Quantcast
Channel: Opening Ceremony RSS - ocblog
Viewing all 5010 articles
Browse latest View live

Tag Teaming at Team Gallery

0
0
This past Thursday, Team Gallery opened two drastically different shows by artists Davis Rhodes and Andreas Schulze. Located around the corner from one another, the simultaneous openings amplified each others’ buzz as guests told each other “This is crazy, but you should see what’s around the corner!” Gallery owner José Freire has succeeded in his mission to exhibit work that encompasses entire artistic spectrums by pairing these two exhibitions that are undeniably antithetical, yet complimentary.

Upon walking into Davis Rhodes’ exhibit Untitled ‘12, you are immediately immersed in his bright, bare world of art. Rhodes’ imposing foam board paintings stand and lean throughout the room. Monolithic, monochromatic rectangles of muted beige, off-white, and black, the pieces differ most importantly in their spray paint treatments, which cause each foam board to warp and reflect the light in a different way. These acts of chemical and physical transformation have rendered the once-identical foam boards unique. Ultimately, this series plays with space, shape, uniformity, and setting.

Compared to Rhodes’ sparse, minimalistic display, Schulze’s work is an explosion of expression. Reminiscent of movements as diverse as Surrealism, Expressionism, Bauhaus and Dada, Ohne Titel is a bizarre and chaotic world of its own. As the viewer passes through the door, they step onto a painted landscape of fields and highways that wind through the exhibit.  Pieces of fantastic furniture fill the “grassy” areas and lend the exhibit a whimsical feeling of domesticity. Canvases full of color and mysterious symbols hang, clashing, on painted orange walls. The paintings are huge and alluring, depicting insane scenarios.

Both through March 24th, 2012

Untitled '12 is showing at:
TEAM GALLERY 
47 Wooster St
New York, NY
MAP

Ohne Titel is showing at:
TEAM GALLERY
83 Grand St
New York, NY
MAP










Andreas sitting in one of his chairs


The Bright Lights of TERRYWOOD at OHWOW LA

0
0
Terry Richardson’s opening at OHWOW Gallery in LA was a celebration of photography, both for Terry and for the many who attended. Perhaps it was the fact that this was the first glimpse of Terry’s new work or maybe it was just the exclusivity of the event (maintained by a line that spanned several blocks), but as soon as Teena and I arrived, we felt the need to expedite photos onto all forms of social media, as unabashed proof that we were there!

It’s no surprise that the 25-piece show, entitled TERRYWOOD, inspired this kind of excitement in LA. With the city as his subject matter, Terry used local landscapes and icons to explore the nature of the city and the idealized dreams of Hollywood. In this vein, the volume of iconic faces showing their support on the night (Pamela, Paris, Lindsay, Franco, and Ron Jeremy, to name a few) was easily foreseen. Their attendance could also be attributed to the Oscar weekend, and if so, the Oscar-esque Terry trophies displayed in the center of the room were all the more appropriate.

Interacting with most of the crowd, Terry took many pictures of his own, placing eager guests in front of the giant prints. Judging by the plethora of flickering flashbulbs and iPhones, it was clear that patrons not only came to view the photographs, but to also be a part of them. Isn’t that what Hollywood is about anyway—finding your way into the spotlight that lured you there to begin with?

Through March 31st, 2012

OHWOW GALLERY LA
937 North La Cienega Boulevard
Los Angeles, CA 90069
MAP

Photography by Teena Sahebi









Jeremy and Jenny


Molly and Michelangelo


Linlee (right)


Dennis


Pete, Greg, and Carlos













Opening Ceremony Spring/Summer 2012: Part 1

0
0
Cat prints, crochet, flowers, and neon—Opening Ceremony's Spring/Summer 2012 collection is about everything we love when the sun comes out. And top of our list this year: the wave of summer festivals! From Coachella to Sonar to Burning Man, we get swept up in the hypnotic prints and colors of our favorite weekenders, cutting loose in multicolor raffia, fluorescent striped skirts, and patchwork denim.

There's also a little Argentina thrown into the mix, where highlighter brights meet hand-crafted details. Rustic tile prints, striped raffia bustiers, and custom-made floral lace are a tribute to our favorite holiday handicrafts. And, like an adventure though the Andes, the trip wouldn't be complete without lace-up baja tops and athletic jersey, finished with juicy neon zips.

Shop all Opening Ceremony Collection here. And browse the Spring/Summer 2012 lookbook here!

