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    Iron Heart Fall/Winter 2025 Collection Preview - Now Live

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    • MastersOfDeathM
      MastersOfDeath
      Iron Heart Deity
      Joined:

      @mclaincausey:

      A Confederacy of Dunces

      I love this book and I know quite a few real life Ignatiuses. If I ever visit NO I'd have to wear a hunting hat.*
      I gave it as a birthday gift to a friend of mine. he looked confused, and as he flipped through the pages said; "there's a lot of words isn't there?" - sigh…..

      *with earflaps of course

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      • B
        bubbapest
        Raw and Unwashed
        Joined:

        @natehate:

        @bubbapest:

        just started reading seriously this year.  so far this year i've read:
        1Q84 - Murakami (first half awesome, 2nd sucked)
        Norwegian Wood - Murakami (was pretty good, but defeinitely would have liked it better had i read it when i was 20)
        Slaughterhouse 5 - Vonnegut (loved it, one of my favorites)
        Breakfast of Champions - Vonnegut (hated it)
        The Rum Diary - Hunter S Thompson (loved it, one of my favorites)
        Inherent Vice - Thomas Pynchon (funny, but didnt get the point of the book and was very confusing)
        Reign In Blood - DX Ferris (wasnt well written, but learned a lot about Def Jam, Rick Rubin and Slayer \m/)
        The Road - Cormac McCarthy (jesus…)

        finishing up Fear and Loathing right now

        hahaha thats lite reading in the world of cormac mccarthy
        wait until you try and take on blood meridian hahaha

        challenge accepted.  i just have to get through the rest of fear and loathing on the campaign trail 72.  didnt much care for fear and loathing in las vegas… but i dont have any experience with hallucinogenic drugs so i couldnt relate

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        • PSBP
          PSB
          Joined:

          Reviving this old thread because I just ordered this book that I learned about from the Heddels Instagram account:

          I was trying to explain my affinity for Japanese-made denim to a friend and as I was telling him that Japanese brands were making incredible vintage American-style workwear, he asked why. I really didn't have an answer. Maybe I will after reading this.

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          • GilesG
            Giles
            IHUK Crew
            Joined:

            Thank you.  Just ordered….

            "OK face up to it - you're useless but generally pretty honest and straightforward . . . it's a rare combination of qualities that I have come to admire in you" - Geo 2011

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            • Megatron1505M
              Megatron1505
              見習いボス
              Joined:

              I have it incoming too…..

              Btw, book tip for anyone who loves Japan. "The Roads To Sata" by Alan Booth, it's written by an English man who lived in Japan and walked from from the Northern tip of Hokkaido down to the Southern tip of Kyushu. Great read.

              Made in England, clothed in Japan, fed in America and drunk in Belgium !

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              • ChrisC
                Chris
                Raw and Unwashed
                Joined:

                @PSB:

                I'm 150 pages in…

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                • PSBP
                  PSB
                  Joined:

                  @Chris - how is it? Worth the purchase?

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                  • ChrisC
                    Chris
                    Raw and Unwashed
                    Joined:

                    Kinda early to say.  So far, it focuses less on the workwear segment of men's clothing (which is what I sort of assumed it would cover) and more on the broader concept of creating a sense of fashion for men and a consumer culture in post-war Japan.  It's examined a couple of trends in the 50s and 60s and how they reflected broader cultural changes, which is interesting, but not exactly what I expected.

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                    • PSBP
                      PSB
                      Joined:

                      I see. I assumed it was about the workwear aspect as well. I hope that is examined at some point, but I'm interested in reading it regardless. Thanks for the info.

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                      • Megatron1505M
                        Megatron1505
                        見習いボス
                        Joined:

                        I just read the GQ interview with the author of Ametora, and he talks about the importance of the brand "A Bathing Ape". It always annoys me when people downplay or mock the influence of Bape on everything we love about Japanese clothing, it wasn't always camo hoodies and Nike rip offs.

                        Made in England, clothed in Japan, fed in America and drunk in Belgium !

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                        • dylantbmayesD
                          dylantbmayes
                          Joined:

                          Does the author elaborate on the brands importance?

                          INSTAGRAM: @DYLANTBMAYES | FACEBOOK.COM/DYLANTBMAYES

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                          • Megatron1505M
                            Megatron1505
                            見習いボス
                            Joined:

                            He says that a lot of things started with Bathing Ape when referencing Japanese clothing impacting popular American culture.

                            Most folks just remember camo and Kanye, but that all came years after Bathing Ape started to impact popular culture.

                            Made in England, clothed in Japan, fed in America and drunk in Belgium !

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                            • dylantbmayesD
                              dylantbmayes
                              Joined:

                              Unfortunately the author (in that instance) seems to be referencing the Kanye years, the early 2000's, when BAPE opened in NY.

                              You sparked my interest for a moment there, thinking he would elaborate on the influences American culture had on NIGO in the early 90's and then the subsequent influence BAPE had in America…

                              Perhaps he will touch on that in the book.

                              INSTAGRAM: @DYLANTBMAYES | FACEBOOK.COM/DYLANTBMAYES

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                              • GraemeG
                                Graeme
                                啓蒙家
                                Joined:

                                These days BAPE is all about gold Rolexes…

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                                • ChrisC
                                  Chris
                                  Raw and Unwashed
                                  Joined:

                                  @dylantbmayes:

                                  thinking he would elaborate on the influences American culture had on NIGO in the early 90's and then the subsequent influence BAPE had in America…

                                  Perhaps he will touch on that in the book.

                                  He did.  Bape was covered largely to show the rise of natively developed Japanese fashion influence, both domestically and globally.  It marked a change in that Japanese fashion was developed with no significant basis in American or European fashion, (unlike most previous American rooted trends) and intended for Japanese consumers (unlike previous Japanese designers like Miyake and Yamamoto, who hit first in Europe).

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                                  • louisboscoL
                                    louisbosco
                                    啓蒙家
                                    Joined:

                                    im in japan, reckon i could find that anywhere?

                                    "Loyalty is a two way street. If i'm asking for it from you, then you're getting it from me."

                                    • Harvey Specter
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                                    • Megatron1505M
                                      Megatron1505
                                      見習いボス
                                      Joined:

                                      I just have fond memories of the old days when the first UK exposure to Bape was through Ian Brown and UNKLE. Back then Bape, Wtaps and Neighborhood were making really cool street wear…..then Kanye happened and Nigo went a bit nuts.

                                      Made in England, clothed in Japan, fed in America and drunk in Belgium !

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                                      • dylantbmayesD
                                        dylantbmayes
                                        Joined:

                                        Thanks, @Chris!

                                        I can now see what you mean when you say not what you expected…

                                        Do you think the book covers too broad a scope?

                                        INSTAGRAM: @DYLANTBMAYES | FACEBOOK.COM/DYLANTBMAYES

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                                        • ChrisC
                                          Chris
                                          Raw and Unwashed
                                          Joined:

                                          I don't think so.  It's a reasonably quick read, and while it doesn't go into exhaustive detail, that's not really the book's intent.  It's for mass consumption by normal people, not a scholarly treatise for fashion historians.  I'm not sure narrowing the focus and increasing the depth of detail would make for a better book.

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                                          • S
                                            Snowy
                                            Joined:

                                            picked up the kindle edition just now. Thanks for the share!

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