My personal view on things is: if you like the way stuff looks, wear it. If you like the way something sounds, listen to it. If something is fun, do it. Just today my friend was showing me some new wallets his store got, and I really liked the 'women's' wallets more (turns out they were all unisex, he only accidentally called them women's wallets) than the men's selection. If I had money for a new wallet I'da grabbed one for sure. Anyways, point is, a lot of guys have trouble letting go of what they've been taught by men's magazines and style guys with ideas for what constitutes appropriate dudewear. There was a lot of pushback from r/mfa and r/streetwear when my mini-photo essay and list got posted there, because those communities are built around established concepts of dress and are less open to boundary-pushing fashion. Not to condemn them, by any means, just acknowledging that some people don't want to work around the norms of fashion and dress, and that's okay too. For those of ya willing to expand your boundaries, I appreciate ya.
rambling semantics
I love brands that make clothes that can be shared between men and women. Yantor does this really well.
ideas
Statistics: Posted by trasparenti — Sun Feb 21, 2016 10:37 am
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