Hyoni Kang in the Opening Ceremony SS12 lookbook, shot by Tim Barber

FLORAL LACE MINI DRESS in indigo

SCOOP-NECK DRESS in camel

FLORAL LACE BABYDOLL DRESS in white

SEAMED MINI DRESS in yellow/blue

kno

Cindy Sherman at the MoMA

0
0
It’s a party up on MoMA’s sixth floor, and all of Cindy Sherman’s old friends are invited (well, many of them anyway). The photographer's much-anticipated retrospective finally opened to the public yesterday, and the cast of characters on display is over-the-top to be sure. There are the sultry vixens, ingénues, 9-to-5 girls, women gone mad, and fading starlets from her Untitled Film Stills series (1977-1980) of small black-and-white photographs cataloguing mid-20th-century filmic clichés of women. There are the disheveled, hollow-eyed, frightened girls from her Centerfolds (1981) pictures, which feature captives of male fantasies of rape and rescue. (Fun guests to have at any gathering, am I right?) And then there are the clowns, the fashion victims, the vaguely historical figures, the heroin-chic models, the aging society women flaunting their pearls, furs, and contrived sophistication… The list goes on.

Of course, Sherman plays all of these roles herself. She takes the female “types” circulated by our image-driven culture and cuts into them with the precision of an knife-happy plastic surgeon, leaving scars that mark their artificiality but also their disturbing tenacity. It is these apects of Sherman's pictures—their ambition and their incisiveness (among other things)—that has made her work so captivating to the art world over the last 35 years. Here’s to 35 more, Cindy!

Go and see these iconic images while you can. The show continues through June 11, 2012.

MoMA
11 W. 53rd St.
New York, NY 10019
map


Untitled #466 (2008)


Untitled #474 (2008)

Larger-than-life Cindy figures before entering the show's first gallery

Untitled #131 (1983)

Untitled #96 (1981) (Image courtesy of the MoMA)

Untitled Film Still #6 (1977)

Untitled A, B, C, D, and E (1975)

Untitled Film Still #12 (1978)

Untitled #70 (1980)

Untitled #119 (1983) (Image

Meet the Model: John Tuite

0
0
Meet John, our dreamy model who we liked so much that we made him a blog intern at OC Worldwide. Check out John's first article here and you'll agree he's not just a pretty face!

Your neighborhood (in NY): Soho

Hometown: Saint Petersburg, Florida

Astrological sign: Aquarius 

What is something about you that no one would expect? I had a parasite once

What was the easiest or hardest thing about modeling for Opening Ceremony? The hardest part was climbing the five flights of stairs to the studio!

When I'm not modeling I'm: Exploring NYC or surfing the web 

Where's the coolest or strangest place you've ever been to for a photo shoot? Nowhere that strange...

Essential photo shoot song? "Freak" by LFO 

Most prized possession? My laptop

Best gift you've ever received? My friend Jessica brought me back some sculptures from Cambodia

What is something that everyone should try at least once? Everyone should party in nature with their friends

If you weren't a model what would you be doing? I'd be studying in Saint Louis

What's the most played song on your iPod? "The Harold Song" by Ke$ha

Favorite place to go to escape the city: Upstate New York or back home in Florida 

Best friend you've found in the industry: Carlos Santolalla

You're on a deserted island—5 necessities? A videocamera, a running refrigerator filled with food, an eReader with everlasting batteries, a dog, and a hammock

What would you choose as your last meal on earth? A five course home-cooked meal with grilled meat and vegetables and fried banana for dessert

What's your spirit animal? Otter or Manatee 


RIVIERA CLUB CREWNECK SWEATSHIRT in indigo 
Ami cotton voile pocket t-shirt in khaki 

ami cotton double-face classic pants in blue 

keds at opening ceremony the pocket tee in tomato 

keds at opening ceremony the keds tee in heather grey 

keds at opening ceremon

Leap Day Comes But Once Every Four Years

0
0
To celebrate this freaky day, we pay tribute to "Leap Day," last week's freakiest of freaky 30 Rock episodes. As Criss told Liz Lemon—quoting holiday classic Leap Dave Williams, starring Jim Carrey and Andie MacDowell—“Nothing that happens on Leap Day counts. Real life is for March.”

