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New York

· I.C.R. vs. DETH KILLERS ·

Designers New York (01.07.2011) ::

If there’s one thing you need to know about me, it’s that I am a T-shirt fanatic. I study them. Love them. Hug them. Wear them to sleep, when I’m walking around, in the shower. It’s a non-stop love affair, so trust me when I say, I know a good T-shirt. Ladies and gentlemen I.C.R. vs. DETH KILLERS makes one helluva T-shirt. Read More »

· Hey, Ho, Let’s go! ·

Amsterdam New York Sneakers (01.12.2010) ::

Just as teenagers plaster their bedroom walls with posters of their rock-star idols, fashion designers adorn their reference books with pictures of Dylan, Bowie, Morrison, Hendrix and Jagger. Rock music has always captivated the fashion world—the posturing, the adulation, the drama and the rebelliousness—and designers will forever discover inspiration for their latest collections in a favorite band or some bygone musical era.
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· (capsule) Returns ·

New York (30.07.2010) ::

(capsule) New York men’s returned on July 19 and 20 to show off the latest in progressive menswear during New York Men’s Market Week. Now in its seventh installment, the trade show took over Center 548, a stunning old factory in Chelsea.

CODE spoke to Edina Sultanik, one of the co-owners of BPMW, the agency behind (capsule) to find out about the latest in menswear:

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· OHWOW Book Club Store ·

New York (29.06.2010) ::

OHWOW founders, man about downtown Aaron “A-ron” Bondaroff and art collector Al Moran are at it again with a new retail outlet buried in New York’s West Village. The basement boutique offers a sampler platter of the downtown New York art scene, from Clayton Patterson’s Front Door Book to Neckface’s The Devil Made Me Do It. With an interior designed by Rafael de Cárdenas, the shop is a work of art in itself. Next time you’re in the West Village and you’re looking to bring a piece of the downtown art world home with you. Stop by OHOW Book Club Store.

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· Patterson: Pyramid Portraits ·

New York (22.06.2010) ::

In the 1980s, the East Village served as New York’s counter culture epicenter. In sharp contrast to the overpriced and yuppie-occupied East Village of today, heroin addicts, squatters and poor artists filled the neighborhood. The Pyramid Club was a nightlife staple, attracting the East Village’s bohemian population. Debbie Harry, Andy Warhol and Madonna are among the more famous faces who showed up in the club, which held hardcore and drag queen nights.

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