Made for Long Affection, the Allure of OrSlow"Founded in 2005, Nakatsu had long been a collector of vintage clothing and amassed a significant archive of American denim, military, outdoors and workwear garments. Wanting to make what he loved, he set about studying these age old garments in an effort to replicate them. But his journey with denim started much earlier than that—he references a pair of denim dungarees which his mother bought him when he was a young kid growing up in Osaka." [Partner] Whether it's trees hanging from the mirror or those weird gel containers that purport to make your automobile smell fresh, you have a lot of options to make your car smell great. Honestly, they all suck. But that's where drift comes in. drift makes cedar-based car air fresheners that seamlessly integrate into every automobile from vintage Mustangs to modern Subarus and combine the freshest, real scents possible--without harsh chemicals found in traditional options like phthalates, parabens and mineral oil. When you choose drift your car will smell better because of it. Get yours here. From Musicians To Artists, Dr. Martens Boots Are as Popular as Ever"Though 'Docs' are often associated with the rise of punk rock and the counterculture movement, the original Dr. Martens boots were originally more modest, as everyday work-wear boots for postal service workers and factory workers in the UK. It wasn’t until Pete Townsend of The Who donned a pair of the 1460 boots that they became associated with music and art." Real People: The Very Useful Black Sweater"If you’re looking to incorporate the color into your wardrobe, however, there’s no better place to start than a simple black sweater. A black knit will go with anything: offbeat Japanese workwear, contemporary labels, and even a health chunky of classic men’s clothing. The great thing about black knitwear is that it forms a visual void, helping your outerwear “pop.” You often see this done in runway shows, where designers and stylists will use black knitwear to help highlight a piece of outerwear coming down the catwalk." Is Cool Even Cool Anymore?"Perhaps cool is a past-date product of midcentury America, something as outdated as a gas-guzzling Oldsmobile. Maybe we’ve outgrown it. The times are too sober and serious, and we can only view cool through the wistful nostalgia indulged by the middle-aged when fondly remembering their youthful indiscretions. Or perhaps it’s the opposite, and the default mode of American life has not undergone a sclerosis of soul but rather regressed to level of collective immaturity too timid to even conceive the audacity of cool." |