaining ecosystem in New York’s Hudson Valley, the farm helps underserved communities by donating everything it produces to local food banks. Since 2011, Colen and his team have given away more than 70 tons of organic vegetables, fruit, eggs, and meat. As the pandemic exposes the urgency of the farm’s raison d’être—spotlighting food insecurity and small-scale farming—Colen has sought new avenues to give back. This past August, he launched a Go Fund Me to double its production, scale up distribution, and increase its donation capacity by buying more food from other regional farmers. He’s also been working on a partnership with concept shop Dover Street Market—a collection of naturally tie-dyed, vintage-sourced T-shirts, hoodies, hats, and bandanas printed with the logos and slogans of the farm’s partners—and funneling the proceeds to farm beneficiaries. When the merchandise promptly sold out, Colen, a former skateboarder, realized fashion was an effective tool for spreading his message, particularly with a young, engaged audience. This fall, he unveiled the first in a yearlong series of covetable collaborations, created pro bono by 12 brands, including Awake NY, Noah, and Supreme. All profits will go toward running the farm. Colen, who’s represented by the Gagosian and Lévy Gorvy galleries in New York, and Massimo De Carlo in Milan, bought the plot of land nearly a decade ago after moving upstate, which gave him the space, access to nature, and the sense of freedom he needed at the time: He’d just gotten sober, and cultivating the land was an opportunity to do something bigger than himself. Colen long struggled to understand his draw to the property. But after nearly a decade, as he says on this episode of Time Sensitive, he’s come to see it as an extension of his creative practice: making things to alter perceptions, or to act as a mirror. Like his art—which varies in style and often employs perishable materials such as flowers, feathers, and chewing gum—the farm is an inquiry into ephemerality and slow, constant change, a canvas for Colen to work out experiences that made him the person he is today. On this episode, Colen recounts the circuitous journey that brought him to the farming life, speaking with Andrew about Sky High Farm’s efforts to combat food insecurity, how skateboarding introduced him to art, his profound relationship with the artists Ryan McGinley and the late Dash Snow, and the wide-ranging body of work he has created while grappling with life’s big questions.
As some of you may or may not know, we can't go more than eleven episodes per season, without turning into a walking jawn. Therefore, welcome to the season two finale, blowout extravaganza. Well...not really. Its honestly just like a regular episode. The only difference being, we are taking a few weeks off from being the hottest podcasters on the mother f**king planet, to handle some very secret highly classified business. But anyway, this week Warren Lotas finds himself in hot water, as Nike sues the labels founder for copying their highly sought after Dunk releases. Salehe Bembury embarks on a peaceful journey ahead of his New Balance 2002R release, Kanye West trades in his church shoes for the latest Adidas 350 V2, the Day of the Dead is approaching, and Nike celebrates spooky season with the Dia de Los Muertos collection, Virgil Abloh and Off-White tape up the ankles in preparation for another Air Jordan 5 collaboration, and Travis Scott takes a break from the Billboard charts to give us a glimpse of his unreleased Jordan 4’s. If you're not off the Item-Nine once streetwear hits, you seriously need to make some life changes. Speaking of changes, and zaza, You can change your trucks AND partake with the guyzas with the new Supreme skate tool, obviously Palace is down with the piffery, the pieces are grown organically at Sky High Farm and then shipped directly to Dover Street Market, you know, jawn to table type beat. Ronnie Feig and KITH take the checkered flag at Le Mans in a pair of custom BMW M Series, and This Is Never That proves that George Costanza is not the only one who knows about GORE-TEX. All this and much more on the season two finale of the hottest podcast on the mother f**king planet. Help us vote on who has the better piece of the week and for more HERE & AIR check us out on @hereandairpodcast on Instagram. Follow us individually: @angelolaviero & @stacksdn . To send us free jawns and FOR BUSINESS: hereandairpodcast@gmail.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