Peep our snapshots of Liz getting "indecent proposaled" by Internet billionaire Sad Thad the Skin Tag Lad and entering a slut-off with Jenna and Karolína Kurková; of Jim Carrey growing gills; of Kenneth dressed as holiday mascot Leap Day Williams, who emerges from the Mariana Trench every four years to give children candy for their tears; of Tracy Jordan spending $50,000-worth of Benihana vouchers; and of Jack's visitation by the ghost of Leap Days future. And, as everyone but Liz knows, you can only wear yellow and blue today. Keep scrolling for ideas!






BERNSTOCK SPEIRS BOATER in navy



WOMMELSDORFF NANCY THICK RIB BEANIE in mandarin/fuchsia



united bamboo bowtie in pinstripe



opening ceremony scalloped collar blouse in yellow gradient



adam kimmel x carhartt bomber in navy



d.s. dundee milford shirt in grey



Millennium Magazines at MoMA

0
0
Rachael Morrison and David Senior have curated an exhibit at the MoMa Library, Millenium Magazines, dedicated solely to independent, small-distribution publications—heaps of which are conveniently sold at OC! The topics of these appealing publications range from a compilation of the editor’s favorite photographs, to documentations of anything plant-related in urban environments. And as the first exhibition at MoMA Library to allow visitors to handle and interact with the books, the result is stimulating, to say the least. I was lucky enough to chat with Senior about the development of this exhibit and some of his personal favorite publications on view.

Rachel Hodin: So give me the low-down on Millennium Magazines.
David Senior: Our idea was to exhibit contemporary artist and design magazines that hinged on an earlier lineage of publications from the ‘70s to the present. There’s a wide range of subject matter, but in a nutshell, we were seeking out magazines that were produced by a small group of people—sometimes one person—and that are different from large editorials. Our guiding principle was to focus on people whose personal project was to make the magazine.

RH: And visitors are allowed to handle with the pieces being showcased. 
DS: Yes. We usually have vitrine shows of library material or historical material that can’t be touched. But for this show, we wanted it to be interactive. It didn’t really make sense to put a magazine that you could buy at a store for $10 in a vitrine. So this is the first show we’ve done here where we have books that can actually be handled. Another fun part was asking the artists for images of their process, which you can see in the slideshow here. It sort of fills out the idea of the publications.

RH: Are a lot of these publications still in circulation?
DS: I’d say 30 to 40 percent are no longer in print. The majority of the publications here have been published in the last three or four years. Some started in the early 2000s and only have a couple issues, such as LTTR, which made five issues and stopped in 2007. For me, LTTR exemplifies a collective of people making a magazine and becoming a social practice, creating a community. The book and its simple format can be a strategy to first get your work out into the world.

RH: Would you say LTTR is your favorite magazine on display?
DS: I like a lot of these. I wouldn’t say it’s my favorite, but for me, knowing the people that made it when it first started—being around the same age as them and getting to see the process of their practice—goes a long way.

RH: What was the most interesting group of collaborators that you met?
DS: In terms of finds for the show, I really love Correspondencia as a project—it’s from Buenos Aires. I also like Venir a lot, which is from Portland.

RH: So these are chosen from all around the world?
DS: Yeah, one of the things we tried to do was to have a global representation of things. We have publications from New York, LA, Paris, Milan, and London but also from Asia, Africa, and Latin America. If we'd had more time to do research there certainly would have been more global titles, but honestly we just tried our best.

RH: Did you find any one constant throughout a lot of the magazines?
DS: I think there are a couple different threads. There’s o

OC Mixtape Series #15: The Aikiu Mix

0
0
Shaking up the Parisian music scene with a smooth cocktail of disco, electronic pop, New Wave, and a splash of indie rock is a talented new quintet worth giving a listen to. The Aikiu is made up of Alex Aikiu (lead vocals), Julien Vichnievsky (keyboards), Barnabé Nuytten (bass), Nuno Cordeiro (guitar), and Tatiana Mladenovitch (drums). Together they distill elements from music across decades, amounting in a sound that can only be described as fresh timelessness. We've been addicted to their hoppy, bass-infected song "JUST CAN'T SLEEP" since it came out in 2010, and we're stoked on the band releasing its very first LP this year, co-arranged with Pilooski (Discodeine) and produced by The Shoes' Guillaume Brière.

