Tag: streetwear

  • Anthony Smith- Waar brand dit?

    Anthony Smith, founder of South Africa’s most befokte clothing label, 2Bop, has always lived by his own rules and he’s proving that you don’t need to buy into the lily-white-old-boys-club-hierarchy of the traditional Cape Town creative industries in order to level-up. As a kid he’d be skating and shooting hoops and skieting games from the rough Northern areas to the idyllic Summerstrand and Kings Beach while his ‘art’ teacher plotted new drawing formulas for the class to conform to. Even back then he was too organic for graph paper, could dallah pump fakes against the systems of constraint. Smith tells me about growing up in a coloured community in PE and at 15, being a bit insecure moving from a ‘ghetto school’ to a ‘fancy private school’ where “all the kids knew Shakespeare and shit” but how he soon realised that kids were just kids, the only difference was access. So he’d make his own spaces, skating across racial divisions and jamming the arcade games which flourished in the blind spot of apartheid’s gaze.

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    There’s a richness to childhood experiences which we never really realise at the time; how can you properly articulate the victory of discovering Double Dragon 2 in your grandparent’s street when you’d started to expect all the good games to be in the white areas? Or the excitement for other kids being good at the games because it meant seeing all the levels and characters and bosses without spending your own 20 cent pieces? It’s not about some kind of misplaced nostalgia, it’s about formative experiences that remain relevant to 2Bop today. Smith’s brand has never bought into the legacy of inferiority that still remains ‘post-apartheid’, it’s always taken pride in local culture, manufacturing locally and channelling Afrikaaps or coloured club culture through remixed Strictly Rhythm Records aesthetics. But all of this diverse texture is exploded open, utilised in a way that opens up appeal rather than shuts down access, drawing on the value of the lo-fi as a platform for the imagination. You can play just about any game today on an emulator and that’s cool, it doesn’t hack the power of the OGs who know the Juicy lyrics when they see them. Smith’s already two-steps ahead, establishing his own company called Premium MFG and Co., producing for like-minded clients and upcoming brands. He also his eye on eventually going full circle to actually producing video games and is already bringing arcade style home by creating a new game controller prototype.

    For all of his success, Smith’s incredibly humble and expresses immense gratitude for his team and the counter-culture checkpoint at Corner Store in Cape Town. He’s cracked the code and is subverting the structure through the communal and collaborative, bringing on interns, hiring young designers, and creating work with all different kinds; from well-established artists to a 6 year-old kid named Kayden. Smith’s pioneering a new business culture; while you were rushing to take notes, he was utilising the resources to make full colour print-outs for logos of the future. While you were networking with corporates, Smith was realising the value of friends who could hustle with heart and who held skills that didn’t fit into lame-ladder job descriptions. There are other ways that you can do things, power in articulations that don’t conform to narrow definitions of language and 2Bop’s the turnaround jump shot. What company do you keep?

    You can follow 2Bop on Facebook, Twitter or Instagram and get gedruip through purchases here and here

    Editorial: Anthony is in pieces by 2bop, i & i & Patta

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  • Crayons – Street Colours

    The word crayons conjures images of fun and free expression. Raees Saiet, the founder of the Crayons streetwear label has taken this to heart.  For the Crayons launch event in 2013 they released colourful limited edition t-shirts and dungarees, while another pop-up  incorporated a screening of Home Alone.

    Crayons latest release is a new set of t-shirts, sweaters and caps. The focus is on classic colours and technical designs. Simple, yet stylish, white, blue and black. The visual design on the new wear is similarly understated. The shirts and sweaters are framed with detailed abstract design patterns.  Black snapback caps are embroidered with a stark label of three white crayons. As with all the best streetwear, its aesthetic is low key but expertly defined. It’s bound to make a strong impression wherever the wearer chooses to casually flaunt it!

    This latest shoot was done in collaboration with Upper Echelon, another Cape Town based street couture label. The label was founded by Ahley Benn and Keenan Appollis and is driven by a desire to put street wear of a new level of influence. As they describe it themselves their brand is ‘’ aimed at enlightening individuals through designs that tell a story, while simultaneously opening individuals minds to what is relevant and most times overlooked in today’s society.’’ One of their most successful products to date has been the Indigo snapback, a classic black hat with an alluring green underbill. For Winter 2015, they dropped the ‘ It’s Dark Outside Collection’, providing minimalism for the winter months. Their latest collaboration with Crayons is a meeting of two groups with a shared commitment to craft and quality.

    The collection will be available at DIP ST and for more images visit crayonsclothing.tumblr.com

    UE CRYNS

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    UE CRYNS

  • Born Out of Boredom – Apathy and Glamour

    People are more saturated with popular culture than ever before. Through Facebook, Instagram and Twitter we are constantly bombarded with the antics of the rich and famous. Celebrities have dramatic break-ups on social media, cause firestorms of outrage with offensive statements and throw shade on their rivals- all in real time.  But through such overexposure, popular culture runs the risk of losing a fundamental glamour and mystery. A tawdry example is provided on the social media of people like 50 Cent and DJ Khaled. Covered in money and diamonds, their efforts to convey the message of success instead become meme punchlines.  When you show everyone all aspects of your life, your image goes from being legendary to boring.