We had the pleasure of interviewing GRIFF over Zoom video! At the pivotal moment before the release of her first full EP, Sarah Faith Griffiths – GRIFF to friends and fans – had an epiphany. GRIFF’s music has an elemental feeling all of its own. You can trace the genesis of her blistering, sparse, emotional songs, condensed on first bow into perfect, three-minute pop moments to her deeply individual aesthetic. Though reminiscent of a more user-friendly FKA Twigs or even back to the ground-breaking sounds captured by Nelly Furtado and Timbaland, the robust, singular five tracks have reminded GRIFF of one key detail to her work. “I’m running the show here,” she says, with an infectious laugh. “Am I even allowed to say that?”Why shouldn’t she? GRIFF is a one-woman production, song-writing and performing powerhouse, set to unleash her full future-pop powers and own 2020. On the one hand, GRIFF is your textbook good girl next door. She’s just out of school, an 18-year-old straight A student from just outside Watford. On quite the other, on account of the mastery she’s shown so far in taking complete control of her career, there is a touch of the young unicorn about her.When the realisation hits that this is all your own handiwork, it hits hard. For GRIFF it came as she sat down to talk about the treatment for the video for Didn’t Break It Enough, the captivating electronic slow-jam which cuts straight to the core of semi-masochistic young heartbreak. Because she was used to exerting complete control of her music (“I didn’t realise how rare it was for women to produce their own stuff, until people started telling me”), why couldn’t she do it with the styling too? For GRIFF, a beautiful, striking young woman with Chinese/Jamaican heritage and the most fabulous, signature, outsized bubble pony-tail, the visuals count just as much as the music.“I said to everyone, it’s one outfit, do we really need a stylist?” she recalls. “It’s going to cost us how much? I may as well just go to Dover Street Market and buy myself a dress with the money.” GRIFF’s big fashion awakening were the romantic dresses of Molly Goddard “Before Villenelle,” she notes. “But I always just find designers inspiring. I’m used to making clothes out of nothing. My favourite shopping is thrift.” In the event, she didn’t even need to shop for herself, taking to her sewing machine and creating a whole look in one week. “I thought I’d buy some stuff in case everyone at the label thought what we’d made was a bit shit. I brought it all out and everyone loved it.”We shouldn’t be surprised that a young woman, left to her unfiltered imagination can write and produce material of the mesmerising quality of Paradise, Say It Again or the two tracks which have already debuted to deep public approval, Mirror Talk and Didn’t Break It Enough. After all, Kate Bush was 16 when she wrote The Man With The Child In His Eyes, Lorde 17 when she hit global number ones with Royals. That she has taken the reigns of the visual representation of herself is just a pleasing addition to the freshness of GRIFF’s mission statements.If it feels like there is something of a happy accident to the nascent musical life of GRIFF, that’s because there is. “It just seems to have found me,” she says of her astonishing early promise. Griff was born the third of three in the “super white, super middle-class, super suburban” garden town of Kings Langley. “London was always teasing you in the distance,” she says of growing up. The first album she loved and bought was Taylor Swift’s Fearless, which she dutifully learned to play, back to front. “There was such a simplicity to the melodies and chords, you could do it very young.” Would she still be able to do it now? “Every. Single. Word.”Looking back, there was something more to the appeal of Taylor than her basic boy/girl, in and out of love stories that appealed to the little GRIFF. “I had the most horrendous growth spurt in primary school, I was HUGE. I looked different from everybody else anyway. I think I must’ve looked at life for a blond-haired, blue eyed girl with a ponytail and thought it looked so easy.”It didn’t take long for GRIFF to begin embracing her difference, in music