A four-track EP that you'll be able to win in our giveaway this week (follow us on TWITTER for details to come!) is a taste of their soon-to-be-released LP. The EP scampers through a sunny field via fast-paced drums and twinkling piano ("Pieces of Gold"); revisits the Strokes' effervescence but with more sultriness ("Somehow"); and offers a heartfelt throwback to 80s melodrama ("20th Century Ghost"). Topped off with the delightful, almost dumb redundancy of the goofy instrumental "Barbarella," this aural sneak peek is as feel-good as it gets. Oh and did we mention the artwork is by by the incomparable French art directors M/M Paris

To know more, we conducted a Q&A with the lead singer Alex, and even got the band to put together a mixtape of some of their favorite stuff. The downloadable mix is molasses to the ears, and coasts seamlessly through Tchaikovsky, Koudlam, Nicolas Jaar, and some of the Aikiu's own tracks.
___________________________________________
  


Tracklist:
1. October - Tchaikovsky
2. Pieces of Gold - The Aikiu
3. I Will Fade Away - Koudlam
4. Somehow - The Aikiu
5. I Need a Doctor - The Drums
6. Take It Out on Me - Chairlift
7. I Didn't Know - Tristesse Contemporaine
8. D'un Taxiphone - Isabelle Adjani
9. Rendez-Vous - Cerrone
10. I Need Somebody to Love Tonight - Sylvester
11. Darkside A1 - Nicolas Jaar
___________________________________________ 

Sofia Cavallo: How would you describe your sound?

Alex Aikiu: I would describe it as a pop with New Wave influences. The songwriting itself is rather classic; we tried to have an interesting mix of organic and electronic in the production. It has more to do with soul music than club music, but you could still dance to most of the songs. It's all pretty much emotionally driven.

SC: Do you see yourself as reviving disco?
AA: The two first EPs we put out were truly disco-influenced, especially "Just Can't Sleep," prod

Pop Your Collar! New Shirts from Band of Outsiders

0
0
Having piles of clean, neatly folded shirts in your wardrobe is the stuff of dreams. In real life, shirts hang out in the corner of your bedroom, in your friends' closets, or in that awkward place where they're not clean enough to wear but not dirty enough to take to the dry cleaner. So you can never have too many shirts. Especially when they're as perfect as Band's cotton button-downs. For Spring/Summer 2012, the offering is big on gently crinkled seersucker (another ally in the lazy person's war against laundry and ironing), micro-stripes and checks, and bright block colors that make you want to change up your usual white.

Shop all Band of Outsiders here.




seersucker striped button-down in black/white/yellow


seersucker checked button-down in multi white

seersucker checked button-down in multi navy

plaid button-down shirt in indigo

button-down shirt in white

button-down shirt in moonlight chambray

button-down shirt in blue ground plaid

button-down shirt in blue

button-down shirt in batiste peat

button-down shirt in batiste coriander

broadcloth check button-down in white/blue/red

striped oxford button-down shirt in moonlight

Right on Target: BULLETT Magazine and OC at the ACE

0
0
The current issue of BULLETTfeaturing cover stars Daniel Radcliffe and Juliette Lewis, is jam-packed with OC friends, including Tavi, Gia, James Franco, Scott Campbell, Alexa Chung, Josh Hartnett, and Girls. Editors Nick and Juliet gave Pardis and me a tour of their office, plus a behind-the-scenes look at the new issue.

Sean Risley: The latest issue, titled "Obsessed," surveys TV and films stars from the 90s and 2000s. Are there any celeb favorites you weren't able to include?

Nick Haramis: I spent the better part of three months trying to convince Macaulay Culkin to participate in the "Five Films" feature, where we asked actors and directors for behind-the-scenes anecdotes from their most iconic films. In the end, he'd only do it if we paid him. But I was able to track down Thora Birch, Heather Matarazzo (Welcome to the Dollhouse), Natasha Lyonne, Anna Chlumsky (My Girl), and Rider Strong (Boy Meets World).

Juliet LeGrand Thompson: Plus James Van Der Beek and Melissa Joan Hart! My eighth-grade self is pretty excited about the issue. In the future I'd love to do something with Honey Boo Boo Child!

SR: I love the editorial where Juliette Lewis fans out on Daniel Radcliffe. As a teen, who were your celebrity crushes?
NH: I used to have it bad for Christina Ricci and confessed the whole thing to her a couple of years ago. Since she moved to New York, we've become great friends, which is good because it could have ended in a restraining order just as easily. Oh, and I once told Patricia Clarkson something crazy like, "I feel like your eyes are sharing secrets that only I could ever understand."

JLGT: I had this amazing Betsey Johnson cropped sweater that I wore everyday with some vintage Boy Scout shorts and purple Doc Martens, until one of my teachers took me aside and told me that I should change more often. That outfit got me through so many awesome moments, like my first concert—where L7 played topless!

