taps for the last through years (at least the last 4 lookbooks) has pushed the civilian side of american vietnam era more than the military side although they still make the pieces they're known for. when i see the newer stuff it reminds me of skaters hanging out in shitty beach towns skating around with long hair but this is a combination of me seeing tetsu cruise around on skateboards and watching zboys of dogtown. it's different from the "hayday" of early 2000 taps but it still feels true to the brands ideals albeit in a different, there is probably an argument for a changing of trends in there somewhere.after speaking to sa's in the hideout i can speculate that it doesn't sell very well at least the pricer bits so could make the assumption the switch was accredited somewhat by that to accommodate for western markets, combined with tetsu getting older and "boring" like most designers do, but as i say that's me reading too much into my tea leaves.
if you speak to someone like milspacca he'll tell you taps fell off the wagon in the early 2000's and insists on a difference between w)taps and WTAPS as we know it today to the point they're two different brands. i'm inclined to agree with this because the pictures of people who wear wtaps circa 2010 onwards dress totally different from those circa 2002, the pieces, fits, and general direction are completely different although linked theme wise.
http://imgur.com/a/jiHAsthis is what i think of when i read about early taps, combined with the fuckton of scans milspex is sitting on he lets slip occasionally
and this is what i think when i hear present day
http://instagram.com/wtaps_dailypicsboth are fantastic but different reasons to me.
that said i'm new compared to how long they've been around and havn't done much indepth research so could be entirely off base could probably add in a bit and tell me if i'm off track but this is how i see the brand.