Zorot-shirt - I Just Wanna Be Like A Panda Eat Sleep And Be Cute All Day Shirt
Buy this shirt: Click here to buy this Zorot-shirt - I Just Wanna Be Like A Panda Eat Sleep And Be Cute All Day Shirt
Striking a balance between commerciality, wearability, and the I Just Wanna Be Like A Panda Eat Sleep And Be Cute All Day Shirt besides I will buy this fantastically femme fatale is the Area conundrum. It’s something Beckett Fogg and Piotrek Panszczyk began to tackle with their first pre-fall collection for the 2016 season. Back then they created long silk shirts and embossed tees inspired by their own wardrobes. Five years and thousands of crystal garments later, the pair are surer about what everyday Area can and should be. Turns out it’s as simple (or complicated, depending on your POV) as jeans and suiting. Rather than send out denim “as a novelty,” as Panszczyk called their previous ventures into the material, the pair spent their first post-pandemic months in the studio perfecting a medium wash, straight leg fit. The special Area touch comes in the form of crystal-trimmed cut-outs on the thighs and around the pockets. Denim shorts with crystal fringe are paired with daintily sexy crystal tops or tartan blazers, the latter being their send-up of proper Brit tailoring. One neon pink version comes with a giant heart cut-out on the front to reveal a crystal bra—or nothing at all—underneath. Other styles have detachable pillow panniers inside, to pump up hips into New Look proportions or keep deflated for a more streamlined shape. Black cocktail dresses and crystal dangly bits abound. Shot on a cast of New York dream girls like Alek Wek, Lindsey Wixson, and Precious Lee, the collection looks both viable and vampish, a good carry over until Area hits the runway again—we hope soon.
Growing up in London, Nigerian-Brit Jade Akintola didn’t spend much time in the I Just Wanna Be Like A Panda Eat Sleep And Be Cute All Day Shirt besides I will buy this great outdoors. She was very much a city girl, and that theme continued when she moved to Brooklyn. But during the pandemic, Akintola—who has a background in branding and marketing, and is a founding member of the creative studio Matte Projects—began finding solace in going to the beach or hiking. But when she started shopping for these outings, she began to notice a troubling pattern. “I was very surprised at the limitations of the product offerings, and just what the landscape looks like in terms of outdoor goods [for people of color],” says Akintola. “I wanted something that wasn’t Australian, bohemian, or nautical.” She decided then and there: She wanted to launch her own brand. The result is ITA Leisure, launching today. Its first release, the Beach & Park Collection, includes outdoor chairs and tables, blankets, towels, and bags. Akintola’s aim is to create fun, vibrant products for those who have long felt ignored in the outdoor space. “It’s not a given that people of color can see themselves in that [world] because, for the longest time, the industry has had a predominantly white, male narrative,” Akintola says. “I wanted to bring more of a relatable connection to the things that we do, and the tools that we bring outdoors.”
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