SR: Your website hosts a nice mix of media that includes editorials, contributing journals, and a TV section. How do you find a balance between the printed magazine and the site?
NH: At BULLETT, we realize that old media and new media are symbiotic, and even though digital platforms offer great features, there's still nothing quite like cracking open a new magazine on a Sunday afternoon. Plus we've added a sticker page, paper dolls, and different paper stocks to our new issue! We put together some amazing video exclusives, short films, and photo galleries on

Grand Opening: Opening Ceremony Shinjuku!

0
0
Get excited––we're opening a second store location in Japan, Opening Ceremony Shinjuku, on Friday, March 2nd! Just like our Opening Ceremony Japan flagship store in Shibuya, which opened in 2009, OC Shinjuku will offer unique menswear, womenswear, and accessories that are carefully selected from various countries each season. It will feature both established designers like T BY ALEXANDER WANG, RODARTE, and PROENZA SCHOULER, as well as emerging labels in true OC curatorial style. To celebrate the new location, we'll be stocking exclusive items from Proenza and TRIPP NYC, and collaboration items from TOGA ROBE TOGA ARCHIVES FOR OPENING CEREMONY. Stay tuned for more updates, and see you on Friday!

OPENING CEREMONY SHINJUKU
Lumine 2 2nd Floor
3-38-2 Shinjuku
Shinjuku-ku, TOKYO

Tel: 03-5323-8115
Open daily from 11:00am ~ 10:00pm*
(*Exact hours are subject to change depending on the schedule of LUMINE SHINJUKU)

__________________________________________

OPENING CEREMONY日本2号店!
3月2日(金) ルミネ新宿店 ルミネ2にNEW OPEN!
3月2日(金)、日本2号店目となる「OPENING CEREMONY SHINJUKU」をルミネ新宿店 ルミネ2にオープン! 2009年にオープンした日本初のフラッグシップストアの渋谷店に加えて、ファッションエリアであり様々な文化が交差する新宿というフィールドでも新たなファッション・カルチャーを提案します。

「OPENING CEREMONY SHINJUKU」ではフラッグシップショップと同様、毎シーズン様々な国から仕入れた新進気鋭のブランドや「T BY ALEXANDER WANG」、「RODARTE」、「PROENZA SCHOULER」をはじめとする人気ブランドなどOPENING CEREMONYならではのアーティスティックかつユニークな感性によってセレクトされたウィメンズ・メンズ・雑貨が揃います。 またショップオープンを記念してPROENZA SCHOULERTRIPPの限定アイテムや、TOGA×OPENING CEREMONYのコラボレーションアイテムも発売!

皆様のご来店をお待ちしております。

OPENING CEREMONY SHINJUKU
東京都新宿区新宿 3-28-2 ルミネ 2 2F
03-5323-8115
Open Time | 11:00 - 22:00 不定休(ルミネ新宿店 営業時間に準ずる)

OC Special Delivery!

0
0
Good things come to those who wait! Thank you for bearing with us while we tweaked the site. As a special treat, we're giving you Free UPS Ground Shipping on all orders over $250!

Just enter the code OCFREESHIP at checkout.

Promotion valid until March 1, 2012 11.59pm PST. Offer applies to US domestic orders $250 and over with UPS Ground Shipping method selected. This promotion does not apply to pre-existing orders, cannot be redeemed in stores, and is only available at openingceremony.usFREE SHIPPING!

Meet Eunice

0
0
New to our accessories design team from the Sunshine State is Eunice, our intern! 

Name: Eunice Youn-kyoung Choi
Hometown: Boca Raton, Florida

Astrological sign:
Gemini
When I was 13, I was wearing: A Pierre Cardin cape coat
Favorite Pandora station: Duffy 
Favorite place for coffee: Joe's
Favorite place for noodles: Hyo Dong Gak in K-town
Item at OC that I most covet: The Peter Jensen Large Leather Angela bag in white.

OCNY Book Club Member: Rachel Hodin

0
0
Member: Rachel
Book: Alex Katz: Seeing, Drawing
Price: $45.00
Why it's so great: Bold brushstrokes, clean lines, and bright colors—I find almost everything about Alex Katz's work fun to look at. This book maps the steps he takes to reach the finished canvasses: a great insight into his artistic process.

Browse all our books here.  













Locals Only: Gerardo Dubois' Argentina

0
0
'Locals Only' is a column in which we ask friends from Argentina, our featured country, where they like to eat, thrift, hide out, and hang out when visiting their homeland.

