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What if Skate Culture was Safe: Welcome Marshall Columbia’s Designs

The throughline of the collection is a focus on unisex styles having traditional menswear silhouettes. The styling of the collection leans towards a genderless energy and centers on structure and use of any physique. “In fashion now, especially in New York, a lot of people just buy menswear or women's wear. It doesn’t really matter and maybe that’s the trajectory of fashion.”

 

This collection is immersive and has otherworldly beauty to it. Each look still features their preeminent cutouts and plush purses in new configurations. As always, playing with rich and vibrant colors like hot pink, royal blue, and slime green and distinctive shapes is nothing new to the designer. Double layered denim, speedo inspired bottoms that can mimic a thong-like aesthetic, and new knitwear ideations show that Mashall Colombia is an expansive label and in it for longevity. The designer countinues to reflect his child-like approach to design through new additions like footwear and new versions of the label’s smiley flower logo. 

In fashion now, especially in New York, a lot of people just buy menswear or women's wear. It doesn’t really matter and maybe that’s the trajectory of fashion

He ruminates on this collection with this stream of consciousness with office “I always try and pull from early memories as my initial reference point for a collection. And with my first menswear collection I’ve been thinking a lot back to when the only thing me and my neighborhood friends would do was skate. There was a skatepark right next to my house so it was the obvious thing to do growing up in the suburbs of Colorado. Even when we weren’t at the skatepark we were either playing Tony Hawk’s Underground or staying up all night watching skate videos on YouTube. But for me growing up gay in this environment was also very hard and triggering. Skate culture was very toxic and homophobic which is a big reason I stopped skating after junior high. So in this collection I want to create an environment that I wish I had growing up. What would it look like if the skatepark was an inclusive place?”

 

Shop Collection 3 coming this April.

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