and in life. A rotating cast-list of foster children passed through the Griffiths household, where she still lives, probably fifteen in total. “It teaches you something about selfless love,” she says of having so many foster siblings. “The first is and always was going to be the hardest to say goodbye to when they went to be adopted.” She was eight years old. “And I was the only girl, and the youngest. You learn not to be the focus of attention, really quickly.”There is something in the music of GRIFF that speaks of a wisdom far beyond her years. Though Mirror Talk addresses her generation’s anxious relationship with self-perception, set against a spinetingling spider’s web of beats, she is pleasingly devoid of neuroses. “That doesn’t mean I haven’t been around them, though,” she says. GRIFF could not wait to get out of school. “Teenage girls can be hard to be around all the time,” she says, “I found my place but eventually, by the time it came to leave, that was just me and my best friend, who is now at St Martins.”Being mixed race left her, she says “kind of not feeling like anything. I’m used to being around white girls but I’m so obviously not. I am a bit of a white girl but I never will 100% be because I look so different and I am so different. The Chinese family would come around and I’m obviouslay so westernised and removed from that. Then the black side comes round and I’m not really in touch with that, either. You’re always in this weird limbo.”All these esoteric emotional states would be parlayed directly into the quizzical nature of her music, married to a natural ear for a pop hook. GRIFF’s production and song-writing skills were honed at home, utilising her brother’s computer software and the family piano after school. “It came naturally,” she says. “But writing music, actually, is kind of a ridiculous thing. Every day you’re expected to reinvent eight notes and marry them to a new concept.”She found her well was deep for conjuring new worlds in song and soon attracted the attention of a family friend who began encouraging to her seek contacts in the industry. Her only worry, on signing a deal just prior to heading into the big bad world from school was that something so beloved, such a safe space for her, would now be swallowed by the machine. “My biggest fear was that music was a hobby before and it was so exciting to do, especially when school was awful. It was such a relief to go home and write. My fear was that it suddenly wouldn’t be a hobby anymore. Would the ideas still be there.”As her debut EP merrily attests, there is so much more to come from GRIFF. “When you are doing it, you realise how much there is to say about the world and to say about yourself,” she notes. “I feel so much bigger when I am on stage.” With creation comes new ambitions. “I don’t want to be an artist who’s around for five minutes and people forget about,” she says. “I want my music to be remembered in ten, fifteen years to come.” GRIFF is making music to be played forever.We want to hear from you! Please email Tera@BringinitBackwards.com.www.BringinitBackwards.comAmerican Songwriter Podcast Network#podcast #interview #bringinbackpod #foryou #foryoupage #stayhome #togetherathome #zoom #aspn #americansongwriter #americansongwriterpodcastnetworkListen & Subscribe to BiBFollow our podcast on Instagram and Twitter!
Episode Summary:In this episode we meet Wallpaper's China editor Yoko Choy, who speaks about the consequences of Covid-19 in the design industry and business, the most recent promising projects oriented towards social well-being and the importance of collaboration. In the multi-faceted reality in China, Yoko expresses her vision on contemporary design, still in flux but yet to be shaped in a more environmentally sustainable direction by the young creative generation. As a multicultural creative she tries to translate the knowledge and insides from both worlds into a common language, meanwhile raising awareness of the importance of cross-cultural exchange.The Speaker:Currently based in Amsterdam, Hong Kong-born Yoko Choy is an acclaimed design and lifestyle journalist and the China Editor for Wallpaper* magazine, as well as a writer for Chinese and international publications including Hong Kong Economic Journal and the online platform Dezeen. Yoko is also a co-founder of Collective Contemporist creative consultancy. She has worked for Art Basel on its launch in Hong Kong, curated exhibitions for Dover Street Market in Beijing, managed Beijing Design Week's international communications activities and represented MARIOTESTINO+ in Asia. Follow Yoko's journey on InstagramHosts: Farah Piriye and Elizabeth ZhivkovaSign up for ZEITGEIST19's newsletter at https://www.zeitgeist19.comFor sponsorship enquiries, comments, ideas and collaborations, email us at info@zeitgeist19.com