Gerardo Dubois is an exciting newcomer in the Argentinian fashion world. He debuted his first collection in 2006, and established his own brand, Bandoleiro. Named for the Portuguese word for "bandit," Bandoleiro produces clothing that is exotic and youthful, exuberant and provocative, and always rooted in Argentina's rustic cabellero culture. Check out the crazy-cute dresses Gerardo did for us and see what he recommends doing in his homebase of Buenos Aires.

Place for a low-key dinner with friends: Julio's, the parrilla (or steakhouse) near my workshop, is the best. It's a small place with good meat and crispy fries.
Gallery: All the galleries at the Patio del Liceo are constantly getting better. And if you're around La Boca you can't miss Popa—those guys are crazy!
Bookstore: Cobra Libros!  I'm always looking for those limited edition Gustavo DiMario photo books.
Place to shop: Bungalow Room  and Fire Walk With Me, for sure.
Vintage store: Cul de Sac here in Villa Crespo always surprises me, and the owner´s Milli Vanilli haircut alone is worth the visit.
Place for coffee: Manu's 90's espresso machine here at Bungalow Room is unbeatable. But if it's sunny and I have some money, I go fight old ladies at the Museo de Arte Decorativo´s Café.
Place for choripan sandwiches: Julio's, Julio's, Julio's! Choripan meat has become a little dangerous lately so I take precautions… sometimes.
Best alfajor cookie: Cachafaz on payday and Jorgito at the end of the month. Both are great.
Weekend getaway: Mar Del Plata is awesome because you can skip going to the beach and still have lots of fun.
Barrio to spend your Sunday: My bed. If I’m out, I like going to the Salvation Army at Pompeya or the Parque Centenario to bargain for cheap little things.
______________________________________________

JULIO - Escalabrini Ortiz 700 - MAP
PATIO DE LICEO - Av. Santa Fe 2729 - Map
POPA GALLERY - Lamadrid 882, La Boca - map
COBRA LIBROS - Aranguren 150 - MAP
FIRE WALK WITH ME - Arce 941 - MAP
CUL DE SAC -

Make It Snappy: Darcel Disappoints Karl

0
0


Who: Karl + Craig (4 EVA)
What: Celebrating colette's 15th birthday with 150 Darcel portraits
When: Right now!
Where: colette, Paris

Make It Snappy: Brucennial 2012

0
0
Make It Snappy is a photo series showcasing quick snaps from OC & friends
Who: Yellow Jade Mushroom of the Supreme Numinous Treasure Mushrooms by Charles Sabba
Why: It's a jungle out here
Where: The Bruce High Quality Foundation's Brucennial art show
When: Last night
 

OC x PFW: The Final Walk at Mugler FW12

0
0


An army of pod women at the close of last night's Mugler Fall/Winter 2012 show. Stay tuned for more Paris Fashion Week coverage to come, here on the OC Blog!

Americana Redux: Adam Kimmel x Carhartt Pre-Spring 2012

0
0
As a man obsessed with American heroes—his shows have referenced cowboys, Snoop Dogg, Bigfoot, and Area 51 researchers—it makes sense that Adam Kimmel would gravitate towards Carhartt, the home of the original American overall. Prizing his "American cut" over slimmer European styles, Kimmel maintains all the practical heft of Carhartt's workwear shapes in the fourth season of their cult collaboration.

Swapping out fall’s cashmere and moleskin for lightweight cotton canvas, the Pre-Spring 2012 collection is grounded in trademark Carhartt details. Work coats, button-downs, and blazers (for when you're off the clock) are cut from durable fabrics and finished with oversized pockets and metal buttons. As Kimmel understands, in a land of skin-tight pants, someone has to man up, and it's Carhartt.

Shop all Adam Kimmel x Carharrt here.

SWEATSHIRT in sky heather

summer work coat in black

BOMBER in navy

SUMMER WORK COAT in khaki

two-button blazer in navy

twill bomber in olive green

reversible welder shirt in navy/black

sweatshirt in black

OC Presents: Dime Store Diamonds

0
0
For our latest online editorial, OC stylist Daria Radlinski, prop stylist Amy Henry, and photographer Jeremy Liebman came together to play their own version of Supermarket Sweep. The playing fields: OCNY and a 99-cent megastore in Bushwick, Brooklyn; the prizes: our favorite OC accessories and oddball 99-cent artifacts; the result: "Dime Store Diamonds."

View the online editorial here.
Viewing all 5010 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images