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What began as a love for vintage textiles and a desire to find new ways to wear old clothing has sparked a vintage revolution. Drawing on the cyclical nature of the fashion world, how clothing moves within that world, and the way garments are passed down and travel, the name Carrousel Dreams was born. With appreciation of each hand-picked garment in mind, Jenny and Emiliano wanted Carrousel Dreams to be more than just a clothing store. They wanted Carrousel to be a space where the clothing came to life, a place where vintage pieces could be reborn and never forgotten.
When the pandemic hit, the duo decided to take the next step towards creating something they had only ever dreamed of doing. Jenny had been curating and building her collection of vintage for some time; at the same time, Emiliano had been trying his hand at web design. In October, the two met for lunch. They realized that they could put Jenny's collection and Emilianos web design together, and from there, Emiliano got to work building the Carrousel website. From there, the two began meeting up once a week, then bi-weekly, then every weekday to work on the website. Both wanted to ensure that Carrousel Dreams would be a place where people could shop Jenny's unique finds and where these pieces would go down in people's memories.
They knew that they wanted the website to be an interactive space, where people could go and not only shop but experience the clothing in almost real-time. They didn't just want people to be looking at frozen images; they wanted to bring the clothes to life on the website and within the Carrousel world. With that in mind, they began to make short films with the clothing from their latest drops, bringing the pieces for sale to life and, in turn, allowing their buyers to have a deeper understanding of the pieces they are purchasing.
The museum section of the website was born from the pair's desire for the clothes never to be forgotten. So often, especially with vintage clothes, the pieces are hand-selected, loved, and then never seen again. Jenny knew she would have to part with her collection, but she didn't want to forget all the pieces she found along the way. So even when something is purchased, it will always have a place to live in the museum of Carrousel Dreams.
Check out the newest drop from Carrousel Dreams on their website, HERE!
Denim Tears Opens Flagship Store "African Diaspora Goods"
Curated by Lee and Whitney Kaplan, owners of the Culver City art bookstore Arcana: Books on the Arts, the African Diaspora Goods library was assembled from the libraries and collections of numerous collectors, academics, art dealers, and publishers over the course of nearly four decades. The collaborative initiative was also partially inspired by Gates’ dedication to elevating and democratizing the public’s access to Black archival images and objects throughout his practice and career. The store location promises to bring cultural programming later this year in partnership with Emory’s budding media company, with a commitment to using fashion as a vehicle for education, storytelling, and community engagement for the African diaspora.
You can visit African Diaspora Goods at 176 Spring Street.
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Axel Arigato in a New York Minute
Axel Arigato in a New York Minute
With Axel Arigato's latest release, it's all about New York. The Onyx sneaker collection calls back to hip-hop and basketball culture with its 80s and 90s court-shoe silhouettes. And, with the brand readying for its summer launch of its first US store in NYC, who better to showcase the sneaker family than New York photography legend, Tyrell Hampton? Known for his candid snaps of New York life, Hampton has become synonymous with the carefree spirit of the city. Taking to the streets with "Bottoms" actress and model Havana Rose Liu, Hampton and Axel Arigato's collaboration paints a picture of the New York here-and-now.
Shop the collection here
Birkenstock in 1774 New York
Birkenstock's latest collection, brings us two new styles, 33 Dougal and 222 West that look like derivates of the classic Boston. Also, a very New York campaign courtesy of photographer Max Farago. Portraits of icons such as Louis Mueller, the Postwar and Contemporary painter, along with artists Coco Gordon Moore, Cassi Namoda, and Rafael Prieto, the visionary artist behind Savvy Studio and Casa Bosques, capture the essence of the city’s creative heritage. As they explore iconic New York locations, the campaign offers a glimpse into both their daily experiences and Birkenstock's heritage, with traces back to 1774.
Shop the collection here
The DNA Runs Deep: Slam Jam x Ubro
Slam Jam and sportswear brand Umbro take their partnership to international heights, blending street style with Umbro's signature Football DNA in their highly anticipated new collaboration. Featuring masked hoodies and essential anorak staples, the language of their SS24 collaboration speaks volumes, as their "Penalty Culture" capsule campaign is modeled by unidentifiable characters in a way that makes us feel like we're behind the scenes witnessing something we aren't supposed to see.
