How Hawaiian Shirts Became A Symbol For The Alt-Right
It doesn't stem from a love of floral prints or Don Ho records.
It doesn't stem from a love of floral prints or Don Ho records.
Noah Murphy-Reinhertz, the company's sustainability design lead, on creating a footwear collection made with recycled materials.
The fashion industry is mulling big changes that could impact everything from its carbon footprint to how much things cost.
It's not just that he looks like a completely different person, but like he's lived a completely different life.
The estimate for the Jordans going up for sale is $100,000 to $150,000.
Rewatching the 24-season series shows how Tyra Banks was the villain of "America's Next Top Model" all along.
Comfy pants have become the pandemic uniform — and Gap, Nike, and Champion are battling against indie brands.
Nowadays, sneakers aren't just for wearing. They're an asset class, on display at museums, and fueling an increasingly profitable resale market. Much of that traces back to Nike putting a superstar rookie's name on a new pair of kicks in 1985.
I silently observed the members of a wedding-shaming Facebook group leave mean, judgmental comments on a photo of my dress.
People wore masks slung to the backs of their necks until they saw policemen. Others cut holes in their masks for their cigars and cigarettes.
Like Michael Jordan himself, the AJ1 was an instant hit. But the sneaker's renewed reign 35 years later isn't just about greatness. It's about the stories that build the myth.
Celebrities are just like us in one way: they, too, have had their routines disrupted by COVID-19. Their routines are just a little deeper under the skin.
Flight Club is really running quite the racket with these obscenely inflated sneaker prices.
The Last Dance has entirely changed my quarantine wardrobe, so I set off on a search to find an exact copycat of Michael Jordan's 1990s Chicago Bulls practice uniform to wear myself.
You might laugh at the big suits and single hoop hearing, but you couldn't pull it off.
We petition this to be the official costumes of the Harry Potter movies.
And it can be yours for $1,800.
Here's a look at some of the types of masks you might encounter, how they work, what to consider when making your own and the level of protection they could provide.
From kitsch to cool, ride the waves of undulating popularity of a tropical fashion statement.
Private jets, piano deliveries and underground shooting ranges: this is what life is like for the 1 percent in the age of coronavirus.
Barber Faheem Alexander demonstrates 12 different fades and his techniques.
What is it about Gore-Tex that makes entities like Supreme, Nike and NASA all want their products lined with it?
From J. Balvin to JB Smoove, Lucas Hedges, Gunna, and beyond, we're still opening up our closets and giving it our best shot.
Are "fancy" sweatpants here for good?
All the cool kids on Instagram have figured out a way to make quarantine fashion, and why is literally everyone going live on Instagram right now?
Dana Thomas, the author of the fast fashion deconstruction "Fashionopolis," explains the severe impact of coronavirus on Bangladesh's garment export industry.
After staying inside so long, sweatpants and leggings have become the new norm. How will this period of time effect the way we dress in the future? It's hard to know, but we took some time to hypothesize.
Growing a beard is as much about coping through a crisis as it is changing your look.
If you look into the history of public health, you'll find instances where beards were blamed for the spread of disease. This is not actually true.
Susan McCarty on the exploitation of conspicuous consumer desire.
Our reviewers select standout moments in their field which still shape their love of the arts.
One of the ironies of social distancing is that it can put privacy in short supply.
Hair getting shaggy in quarantine? Wondering if you could cut your own hair? Don't let coronavirus ruin your buzz(cut)! Take matters into your own hands and learn from a pro.
If you're stuck at home and feeling out of sorts, it might be time to experiment with a box of hair dye.
Yu Fujiwara captures the AW20 womenswear shows just weeks before the world locked down.
"Finally, I could have zero-gravity hair!"
Kerry Washington on Beyoncé, Ta-Nehisi Coates on Kendrick Lamar, Oprah Winfrey on Toni Morrison, Issa Rae on "Scandal," and 31 other prominent black artists on the work that inspires them most.
Wondering how to cut bangs and how to trim bangs at home without completely screwing up? Here, a hairstylist explains how to trim bangs in 8 easy steps, complete with pictures.
How the coziest carpets went from Alexander the Great's tents to your living room.
William Murphy was not the first pioneer of space-saving furniture, but thanks to some clever innovation, good timing and fortuitous funding, his surname has become the household name in foldout beds and a widely used generic applied to similar designs.
What do fake Eames chairs, extra legroom and $40 scented candles have in common?
50% of reported companies allow for casual wear in the office. Is the business suit going the way of the dinosaur?
Photographer Hazel Gaskin shoots Goldsmiths Lions as they prep and perform on competition day.
If you wear one here, you are gullible, selfish, foreign, sick and asking for attention. But in Asia, face masks mean something else altogether.
As cities become ever more packed with cameras that always see, public anonymity could disappear. Can stealth streetwear evade electronic eyes?
Fashion brands, Deadheads and even cactus purveyors are joining forces with a single mission in mind: make stylish Sanders T-shirts.
As you may have heard, BMW updated its logo for the first time in over two decades, and, since it's a thing that happened in the world, some people are not happy about it.
Technological advances and a growing line of research have paved the way for a new class of support systems that are comfortable, look good, and fit a wide(r) variety of bodies.
By drawing on traditional dyeing techniques while utilizing the perks of modern technology, textiles designers are shaping a colorful new world.
"This will confirm and verify that the NBA's rules and procedures prohibited the wearing of certain red and black Nike basketball shoes by Chicago Bulls player Michael Jordan on or around October 18th, 1984."
Fashion critic Cathy Horyn reviews the new and bizarre fall/winter 2020 collections as seen at Paris Fashion Week.
When he's not cooking them, Japanese chef and food artist Takehiro Kishimoto is turning fruits and vegetables into intricately carved sculptures too beautiful to eat.
It's a hazmat suit for the urban commuter. And even though it's just a concept, it can't be realized soon enough.
Engineers to advocates share advice for transforming your street corner.
Tech workers are, allegedly, the most boring dressers on earth, unless they're Jack Dorsey, in which case they occasionally look like high-fashion moon men.
She's now an up and coming global superstar ready to take on the world.
It may look like a backlash against the super-exclusive streetwear brand, but it's pretty much the opposite.
And why are there still so few visions of comfortable, livable interiors for men?
What's the weirdest thing you learned this week? Your answer is about to get a lot weirder.
Nonsurgical cosmetic methods, like nose and face shapers, are all over social media as users chase the perfect selfie — but these rituals are nothing new.