    Nqaba Fatman, has been exploring this mix of fascination and apathy with his new street wear label Born Out of Boredom.  The label started from a professed love/ hate relationship with popular culture. It began with his Instagram feed, which is curated to highlight tedium and lack of interest.  Listing its main theme as ‘social anxiety’, @shakesbored shows Nqaba and his friends trying to stay awake through the banal events of everyday life. However, the atmosphere of apathy is misleading. The photos and images are expertly framed and styled, giving the work a casual glamour. With this foundation in place, Born Out of Boredom has now joined a wave of DIY designers coming off the internet.

    Its first collection dropped in February this year, with a limited collection of t-shirts. Their slogan captures the label’s ironic ethos- NOTHING INTERESTING. WEARY AND UNINTERESTED. SENSIBLITIES ALWAYS FOREVER.

    And just in time for Winter it has released a second collection of long sleeves and hoodies. The accompanying photos (shot by Liam Volschenk) position models in a humble suburban home. This makes the stark red and blacks of the clothes stand out, and it shows the label as a source of durable and stylish street wear.  In the age of overshare, the laid back quality of Born Out Of Boredom speaks volumes without having to raise its voice.

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    Photographer: Liam Volschenk
    Stylist and director: Nqaba Shakes Fatman
    Models: Nikho Rudah and Lucas Carr
    Assistants: Isabella Vernes and Larissa Armstrong

  • Sol-Sol x Young and Lazy drop an exclusive, collaborative collection at Corner Store CPT tonight!

    This Friday the 13th, the stars have aligned and luck is in your favour with two of South Africa’s finest streetwear brands, Sol-Sol Menswear and Young and Lazy, dropping an exclusive, collaborative capsule collection at Corner Store CPT.

    Creative directors and designers Mathew Kieser and Anees Petersen have been inspiring aesthetic attitudes across the country and now join forces to create an internationally relevant, yet locally inspired collection with the versatility to be worn across a wide variety of cultural and economic situations; from the wayward delinquent to the advertising executive, from the care-free skater kid to the carefully-curated clothing geek.

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    Scope the impeccably crafted collection in the lookbook below, shot by Ricardo Simal; with classic long and short sleeved tees, collaborative text-based logos that will get the cool-collector drooling, reworked outerwear denim with the freshest silhouette, as well as beautifully detailed and reworked chinos.

    With its quality, uncomplicated approach, combining a minimalistic pallet with subversive pops of colour, a tasty combination of fabrics, and an interestingly unisex feel, you can easily scoop one or two special items or wear it head-to-toe.

    Check out the drop and party here and claim a piece of this important moment in SA clothing culture!

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    Credits:

    Photographer – Ricardo Simal

    Stylist + Director – Anees Petersen

    Model – Pierre Carl Vermeulen

  • Watch: Fear of The Youth Episode 2 – Didi Monsta

    Fear of The Youth is a new web series about the interests and concerns of Johannesburg youth. The series is produced by Germ Heals a collective of filmmakers, fashion designers and photographers. In episode 2 Germ Heals catch up with the young fashion designer Didi Monsta to discuss his personal style as well as the release of his Half Empty collection.

  • Thesis Lifestyle celebrates a decade in the game!

    Thesis is a Johannesburg institution. From fashion and retail to events and socially oriented initiatives the brand has grown from strength to strength in the past decade. Their t-shirts and bucket hats are staples on the streets of the city and they’ve recently opened a new store ko-Kagiso.

    The original thesis store is located In the heart of Soweto  at 173 Machaba Drive, in Mofolo Village. Their stock of original apparel and accessories are fresh yet uncomplicated and have come to help define youth culture from Soweto. The store itself is home for the brand as well as a creative nexus for Soweto and Johannesburg at large. The Thesis team consists of Wandile Zondo, Business Manager, Wireless G the Creative Director and Co-owner Nkululeko Khumalo.

    The brand launched a decade ago, and has been positively impacting their community through cultural initiatives as well as serving as a model for entrepreneurship for other streetwear brands.  Thesis is rooted in the street culture of Soweto, and interprets the unique experience of being from there for the world. Their innovative perspective on using the corner store to push culture instead of liquor positively impacts their community while inspiring others to follow suit. Their ten years in the industry has seen them consistently promote creative expression; they hosted the pioneering Thesis Social Jam Sessions which offered a platform to other up and coming creatives including Toll Ass Mo and the Goliath brothers.  And now as part of the 4Afrika Initiative Thesis has teamed up with Microsoft to continue to do great things for South African creatives and society.

    A happy ten years to Thesis Lifestyle; a landmark for a cultural and social institution, for and from the streets of South Africa.

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  • Vulcan Juwish is a New Label Making Playful Streetwear

    Vulcan Juwish is a Johannesburg based fashion label started by two brothers, Thapelo and  Kopano Maubane. The label launched its 3rd collection today via a series of candid portraits and lifestyle shots.

    Although it may look like it at first glance Vulcan Juwish is not the usual streetwear-label-startup so common amongst young streetwear-enthusiasts based in and around Johannesburg. The labels odd combination of reference points which include N.W.A and Star Trek, infuse an unusual but refreshing playfulness and eccentricity into their clothes.

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