Archives - Posts tagged as 'Fashion'
Marketers are not Merchants, being a Merchant is to be AuthenticPosted September 18th

I love what John Jay (Executive Creative Director and Partner of Wieden + Kennedy) had to say today in his blog about a recent retail experience:
Most marketers are not merchants, being a merchant is to be authentic and there is no more tell-taking aroma than the one of authenticity when you walk into a shop. That was my initial reaction when I walked into Self Edge on Valencia St. in San Francisco, but without even touching one piece of denim, there was already a sense of authenticity through a Japanese lens.
Self Edge is passionate about denim and the denim brands they sell. They house and display their products like your grandmother's fine china. They attack you with all five senses to conjure up the emotions and pride they have in their products. You can see right through them and their authenticity, passion, and knowledge latches on to your heart (and wallet!).
These are things small and large brands should be doing to attract Gen-Y. Start that blog, website, newsletter, store, etc., update it regularly, support your base, give away knowledge and ideas, elicit creativity and passions from your fans. It won't happen overnight, no detailed endeavors ever do, but if you continue to pound away on your project - your heart will shine through to others.
Mr. Jay finished up his post with:
No detail here is too small including the use of a vintage Union Special China stitching machine to create the proper puckered hem after a washing. Self-Edge is a love story, an emotional tryst between the owners, denim and Japan.
Alife NYC; Effortlessly CoolPosted September 17th
If you want to get inspired, visit the Alife headquarters on New York's Orchard Street. What looks like a shoe store is also the realization of the late-night plan that so many talk about, fewer attempt, and even fewer achieve. Rob Cristofaro, Arnaud De Le Colle, Tony Arcabascio, and Tammy Brainard (from left) met five years ago, saved and invested the same amount, and became equal partners in the venture that does what it likes, including art direction, curating (with artists like Shepard Fairey), book publishing (of Ryan McGuinness), a maiden shoe line called Rite Foot (to be carried at Colette in Paris and Los Angeles' KBond), and a lot of other stuff that there isn't room to mention. And they're all 30.Six things that help keep Alife cool:
- Collaborate with large brands (Puma, Reebok, Nike, Adidas, Levi's) on special products in a win-win situation for both
- Support smaller creative musicians, cutting-edge artists, and filmmakers
- Keep their products rare and limited, promote heavily
- All their products/collaborations are in their creative control from start to finish (no outsiders)
- Keep the product simple, but all details matter
- Feature/distribute their product in only a handful of the coolest stores around the world
Wise & Young