Are Sneaker Retail Stores Dying? The Debate Has Raged On Since The Acceleration Of Ecommerce If The Brick And Mortar Retail Industry Is Dying Out. There Is A Distinct Reason Why Sneaker Shops Such As Kith, Dover Street Market, Lapstone And Hammer, Index Pdx, And More Stand Out In A Fading Sector. In This Week’s Episode, We Take A Look At A Handful Of Sneaker Retailers, Boutiques, And Consignment Shops To Discuss How They Are Thriving In Today’s Environment. Further, We Hold A Few Case Studies To Provide Examples Of How Shops Like Boston’s Bodega, Portland’s Index Pdx, And Philadelphia’s Lapstone And Hammer Are Breaking The Mold. We Also Take A Look At How The Jordan Brand Fall 2020 Collection Brings Fresh Design Approaches To Retro Looks. Four Iterations Of The Air Jordan I And Three Women's-Exclusive Styles Lead The Latest From The Jumpman Including The Laser Orange Jordan 3 And The Oregon Duck Inspired Jordan 5. This Week We Take A Look At Upcoming Sneaker Releases Such As The Air Jordan 5 Alternate Grape, Women’s Air Jordan 11 Low Concord, Yeezy 700 Mnvn Bone, Air Jordan 1 Retro High Bloodline And More In The Last Portion Of This Sneaker Podcast. Keeping Stock Is A Weekly Sneaker Podcast Providing You With New Episodes And Content Every Sunday! Connect On Social: linktr.ee/KeepingStock Business Inquiries: JustKeepingStock@gmail.com Keeping Stock Sneaker Podcast Website: https://keepingstocksneakerpodcast.com/ Support The Cast: bit.ly/KeepingStock-ListenerSupport --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sneaker-podcast/message
This week, prolific playwright and man about town Jeremy O. Harris calls in from London to discuss himbos, "Slave Play's" return to Broadway, how the theater world has reacted to coronavirus and the Black Lives Matter movement, fireworks conspiracy theories, shopping at Dover Street Market post-lockdown, and much more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
This week, prolific playwright and man about town Jeremy O. Harris calls in from London to discuss himbos, "Slave Play's" return to Broadway, how the theater world has reacted to coronavirus and the Black Lives Matter movement, fireworks conspiracy theories, shopping at Dover Street Market post-lockdown, and much more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
這集節目由咖啡林 Coffeeling 贊助播出;咖啡林是台灣咖啡界的隱形冠軍,目前只在高雄三民區有獨立專門店。6 月底前至咖啡林消費並出示 L.DOPE RADIO 的 Podcast 畫面,即可享外帶咖啡第二杯半價的優惠! 本集 Daily News 內容包含: ► 由於疫情迫使眾多職業賽停辦,男網冠軍 Novak Djokovic 決定自己發起亞德里亞巡迴賽(Adria Tour),在巴爾幹半島舉行一系列賽事;然而就在參賽選手先後於克羅埃西亞站確診後,Djokovic 和妻子也在塞爾維亞經篩檢呈陽性。 ► 運動品牌 The North Face 與 Patagonia 先後加入抵制行列,停止對社群平台上的廣告投放,施壓臉書管制平台上的不當言論 ► 2017 年成立的「無性別」銀飾品牌 Natural Instinct 在初期就登上世界級選貨店 Dover Street Market,更在今年進駐日本高端精品選貨店 Estnation。「我不會去做民俗風的老鷹羽毛或是其他刻板印象的形狀,我希望一切回歸到自然本能,一種屬於我的元素 — Natural Instinct」 如果喜歡我們的頻道,並且想要獲得更多時尚、潮流、藝術與音樂新訊,歡迎訂閱並至以下平台追蹤我們! ► 網站:LDOPE.com ► Instagram:instagram.com/ldope ► Facebook:facebook.com/LDOPEcom ► Telegram:t.me/L_DOPE
In this fifth episode of Creative Conversations, Suzy is joined by the young dynamic designer, Marine Serre.Marine’s second-ever collection, A Radical Call for Love, created for her own label for Autumn/Winter 2017, was designed in the wake of the Paris and Brussels attacks while she was working at Balenciaga, and featured what would become Marine's signature: a crescent-moon motif.This led to Marine winning the prestigious 2017 LVMH Prize for Young Fashion Designers. Rihanna presented her with the award, while Karl Lagerfeld championed her work and became her mentor. This young French woman, raised in rural France, was trained at a Belgian fashion school and can be seen as a fashion prophet. She seems to have seen the future and expressed it in clothes. Only a fashion prophet could have shown a collection that included images of flames before the Australian bush fires, and masked the faces of her models before the world knew of the Covid-19 