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Tags » ‘Fall/Winter 09’

Elmer Fudd Would Be Proud

July 27th, 2009 by

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During the fashion weeks that seem to crop up once a month, I usually tend to stay away from the fashion blogs and just aimlessly roam the internet until I’m arguing with random juveniles on youtube about the authenticity of a video.  The reason being is I, and you the readers, aren’t really interested in what Louis Vuitton, Gucci or whoever are showcasing, and for few reasons; most of us can’t even afford a pair of draws from these brands let alone something with more material, the runway shows are usually a bit excessive and display clothing that is utterly outrageous and can’t even be worn on our streets and the “I can’t afford it” factor should be mentioned one-mo-gin.

These runway shows however do play an integral role in the fashion realm.   Designers that are looked upon as the kingpins of fashion showcase their latest collections for the world to see, giving us insight on upcoming trends.  These trends can be something as little as a fabric that will end up being used by many different brands during a specific season or as big as a color scheme that will be seen on the shelves of most brands, kingpins and small time dealers alike.  So I bent the truth a little baby bit.  I don’t stay completely away from the blogs during fashion week, I try to breeze through, seeing if I can spot an emerging trend that can potentially trickle down to us, the common folk.  In doing so, I sometimes stumble across a designer that I dig and I begin to follow their work, even if I can’t afford a keychain from them.  This was most definitely the case when I peeped Junya Watanabe’s fall/winter 2009 collection.

Now I knew a little bit about Junya Watanabe before I seen they’re fall/winter collection, but it was just in passing as I was trying to find the release date for a pair of Jordan’s on another website that shall remain nameless.  Before I explain my appreciation for this brand, I’ll drop some background knowledge about the designer; Junya Watanabe is a Japanese fashion designer who began as an apprentice during the 1980s for the mack daddy Comme des Garcons, which Junya Watanabe still distributes his brand through.  Junya is renowned for using synthetic and technologically advanced textiles and fabrics to create distinctive clothing with a specific direction in mind.  I mean this dude has Michelle Obama rocking his shit, and we all know how fly Michelle gets.

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Junya Watanabe is kind of a kingpin brand, so I won’t have anything of his in my closet for a little while, but he does deserve mucho respect for his designs.  For his fall/winter 2009 collection he drew inspiration from the American “sports” of hunting and fishing, taking traditional clothing worn during the hunt and turning them into blazers or casual jackets or visa versa, taking a tailored suit jacket and adding a hunting twist.  I really enjoy when designers devote much of their collection to something particular (see Benjamin Bixby) from the real world, whether it is a time period, color or in this case the attire of a hunter in the United States. It is where fashion transforms to art, much different from the brands today, that just add an artistic graphic to a plain tee-shirt.

To Top It Off

May 14th, 2009 by

still-life-2009-fall-winter-hats-2

Still Life NYC

Historians have found it hard to pinpoint the origins of headwear, yet many believe it was the first article of clothing worn by primitive man.  Sounds a bit outlandish, yes, but ponder that implication for a moment.  Seriously, DO IT!  Hats weren’t conceived to coordinate an outfit, they were more than likely stumbled across by early man to protect themselves from the elements of the world, i.e. rain, sunlight and the occasional falling pterodactyl poop.  Having said that, headwear evolved over the course of time, to be worn by religious, nobility as well as military figures to publicize their social status.  But most notably headwear expanded to the realm of fashion.

Jump ahead a few centuries and the generation of urban, streetwear, hip hop fashion is introduced to the masses.  In our fashion community, hats have played an integral role in our appearance.  From the days of snap back raiders to closets full of New Era fitteds.  Okay, I guess this history lesson has gone a little too far, but it was done to prove a good point, I hope.  The point being that with the rich history of headwear our community has decided to focus on a very small assortment of styles.  I myself have fallen into this close-minded thinking:  owning nearly ten different hats all being the same New Era design.