One of your perennial favorites, Danish menswear brand Han Kjøbenhavn, just double-dosed the intercaves with its 2014 offerings--a Spring/Summer lookbook (photographs below) and Autumn/Winter über show (video at the bottom). The former is slick and technical with an airiness about it. The latter, presented at the National Museum of Denmark as part of Copenhagen's fashion week, is dark and formidable. It's a spectacle in which Speedoed hulks pedal white chariots in an ominous parade of gas-masked grotesques. In other words, it's more of the awesomeness you've come to expect from Han Kjøbenhavn.
Thursday, February 13, 2014
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
Tuesday, February 4, 2014
m's braque Spring/Summer 2014
Takahiro Matsushita unveiled his menswear label, m's braque, in 2002, and the Paris-based, Japanese designer has been going strong ever since. He finds and employs vintage fabrics and mixes textures, patterns, and colors beautifully and simply, as evidenced in his current collection. The photos below feature the art of Aki Kuroda.
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Céleste Boursier-Mougenot at Peabody Essex Museum
French artist Céleste Boursier-Mougenot is a trained musician and composer whose installation featuring 70 zebra finches and a slew of tuned, amplified guitars will be on display at the Peabody Essex Museum (Salem, MA). As the birds nest, feed, flock, and perch on guitars and cymbals, the sonic experience unfolds. The piece was originally designed for the Barbican's Curve Gallery in 2010, but will be on view on in the P.E.M.'s 2,000-square-foot walk-through aviary starting on January 18.
Sunday, January 12, 2014
Peter Jungmann | "Ufogel" | Austria
Architect Peter Jungmann designed the minimal 484-square-foot Ufogel, which is located in the Austrian Alps.
Thursday, January 2, 2014
Kenzo F/W 2013 | "Cloudbusting"
When you saw the Kenzo Fall/Winter 2013 video, "Cloudbusting," it was a reminder of the amazing job creative directors Humberto Leon and Carol Lim have done in bringing the Parisian label back to relevancy. Below is an interview that you conducted with Leon and Lim, the brains behind Opening Ceremony, about the process. It originally appeared in the Nov/Dec 2012 issue of Essential Homme.
Saturday, December 14, 2013
Need Supply | "Meet the Maker: Gitman Vintage"
Richmond, Virginia-based retailer Need Supply recently released an episode of their "Meet the Maker" series featuring Gitman Brothers Vintage, which has been manufacturing shirts since 1978 in Ashland, Pennsylvania. The brand is an extension of Max Gitman's original company, which relocated to Ashland from Brooklyn in 1932. Slim fits and interesting patterns and prints have elevated the popularity of Gitman Vintage shirts in recent years.
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
Joe Doucet | "Iota" Playing Cards
You most definitely do not like playing cards; however, you might want to be dealt in to a hand using designer Joe Doucet's minimalist "Iota" deck. Play on, players.
Monday, November 18, 2013
Three Questions: Corey Milligan of Mtn Man Toy Shop
You were recently introduced to Mountain Man Toy Shop of Jackson Hole, Wyoming, which purveys of all kinds of tools and other fun stuff for the modern day outdoorsman. It’s proprietor, Corey Milligan, is also the founder and owner of New West KnifeWorks, where he’s been making some of the best cooking knives on the market for over 15 years.
Corey was kind enough to take some time out to dish about knives, throwing tomahawks, and living the good life in the mountains.
THINGS IS COOL: How did you get from making knives to Mountain Man
Toy Shop?
COREY MILLIGAN: Expanding from just making kitchen knives to the
MMTS was really easy. The original drive was good old-fashioned customer
demand. All summer long in our kitchen knife store in Jackson Hole,
customers were coming in looking for hunting and pocketknives. We had
space next door become available, so it was an easy decision. With my 20
years of experience manufacturing kitchen knives, it was easy to use that
knowledge to start making other types of knives. Some guys often think
kitchen knives are kind of girlie and not tough compared to hunting and pocketknives,
but the opposite is true. Kitchen knives in a real professional kitchen
get a harder workout in a day than most hunting knives get in a year. So
making badass hunting, pocketknives and other mountain tools is no
problem. Also, we are in Jackson Hole where we are hitting it hard
in the mountains all the time. My friends and/or I are hunting,
fishing, climbing, skiing, white water paddling, search and rescuing, ski
patrolling...everyday on the highest level. We know how tools need to
work and will break them if they don't.
T.I.C.: Why tomahawks?
C.M.: Why not? They are just nothing but fun. It is my
goal to mainstream throwing tomahawks in the backyard just like throwing
horseshoes. The sound of a tomahawk sinking into a wood crosscut is
incredibly satisfying. I think there is some perception of risk but they
are no more dangerous than throwing horseshoes as long as you use a little
common sense. The perception of
risk is also what makes them fun.
Tomahawks have a rich history in Jackson Hole and for mountain
men. Besides the rifle, it was the mountain man’s most treasured tool for
its utility as a throwing or, more commonly, hand-to-hand weapon and as a
general camp hatchet. There is also a rich history from the early days of
Jackson Hole industrial tourism in which the "rubber tomahawk shop"
was the classic tongue in cheek description of tourist stores. So having these badass handmade
tomahawks instead just fits right into Jackson Hole’s evolution into a super
high-end destination. The hand-forged nature of our "hawks"
also makes them beautiful pieces of metallurgy. They’re collectible for hanging on the wall as an art piece.
T.I.C.: How would you describe mountain man style?
C.M.:
It's my hope with MMTS that we are giving a nod to the classic mountain men of
old—the trappers, explorers and cowboys who discovered and settled Jackson Hole--while
also celebrating the real and true mountain man lifestyle that is alive and
well in Jackson Hole and across the West today. Most folks I know are
here to live the good life in the mountains, whether it’s playing in the
mountains on skis, snow machines, bikes or horses. Somehow, ski bums and cowboys can drink
whiskey and PBRs together at the bar and end up talking about the glory of
their day in the mountains instead of getting in a fistfight. As far as
what folks wear, the organic combination of western wear (Kinco work gloves, Carhartts)
and technical mountaineering wear (Patagonia puffy) is pretty cool. If
you are from here, it is pretty easy to spot a local.
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