pandemic. It has been a tumultuous ride for the designer’s small team, but with her use of regenerated materials, the upcycling skills she inherited from her grandfather at his “brocante” (flea market) and the support of Lagerfeld as well as Adrian Joffe of Dover Street Market, Marine has achieved a cult following.Produced by Natasha Cowan.Edited by Tim Thornton.Music by @joergzuber.Graphics by Paul Wallis.Production Assistance by Lauren Sweeting.Support for the Creative Conversations podcast comes from the Condé Nast Luxury Conference.To find Suzy's articles visit vogue.co.uk/fashion/suzy-menkes ...find Suzy on Instagram @suzymenkes and Twitter @thesuzymenkesThis podcast is also available on YouTube https://youtu.be/NItGYVaYbc4
On this week's edition of The Legit Check Podcast, Adi and Renee keep going and give our longest episode discussing PJ Tucker's Nike announcement, Black/Red XI's, a brief history of OVO x Raptors merch, snapbacks vs fitteds, which kind of shoe boxes are superior, are Air Force 1's the wave or not, Dover Street Market x EVERYONE collab for their Black Friday "Monochromarket", etc! Follow us! AJ/Adi: @Greyhoodie.Adi on IG & @Greyhoodieadi on Twitter Renee: @Renmeetsworld on IG & Twitter
HYPEBEAST Radio 是 HYPEBEAST 旗下的专属 Podcast 企划,在「SoundsGood」 栏目中,你能听到来自潮流文化范围内受到关注的嘉宾们带来职业生涯中的那些关键决定和高光时刻,还会与我们分享他们的私房灵感歌单,以及那些歌曲背后的故事。本期嘉宾:Adrian JoffeComme des Garcons 总裁、Dover Street Market 总监想获取更多关于音乐、时尚、设计以及潮流文化等相关信息,请持续关注 HYPEBEAST Radio。本期歌曲:Pink Floyd - Lucifer SamLeonard Cohen - The Stranger SongThe Who - Magic BusJoni Mitchell - Both Sides Now (live)Kraftwerk - RadioactivityYagya - The Observable UniverseFKA Twigs - Water MeOliver Huntemann - Dark PassengerTimeline:03: 40 - 生于音乐绝缘家庭06: 44 - Adrian 的第一张唱片10: 59 - Kraftwerk12: 11 - 杂食性音乐动物17: 31 - Dover Street Market 门店的音乐设计19: 39 - 关于 Streetwear24: 07 - FKA Twigs25: 22 - Streetwear 之后是什么?26: 08 - 如何摆脱同质化竞争?28: 10 - 为什么我们要挑战传统审美?
HYPEBEAST Radio 是 HYPEBEAST 旗下的专属 Podcast 企划,在「SoundsGood」 栏目中,你能听到来自潮流文化范围内受到关注的嘉宾们带来职业生涯中的那些关键决定和高光时刻,还会与我们分享他们的私房灵感歌单,以及那些歌曲背后的故事。本期嘉宾:Adrian JoffeComme des Garcons 总裁、Dover Street Market 总监想获取更多关于音乐、时尚、设计以及潮流文化等相关信息,请持续关注 HYPEBEAST Radio。本期歌曲:Pink Floyd - Lucifer SamLeonard Cohen - The Stranger SongThe Who - Magic BusJoni Mitchell - Both Sides Now (live)Kraftwerk - RadioactivityYagya - The Observable UniverseFKA Twigs - Water MeOliver Huntemann - Dark PassengerTimeline:03: 40 - 生于音乐绝缘家庭06: 44 - Adrian 的第一张唱片10: 59 - Kraftwerk12: 11 - 杂食性音乐动物17: 31 - Dover Street Market 门店的音乐设计19: 39 - 关于 Streetwear24: 07 - FKA Twigs25: 22 - Streetwear 之后是什么?26: 08 - 如何摆脱同质化竞争?28: 10 - 为什么我们要挑战传统审美?
Eugene and Charis discuss a recent WWD interview with Rei Kawakubo, founder of COMME des GARÇONS and Dover Street Market, where she makes distinctions between her relationship with fashion and business. They also talk about whether the role work now plays in people’s lives can be considered equivalent in any way to the role religion used to have. 00:02:53 Rei Kawakubo 00:26:36 The role of work Links: https://wwd.com/fashion-news/fashion-features/the-originals-rei-kawakubo-on-the-genius-grind-1203137382/ https://www.fastcompany.com/90350861/how-work-became-the-millennial-religion-of-choice www.maekan.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/maekanitup/message
On the second installment of Curated’s artist profile series within a series: “Notes from the Field”, Telsha sits down with her partner David Marshall, a current client specialist @ Dover Street Market/ freelance creative producer to talk about dating a creative. We finally got Dave on the show ya'll, mission accomplished. Follow Silas on IG @dave.creative
Kalau di episode sebelum ada pertanyaan ke brand Dover Street Market, di sini gue dapet jawabannya dari Adit, founder dari brand streetwear Jakarta, Paradise Youth Club.
James and Lawrence are back for Pander Szn with what arguably might be the most ridiculous pod in FU history featuring Barstool's own Ben “Young Pageviews” Friedman. YP joins the gang to talk about the importance of virile, free-range chinchillas, shitting his pants outside Dover Street Market, and his beef with Chance the Rapper. The boys are also kicking things off with their 69th bagioli update and, finally, in Captain's Log/Letters to Home, a just the tip tease of the episode all 8 million members of the Fail Gang have been patiently waiting for.