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Burberry Gives Us FOMO
For all the New Yorkers who didn't immediately flee the city in the face of sub-thirty degree weather, we're right there with you, longing for the summer. And Burberry is making us want it even more. If you're not already in the tropics, Burberry's Summer 2024 campaign, set on the shores of sunny Jamaica, is going to make you wish you were. Captured through the lens of Tyron Lebon, garden flowers, summer fruits, shields, and buckles are sure to catch your eye on models Karen Elson and Sang Woo. Curated by Chief Creative Officer Daniel Lee, the campaign brought things home. Lee describes Burberry Summer 2024 as a celebration of the rich culture and influences that constitute Britishness today.
Shop the collection here
A Futuristic Fusion with Maison Margiela x Gentle Monster
By now, it's no secret that Maison Margiela and Gentle Monster make a great team, so it's only right that they give us a second collaboration. Their latest sunglasses collection brings us seventeen designs of that futuristic feel that we've come to love so much — from leather-wrapped frames to Gentle Monster's trademark silhouettes. With a campaign shot by Jordan Hemingway, we're pulled into a hyper-realistic, almost dream-like setting inspired by the transatlantic voyage that serves as the backdrop for Maison Margiela's Co-Ed SS24 Collection.
To celebrate the launch of this new line, five activation spaces worldwide are opening, serving as pop-ups for a closer look at the collection. Featuring performances between robots and humans, (not easily differentiated), the pop-ups are sure to blur the lines between reality and fantasy in the world of Maison Margiela and Gentle Monster.
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The Interconnecting Threads of Sheerly Touch-Ya
DRESS by ECKHAUS LATTA, LINGERIE by ARAKS, TIGHTS by SHEERLY TOUCH-YA, SHOES by MAILE, RINGS by DUNTON ELLERKAMP, BRACELET by EARTH ANGELRY, BAG by BRANDON BLACKWOOD
office spoke to Serena about the serendipitous story of the brand, the emotional and practical weight of running an intergenerational business, how it ties in with her own art practice, and the hosiery revival in fashion today. Read the interview below.
office — What are your earliest memories of Sheerly Touch-Ya? Do you remember watching your father work as a kid? What are the snapshots that spring to mind from those early years?
Serena Chang — That's a fun question. I mean, there's a ton. The brand used to be called Serena, before it turned into Sheerly Touch-Ya, so I just remember seeing my name all over these packages, which was pretty wild. Originally, my parents were renting a warehouse in Maspeth, Queens, and there'd just be piles and piles of pallets filled with hosiery boxes. As kids, whenever we weren't in school, we'd be at the warehouse, climbing all over the boxes and making forts and little cities within them.
And then later when I was in middle school, I remember being so embarrassed when we’d go back-to-school shopping because my dad would head straight to the lingerie hosiery section of the department store. He'd be picking everything up, stretching it, observing all the materials and comparing what's on the market. And I would just be like, Oh my god, this is mortifying.
I can imagine! That’s funny about the name, too. So what came first, Serena the brand or Serena the daughter?
Well, I was born in ‘89 and my dad started the business in ‘92, so I did! I was three years old at the time, the only daughter of four kids. I guess it was a sweet, if slightly strange tribute to me. But there was a jeans company called ‘Serina’ and they sued my dad so he had to change the name. He went back into this Hanes archive of defunct brand names and found Sheerly Touch-You, and just changed it to Sheerly Touch-Ya. So that's where that came from! Again, I used to be pretty embarrassed by the name, being dropped off at school in the company van. But as an adult, I think there’s something kind of special and weird and accidentally cool about it.
It sounds like there were a lot of serendipitous moments in the founding of the company, including the stock your dad was sent on a whim. Does he ever reflect on how it felt to emigrate alone and start his own company from scratch?
Oh, for sure. He came from nothing, you know, from the countryside of southern Taiwan, with basically no money. His mom was selling vegetables from their farm on the side of the road to get him the funds to go to school in America. So when he talks about his story, he's always like, It was my American miracle that this could even happen. And that he was able to make it happen through hosiery of all things! I think hosiery was just a means to an end. It was all just random circumstance.
DRESS by ECKHAUS LATTA, LINGERIE by ARAKS, TIGHTS by SHEERLY TOUCH-YA, SHOES by MAILE, RINGS by DUNTON ELLERKAMP, BRACELET by EARTH ANGELRY, BAG by BRANDON BLACKWOOD
With all of that in mind, how are you approaching the company today? What changes have you made to the way it's being run, and to the designs?
So today we produce new quality hosiery and also upcycle dead stock, and the majority of the production is still done in Taiwan. When I took over, I was wracking my brains about how to rebrand while also maintaining the essence of what Sheerly Touch-Ya is and how it came to be. I’ve actually decided to keep all of the packaging and designs the same. I feel like a lot of fashion today is so polished, and I didn’t want that. It's more about updating the aura around the brand, to present it within a contemporary context.
