What is your relationship to social media and marketing your collection? How do you think that has affected the way that people are engaging with it?
In terms of my social media presence, it's kind of strange; I definitely do my best on some level, to convince myself to take pictures and post and edit and have a witty caption or something like that.
I also let go a little bit and realized that maybe part of what separates me is having a fair amount of my stuff be [only available] in person, and not posting all of it for everyone to see.
That’s easier for me, like the social media doesn't come naturally and I can be lazy about that stuff, but it also has felt more natural and bred this air of mystery or exclusivity for not having everything readily accessible online. Instead people have to come and make an appointment and then they can really see the full inventory here and get a full sense of what I have. It's been even harder for me when posting objects. I have objects and stuff that are beyond clothes, and with these kinds of things, I haven't really found a foothold or way to mesh them with my clothing that I put forward on Instagram. So for those kinds of objects especially, you’d have to see it in person.
My relationship to social media is that I begrudgingly do it. But I have realized that it's actually become kind of the selling point for me to not put everything out there for everyone to see.
How do you think that in-person only energy has created hype or a certain allure around your collection?
First and foremost, you have to have good stuff. No one's going to be intrigued to see what you're not posting if the things you're posting are wack. There's a delicate balance that I have stumbled into, where people are intrigued to see more.
I actually have people apply for an appointment, they can't just book one. And while all of that seems fairly gatekeep-y, it's also just because my showroom is attached to my house. So I don't want someone completely random or not super known in the industry just arriving at my house, for safety or privacy reasons. Word of mouth is also huge — being recommended that way has become its own monster where I don't have to do much advertising. Each time a new person comes, they become a walking billboard for it or advertise it on my behalf. So that's been really fulfilling to see it organically grow.
Who are some of the most exciting clients that you've had?
I've had Kanye's people reach out, and even though I'm a Jew, I’m a super fan-boy of Kanye. I have been an obsessive fan, like I had the Late Registration CD playing in my car for probably three years in high school. I didn't even take it out. That was very surreal. I didn't even believe it was his people when they reached out. I had to make them verify that to me, and in the end, he didn't end up buying anything right now, but that was very surreal just to have him reach out. [Editor’s note: since this interview, Ye has purchased from sumshitifound.]
I've had a fair amount of design teams come through. I had Kim Jones’ design team come through. They purchased an item that my dad had thrown on as a shawl when he wasn't feeling well when we were in France, which I had sourced at a flea market there. That was kind of fun, being able to call my dad who knows nothing about fashion to tell him that the creative director of Dior just purchased this thing. Although he can't fully appreciate that, I think he got the idea that that's pretty funny. Those clients have been great.
I've also really enjoyed working with stylists. Maybe initially, stylists reaching out didn't have the star factor for me just because I didn't know who they were, but after working with them, I’ve found that it's really cool to work with stylists and see where those things end up and how they put it together.
Could you tell me about the sourcing process?
I mean, the sourcing process I would say is half a hustle and half a sickness or an addiction. There really isn't a great way to source in New York City. The value in New York is on the selling side, 100%. There's fun places to source, but you're not gonna make money and you're not gonna find anything. It's just very picked through, everyone knows what they have and that's great. It's nice to live in a place like that for the purpose of selling.
For sourcing my stuff, it's so specific that I kind of have to cast a really wide net, which is time consuming. My girlfriend often would like me to be off my phone, but I literally am working when it looks like I'm just mindlessly scrolling. I have been through the antiques world, which I would also say is a big part of my life. I know a lot of people who are looking for antiques and if they find clothing that they think is up my alley, they'll send it my way.
That's a real lucky thing for me, to have many people who look on my behalf while looking for something else. I'm from North Carolina, so a lot of it's looking there when I visit my parents. I do a lot of sourcing in France. Beyond those places, which are the majority of it, I also look in the countryside, and through friends I've made along the way from buying one thing online and then getting to know them.
I don't charge a low price for my items. I do sometimes have things that aren't really my wheelhouse. I price things very fairly. It’s usually fairly high because the stuff is pretty unique and I see the value in it. And so a lot of times I price things at kind of an elevated price point, which is helpful for contextualizing it in that way. Pricing can also be a tool sometimes. I think I'm way more likely to sell it if I price it higher than if I price it lower — that's just how my market is.
I can command that higher price point for my curation and the consistency of knowing that it's going to be clean as well as destroyed, and wearable and all original. I don't modify anything. I like everything to be natural wear. That's a question I get a lot. Because of my curation and knowing it's gonna be legit and wearable and not disgusting, I can command a high price point also for being in New York.
And so because of that, I pay up. Something that's helped me in terms of sourcing consistently is that I pay up for stuff. A lot of vintage people like to sell stuff to me because I'm not lowballing them.
I really just price things at what I think they're worth. Sometimes stuff sits around for a while but someone's usually stoked to buy it just because if it's super unique, someone will get it and agree with me at some point. I'm happy to spend some time with a garment, use it for styling purposes, and then get it to someone that really, really loves it and is willing to pay that price point.
My main client is not a vintage person, nor is it vintage sellers. With vintage becoming so saturated, the majority of vintage sellers are selling to other vintage sellers, which is kind of an interesting phenomenon. There's more people that are “such-and-such vintage” on Instagram than people that just wear that stuff.
Most of my clients are higher fashion people, slightly avant garde, dressing people in a New York professional world, or just simply kind of a Balenciaga boy who wants the real thing. And so, instead of paying a grand for a hoodie, going to the source and getting the reference piece for 500 compared to the original, it's not that expensive. People in that high fashion world want a piece of actual vintage to juxtapose with the other stuff they're wearing. It just allows me to have a unique market.