With a career in fashion spanning 5 decades, Florence Deschamps has worked with some of the biggest names in the industry, including Rei Kawakubo of Comme des Garçons, and Kenzo Takada. Florence is passionate about finding and mentoring creative talent. In her Paris showroom, she introduces emerging designers and their collections to the world’s top buyers. Florence works closely with her young and hip showroom director, Marina Lyritzi. Marina is a talented content creator and branding specialist. Through her work as a stylist and online influencer, Marina tells the story of designers and their products, with a youthful and joyful voice. In this episode: Part 1 - Florence Dressing up in her grandmother’s designer wardrobe in Connecticut. Florence studied at Sarah Lawrence College and La Sorbonne. She also studied dance with George Balanchine. Florence began her fashion career working as a model in the late 1960s. With photographer Sarah Moon she learnt the art of photography. Working in public relations at French fashion house, Dorothée Bis, was very formative. In the early 1980s Florence discovered Comme des Garçons and met Rei Kawakubo. She became the president of Comme des Garçons, and launched the brand internationally. Today Florence presents and sells her young designers’ collections to the great fashion stores around the world, including Rei Kawakubo’s Dover Street Market, and Blake in Chicago. Good proportion, a sense of harmony, and a sense of humour and playfulness are important in a designer’s work. Part 2 - Marina (27m40s) Marina met Florence at Paris Fashion Week when she was interning with an Italian bag designer. Marina had a fashion blog for several years, before shifting to Instagram. She collaborates with fashion brands and recently won first prize in Marie Claire Greece blogger awards, and has worked with H&M. It’s more effective for consumers to see fashion products on real people, rather than very tall and thin models. It’s important for designers to have a good connection with their showroom. Strong brand DNA and a clear target market are very important for commercial success. Bonus audio – What the dog thinks (36m10s)
Dans ce nouvel épisode nous allons à la rencontre de Julien Goulard, à l'age de 12 ans il lance Très Rare, un compte Instagram qui compte aujourd’hui plus de cent six mille followers. En 2016, le projet AIRVEI commence à naître dans l’esprit de Julien alors jeune étudiant d’école de design industriel parisienne, Strate - École de Design. Dans cette épisode il nous raconte comment il a construit Très Rare, comment il a fait levier sur ce compte à la fois pour financer sa marque, la lancer et collaborer avec d'autres créatifs. Il nous raconte step by step les début de sa marque AIRVEI qu'il définit lui même comme un studio d’expérimentation avec laquelle il souhaite à chaque collection présenter une étude très singulière du vêtement sur des aspects tels que la structure formelle, le contexte d'utilisation ainsi que son rôle dans notre société actuelle. C'est un épisode à destination des jeunes et aspirants entrepreneurs qui se demandent comment se lancer quand on n'est pas forcement issus d'une formation de mode et sans expérience. REFERENCES DANS L'EPISODE - TRÈS RARE: www.instagram.com/tresrare/ - AIRVEI: airvei.com - Strate - École de Design : www.strate.design - RAF SIMONS: rafsimons.com - HELMUT LANG : www.helmutlang.com - Y/ PROJECT: www.yproject.fr - Antwerp: www.antwerpacademy.be - Nicolas Ghesquière - Alvar Aalto - Rem Koolhaas - Franz Kline - NUBIAN : www.nubian-ave.com - DOVER STREET MARKET : www.doverstreetmarket.com - WER-HAUS: wer-haus.com - Romain Aufauvre - Scott Toulis - Saf Hansen: www.sefhansen.nl - Paul Franco: www.paulfranco.fr - Emil Cioran - Milan Kundera - Conférences TedX : www.ted.com/talks?language=fr - Dieter Rams LES PERSONNES QU'IL SOUHAITERAIT ENTENDRE DANS LE PODCAST Elena et Pierre de AFTERHOMEWORK : http://afterhomeworkparis.com Simon Porte Jacquemus de JACQUEMUS: https://www.jacquemus.com
