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Ray Gunn First Look: Brad Bird’s Sci-Fi Noir With Rockwell and Johansson
Courrèges Three Sixty Bag: A Cont Form Without Fixed Position
Kith – Ronnie Fieg Turns 15 Years of RF Footwear Into a Book, Arriving Fall
William Aliotti x Billabong: A New Continuity in Surf Expression
Shake James x adidas Samba “414 Day”: Milwaukee Enrg Meets Summerfest Access
Turnstile / Dermot Kennedy — Still Under Pressure, On the Edge
TODO PASA “Sol” Clavo Jacket: A Trial of Fragments, Not a Style
Lacoste Polo Factory Paris: The Crocodile Tells It All
When Lacoste opens the Polo Factory in Paris, it doesn’t simply present history—it stages it. The visitor is not walking into an archive, nor a conventional exhibition. Instead, they enter a carefully constructed memory: a 1950s factory that feels plausible enough to be believed, yet polished enough to signal that belief is optional. The machines […]
Thisisneverthat® × Grateful Dead: Heritage Graphics, Rebalanced
familiar There is a stark kind of image that refuses to age. Not because it resists time, but because it absorbs it—layer by layer, generation by generation—until it becomes less a relic and more a system. The iconography of the Grateful Deadexists in this space: endlessly reproduced, endlessly reinterpreted, yet never diluted. With the arrival […]
Adidas x VA Superstan: When Two Icons Resolve into One Surface
There’s something quietly radical about a shoe that doesn’t announce itself as new. Instead, it rearranges what already exists—two silhouettes so embedded in cultural memory that they hardly need introduction—and asks a simple question: what happens when legacy is not preserved, but recomposed? The return of the Superstan, reworked by adidas Originals in connection with […]
Apple’s Foldable iPhone: A Prototype Caught Between Precision and Possibility
The first credible glimpse of Apple Inc.’s long-rumored foldable iPhone hasn’t arrived through a keynote or a controlled reveal. It has surfaced through something quieter, more industrial, and arguably more revealing: a dummy unit. Shared by leaker Sonny Dickson, these physical mockups do not simply preview a product. They outline a design position, a hesitation, […]
FITZ x Casinola “EDDIE”: A New Essential For Modernity
frame The FITZ x Casinola “EDDIE” isn’t trying to compete with the noise of contemporary eyewear. It removes itself from it. What you’re looking at is a frame that understands proportion before presence—something that sits on the face without insisting on being the center of attention, yet inevitably becoming it. The first read is clarity. […]
Tretorn Ace ’91: Court Memory, Everyday Form
There is a specific kind of clarity that comes from tennis footwear designed before excess became the default. The Ace ’91 by Tretorn draws from that moment—early 1990s performance—when design was already precise, but not yet overstated. It’s not nostalgia in the conventional sense. It’s structural recall. The shoe doesn’t replicate an archive model; it […]
MOKE GEN 1 EV: A British Original, Reworked in Pace
There are vehicles that move through time quietly, adapting, shedding, reappearing. And then there are those that refuse to let go of their original idea. The MOKE sits firmly in the latter category—a machine that has never tried to be more than it is, yet somehow becomes more with each iteration. With the GEN 1 […]
Études Studio Oversized Nylon Bomber: Utility Recast in Champagne
The bomber jacket has always carried a kind of cultural shorthand—flight, function, rebellion, uniform. With Études Studio, that shorthand is not erased but rewritten. Their interpretation of the nylon bomber doesn’t try to compete with the archive of military authenticity; instead, it reframes it as a surface for contemporary identity—measured, graphic, and quietly subversive. What […]
LABELHOOD x Nike Shox Z Calistra: When the Shoe Refuses to Behave
There’s a point where footwear stops trying to be wearable in the conventional sense and starts insisting on something else—identity, friction, posture. The connection between LABELHOOD and Nike lands precisely there. Not as a crossover built for mass approval, but as a deliberate narrowing—toward a specific audience, a specific language, a specific way of dressing […]
Kris Gebhardt’s Brother John’s Elephant: Holding Its Ground
There is something immediately disarming about an elephant rendered at this scale—not because of spectacle, but because of proximity. In Brother John’s Elephant, Kris Gebhardt does not stage the animal as distant myth or safari emblem. Instead, he brings it forward—closer than expected, closer than comfortable—until the figure begins to occupy not just space, but […]












