I've bought several pants from Japan in an effort to find pants that I can fit - too much biking = too tight pants - and unfortunately I've sold pretty much everything I've proxied. I'm always on the hunt for more pants, the weirder the better. Living in Florida makes it unrealistic to spend a lot of money on jackets or outerwear so pants are pretty much as good as I can get.
Here's some:
also: one of my fave lookbooks, Nanamica s/s '13, "One Ocean, All Lands"
Nanamica s/s '14
So, Nanamica is great because they've got the blend of techy fabrics (Gore, windstopper, climacool) with traditional wardrobe staples (macs, baseball caps, kangaroo parkas, hoodies, chinos) and the colors are always like navy, tan and muted earth tones. So super versatile clothes that could be paired with any other brand, Japanese or not. TNF Purple Label is also perfect, field jackets and climber pants done up in gore-tex denim, water-resistant fabrics, etc
Of course, everything is cut great; lots of modern cuts (slim fits) but everything's totally timeless - nothing too skinny, every piece is mature, but there's a youthfulness to it all too (the way the chinos are all rolled up, the light colors). Everything they do is subtly techy, but the pieces are everyday clothes, nothing with the crazy patterns and pieces of facetasm or Sasquatchfabrix Eototo.
The quality is very high and the prices generally match. I think they do their best work with summery looks: there's great flow in their clothes. Lots of straight, clean lines and simple silhouettes in the lookbooks, which isn't even what I usually wear but it just vibes right. The kinda stuff you wear to run errands but done up with sharp cuts and great fabrics. I usually don't care for sweatpants with cuffs but Nanamica's never look slouchy ya know? The cropped pants are definitely strong here. The f/w stuff is excellent but there are a ton of brands doing casual techy jackets and such (2-tacs, And Wander, Made With Standard, even Anachronorm does a couple). The summer stuff isn't as overtly surfy and casual as Sunny Sports and it's not as refined and mature as The Stylist Japan's summery looks.