My whole idea for social media was just to have ordinary people wearing this stuff, taking selfies at home. I wanted it to feel authentic and real and accessible, because that is what this company was built on. Historically, a lot of the stock was sold at mom-and-pop shops and 99 Cents stores to working people all throughout New York City. I’ve also been introducing it to a new demographic, of course, so smaller boutique stores now carry it, and it’s been sold in galleries through art installations. It’s about putting it out there in different ways.
It’s an interesting time for you to be rejuvenating the brand, given the way hosiery has gone from fashion staple to statement in recent months. Tights and stockings took over the runway last year, for example, from Miu Miu’s no-pants look, to Gucci’s red fishnets, and Jacquemus’s lacey, floral tights...
Yes, it was kind of unintentional but perfect timing! I started noticing all these write-ups in magazines about the pantyhose-as-pants look, and the way the hosiery trend is growing among influencers. I’ve even been getting back into it too, wearing our tiger-patterned tights and embracing these flocked styles. Sheerly feels like this special archive and inventory of pantyhose designs and processes from the 90s. It’s interesting how it all comes back around.
TOP and DRESS by GAUNTLETT CHENG, LINGERIE by ARAKS, SHOES by MAILE, EARRINGS by CAROLINE ZIMBALIST, RINGS by DUNTON ELLERKAMP
Did you always intend to work with the brand, or did it take some convincing? Did your dad really want you to take over?
Oh yeah, he wanted it hardcore for his children. I think that’s pretty common among immigrant families (my younger brother also helps out with the business). I was resistant for a time, but because of my own art practice, it felt like a natural step when he decided to retire. I’ve always been interested in the creative side of it — a lot of my work is about recontextualising and reappropriating hosiery imagery, and the symbolism of immigration, acculturation, work, manufacturing, labor. I guess I also have Sheerly to thank for my own introduction into sculpture fabrication.
Could you expand on that?
It’s a funny story, which also feels very old New York in a way. So back when my dad was learning the ropes at Marathon Hosiery, it was stationed at a warehouse in Red Hook, Brooklyn. Eventually, the owner of Marathon Hosiery left the space and rented out the warehouse. His first tenant was Urs Fisher, the sculptor. I was graduating from art school at the time and was having difficulty finding work. The owner offered to put us in touch. I called Urs’ number and ended up working for him for seven years.
It was an incredible learning experience. While working for Urs, I also met my business partner and we decided to start Shisanwu LLC, our sculpture fabrication studio. We’re now based out of the same warehouse as the Sheerly Touch-Ya company in Queens.
TOP by RUI, DRESS by FIND ME NOW, SHOES by MAILE, HAIR CLIPS by EARTH ANGELRY, EARRINGS by LAURA LOMBARDI, RING by EARTH ANGELRY, BAG by BRANDON BLACKWOOD
And you have an art exhibition coming up soon, right? How did that materialize, and what’s the focus?
So myself and two friends decided to create a collective called Lunch Hour, which explores and critiques mythologies around authorship, work, and labor, and renegotiates terms of value within the industry. Our upcoming group show is about addressing the realities we’re in right now with work and labor. How there’s this huge division between wage labor and personal creative practice; how you have to have a full-time job and then pursue your own art in your off-time, but is that even seen as work? And how we’re all conditioned to do creative work for free because value isn’t really tied to it.
Yeah, that really resonates with the fields of writing and journalism as well. This perpetual need to balance editorial with commercial just to make rent.
Exactly! So it’s a show that addresses these shared sentiments between creative communities. But we’re staging it through the lens of hosiery manufacturing and art production. We’re exhibiting it at the warehouse, so installations will be nested into the working landscape; sculptures and film projections among rows of hosiery boxes.
TOP by GAUNTLETT CHENG, SKIRT by ASHLYN, SHOES by MAILE, BAG by BRANDON BLACKWOOD
That sounds great. And the staging reminds me of what you said about making forts among the hosiery boxes as a kid — again, it’s all quite cyclical in a way. Do you feel a sense of pride in continuing your family business and making it your own?
Yeah it’s funny, it’s like half burden, half pride. But it’s definitely something I’ve been embracing and enjoying lately. It’s a really playful and satisfying way to collaborate with lots of different people. In the art world, you’re often in this bubble, whereas with fashion, I can bring my creativity to a wider audience and make it more accessible. I love how people can express themselves through these fun yet affordable stockings and tights. I want this strange pairing of contemporary art and hosiery to continue.