När italienaren Elio Fiorucci skapade sitt märke Fiorucci för 50 år sedan hade han en idé om att öppna modebutiker som skulle ge kunderna något mer upplevelser. Märket grundades 1967, men det var i mitten av 70-talet som det tog fart. Det var då som dess butiker fick rykte om sig att vara någonting alldeles extra. Framför allt den som öppnades i New på 59:e gatan, nära varuhuset Bloomingdales, 1976. Den kom att kallas för ett dagsöppet studio 54. För i likhet med det topptrendiga diskoteket, var det i Fiorucci-butiken som alla som var något och på väg att bli något inom populärkulturen hängde på dagarna, och inte bara för att shoppa kläder. Madonna gjorde där sin första spelning. Konstnärer som Keith Haring och Kenny Scharf ställde ut sina målningar. Författaren Truman Capote signerade böcker i butiken. Grundaren av tidningen i-D, Terry Jones, var butikens Art Director. Modeillustratören Antonio Lopez stajlade skyltfönstren, och den blivande modeskaparen Marc Jacobs drog som 15-åring med sig sin älskade farmor till butiken för att storögt titta på kunderna, och butikspersonalen som var uppklädd till tänderna i discoglittrande utstyrslar. Förbipasserande på gatan tappade hakorna när de dansade i fönstren, klädda i overaller av lack, glittriga cowboyboots och med svart läppstift. Och då är det den manliga personalen vi pratar om. Men alla som var där gjorde så gott de kunde för att understryka det speciella med Fiorucci. Långt före Colette i Paris, Dover Street Market i London och 10 Corso Como i Milano och allmänt snackande om konceptbutiker inom modet blandade Fiorucci mode, musik, skönhetsprodukter, små pryttlar som nyckelringar, vykort, pennor och muggar och happenings. I en av butikerna i Italien fanns till och med en snabbmatsrestaurang, redan 1974. Det var ett lekfullt koncept som kom att prägla både samtiden, och framtiden och det ligger inte minst i tiden nu, då upplevelser är ett ord som allt oftare förekommer när man pratar om hur modebutiker ska utformas för dagens alltmer krävande kunder. I veckans program tar vi en närmare titt på en av Fioruccis återkommande symboler körsbäret. Ett bär som traditionellt har symboliserat paradiset och odödlighet, men som med tiden fått en allt mer tvetydig innebörd. Vi undersöker också vitsen med färdigslitna jeans med hål i. Och så pratar vi med designern Vivianne Tvilling som startade sin första egna klädbutik i Stockholm 1968 när hon var 18 år gammal. Sedan 1980-talet bor hon i New York och även där har hon drivit egen butik i många år. Snart firar hon 50 år i butiksbranschen. Veckans gäst är Jörgen Andersson, konsult och rådgivare i modebranschen.
Donte' and Ron are back again. This week they caught up with Jerrill Sankey, the owner of Creative King. Jerrill crafts his hats by hand, from scratch. A unique aspect in an industry where everything is manufactured and mass produced, Creative King exists in a space of its own. In the span of a few years, the head of Creative King went from a Public School Janitor to a recognizable, internationally sold brand. Before they get into the interview, Donte' and Ron speak about the art of freelancing(1:05). Then Ron tells the story of seeing Creative King for the first time(7:15) and allows Jerill to tell us how long his journey has been, moving to Maryland and being inspired by 90's hip-hop fashion, like Roc-a-Wear and FUBU (11:00). The conversation leads into dealing with criticism and how it helps personal and business growth(16:22). He also talks about the transition from janitorial work to working at Sewlab USA(25:15). To rap it up, the three talk about the future of Creative King; from working on being carried in Dover Street Market and Opening Ceremony, expanding the brand to bags and building the team(42:33) Creative King's Website: http://www.creative-king.com/ Twitter: @creativekingllc Instagram: @creativekingllc BRNDD 10: Playlist https://play.spotify.com/user/brnddpodcast/playlist/7ALKJzJhJtdctoouneP5GR BRNDD Podcast: E-Mail: brndd@debonairmaterial.com Facebook Group: www.facebook.com/brnddpodcast Twitter: @DebMaterial Instagram: @debonairmaterial facebook: www.facebook.com/DebonairMaterial/ Ronald James Twitter and Instagram: @whoisronjames Donte Cotton Twitter and Instagram: @Cotteonsmooth
- Presentación de LockUp - http://lockup.es- AfterShip - http://j.mp/1Fo9DA5- TransferWise - http://TransferWise.com/u/b00bff- Hoy me compran el Apple Watch en Dover Street Market (http://london.doverstreetmarket.com/index.html). Artículo en The Verge (http://www.theverge.com/2015/4/24/8488619/i-bought-an-apple-watch-this-morning-despite-what-apple-said). La noticia con la lista (http://www.businessinsider.com/apple-watch-in-store-friday-fashion-boutique-london-tokyo-paris-los-angeles-2015-4)