#wear


oki-ni Design Competition

logo-oki-ni-20090512

As part of the next phase in the evo­lu­tion of oki-ni (and to make sure that we keep the opin­ions of our cus­tomers at the fore­front of what we’re doing), oki-ni.com are launch­ing a world­wide competition.

We’re look­ing for some­one to design a logo that cap­tures the essence of oki-ni.com in any way, shape or form. We need a graphic image (which can be absolutely any­thing) and a logo which reads oki-ni.com.

The winner/winners (we may use more than one for dif­fer­ent projects that we embark upon) will receive £1000 worth of store credit each to spend on any­thing on the site. All entries should be sub­mit­ted by mid­night on Sun­day 17th May, 2009 Please for­ward all entrants to charlotte@oki-ni.com or post to:

Logo Com­pe­ti­tion
oki-ni.com
20 Gar­rett Street
Lon­don EC1Y 0TW

Good luck!

If you have ques­tions, need details, etc., check­out oki-ni’s Face­book page.

Christian Peau Washed Leather Sneaker Boots

Sexy.

Chris­t­ian Peau is a Japan­ese fash­ion house whose design is under­stood to bridge the gap between mod­ern avant-garde and clas­si­cal artisan-based fash­ion. Unlike many cut­ting edge Japan­ese design­ers that have emerged from the last 10 years, Peau’s is much more Euro­pean in nature. His influ­ences lie in the tra­di­tionl arti­sans from the early 1800s who were under­stood to be mas­ters in their trade. Drawn from tra­di­tional shoe­mak­ing and leather mas­ter craftsmen,Christian Peau has rein­vented the avant-garde in a mod­ern and beau­ti­ful manner.

The empha­sis is on hand­made leather garments—each shoe is made by hand in Japan with an assort­ment of hand-stained, painted and washed leathers that are com­pounded and nailed together for a truly unique outcome.

Source via oki-ni.

Jordan 2009

I know it might be a cou­ple of days late for this post but Jor­dans are clas­sic and time­less. Below are pho­tos of the gen­eral drop Jor­dan 2009s (white/black), which will be mak­ing their debut dur­ing All-Star week­end in Feb­ru­ary 14th.

To get more info about the shoes (“it’s gotta be the shoes”), and the design process, check out Jason May­den, Senior Footwear Designer for the Jor­dan Brand, in his inter­view via Com­plex.

Con­tinue reading →

Pastry vs. Johnny Cupcakes?

From Johnny Cupcakes:

Ran­domly putting baked items on t-shirts and hav­ing an entire brand revolve around it is free for any­one to do. I don’t own food. How­ever, I did indeed start this brand of mine 8 years ago, hav­ing it’s main focus be revolved around cup­cakes and any­thing asso­ci­ated with it. In the inde­pen­dent t-shirt indus­try, I believe I was the first per­son to go all out with this cup­cake / bak­ing motif. I’ve made a tremen­dous amount of sac­ri­fices and risks to make it the home­grown, fam­ily run, fun, lim­ited busi­ness that it is, since I dropped out of high school and sold my t-shirts out of my rusty car. With my brands main focus on my cus­tomers and their expe­ri­ence, I think I’ve been doing a pretty swell job at it.

Last Spring I was alerted by a cus­tomer who hap­pened to work at a pop­u­lar mall sports­wear store. This cus­tomer of mine caught a glimpse of his manager’s cat­a­log which had var­i­ous items that were being released in the near future at all of their mall loca­tions. One of the items in this com­pa­nies cat­a­log was a “Make Pas­try Not War” t-shirt. Not only was it a very sim­i­lar slo­gan, but it had the same EXACT place­ment, font, EVEN A CUPCAKE in the cen­ter of the t-shirt. This was no coin­ci­dence. Weeks later my inbox was flooded with furi­ous Johnny Cup­cakes cus­tomers who saw this same cat­a­log with the ‘Pas­try’ design in it. I could of made a big deal about it online, mak­ing every­one else aware of it. Instead, I decided not to be a cry baby and post it all over the inter­net, so I sought out a dif­fer­ent route. I decided to con­tact my trade­mark attor­ney, who then con­tacted the own­ers of Pas­try / Pas­try Kicks. We got in touch with the Pres­i­dent of a cer­tain mall chain-store who ended up declin­ing the order of all ‘Make Pas­try Not War’ t-shirts.

Recently I’ve received sev­eral e-mails from con­fused and upset cus­tomers of mine. Now, 2 other designs have appeared on their web­site. You be the judge…

pastrywarcomparisongg3
pastrysupportcomparisonfw8
pastryfreshlybakedcompaxn8

The thing that baf­fles me, is why would two girls who’re famous via MTV, have to stoop so low to cre­ate such sim­i­lar items, never mind brand? Maybe they’re both really great girls who hap­pened to hire some not-so-great design­ers? I’m not sure what the case is, but I do know that this should be brought to every­ones attention.

Spread the word, re-post all of this, and/or express your opin­ions to ALL of the con­tacts below:

Cus­tomer ser­vice toll free Num­ber
1–800-970‑0776
Mon-Fri 9AM-6PM. Sat 10AM-5PM (ET).

http://www.pastrykicks.com/contact/
http://www.myspace.com/pastrykicks

help@pastrykicks.com
hr@adjmi-apparel.com

Black Friday Deals on Wear

Here’s a hand­ful of casual/street wear/urban cul­ture attire ven­dors hav­ing Black Fri­day deals. Most of them are based in Cal­i­for­nia. But some have their sale event extend­ing online as well.

Con­tinue reading →