Monthly Archives: December 2006

2007.

“There will come a time when you believe everything is finished. That will be the beginning.”
– Louis L’Amour

by bobbyhundreds

THICKER THAN WATER

It’s about time. Our newest episode of HOMEYS is online.
This time around, we got a look at Toby Morse’s home. You may know our boy Toby1 as the lead singer of H2O, Hazen St., or you might have just heard his name from the double-label tee we did with his band last season. Also known for handplants and bonelesses at the BP ramp, his Tasmanian-Devil-of-a-son Max, and for being a bigger Nike junkie than you (enough to get a swoosh inked on his foot.)

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HOMEYS with Toby1 can be viewed in the TUBE section (click on the toolbar above).

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photo credit: Michael Rappaport

by bobbyhundreds

KNOCK IT OFF!

Wow.
Not only do they shamelessly bite to cash in on the Jay-Z hype, but they flip our zip-up into a confused v-neck/hoody/longsleeve shirt …thing?

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Damn those pirates.

by bobbyhundreds

THERE GOES THE NEIGHBORHOOD

The line started yesterday (Wednesday) night for the Supreme x Neighborhood double-label which will be dropping at Supreme Friday morning…
earlier this afternoon, the line was already running deep down at Supreme’s LA location on Fairfax. The one thing I did notice was that the demographic was a bit different, considering it was mostly the diehard NBHD heads anticipating the $600 denim (NO, that was NOT a typo).

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Here’s a look at the black colorway of the tee:

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In other news, look who’s back in our neighborhood. Sir Nicholas Jackson of the almighty Twelvebar. 2007 is a big year for the brand. Don’t make me say I told you so..

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by bobbyhundreds

COOL, BUT HOT

As long as we’re on the subject of 2006′s Best, these are easily the 2 best commercials of the year by Sony’s Bravia. Absolutely no CGI involved! Check the corresponding websites for behind the scenes production footage (and the quality of the films are also much better on the Bravia site).

Bravia’s PAINT ad:

Bravia’s BALLS ad:

Pretty sick, right? Yup. Too bad they shamelessly ganked the idea from a decade-old Letterman stunt. Corporate pirates strike again!

[Thanks to You Thought We Wouldn't Notice for the heads-up]

by bobbyhundreds

UPDATES

Our Holiday line is now in The Shop! New Yasi Asks in the Zine! Gerald Ford RIP!

by bobbyhundreds

THE FINAL COUNTDOWN

#

Just because I said so, I’m gonna spend the rest of the week doing a 2006 Year in Review. I’ll be posting up different Top 10 lists that you will enjoy. I am gonna subject you to this against your will, you will remain passionately engaged, and you will laugh maniacally. Like a cackling witch. Got that?

First up, let’s just say that as far as our little scene is concerned, it was quite the year for The Web. But if you step back, it’s clear that in 2006, the Internet dramatically altered every industry, social scene, and (sub)culture around the world. Of course, the Internet has been loud and proud since Prodigy and a/s/l chatrooms, but this year, the personal landscape opened up a universe of possibilities thanks to sites like Myspace, Youtube, and Fight Collection.

As far as “streetwear” and “street” culture is concerned, the online revolution was both embraced and shunned out of embarassment, like the Teddy Ruxpin you sleep with every night, cooter. While regularly-updated weblogs (kinda like ours..?) were initially scoffed at, by year’s end, most the major players were sharing their internet diary. And even if they didn’t have one, they had a regularly-updated website of some kind. What was once an offline desert has blossomed into a digital oasis. From streets to screens, for better..or for worse.

These are my top 10 streetwear-related websites of the year, for varying reasons. Whether due to street-cred or screen-cred, design, contribution to the culture, functionality, or providing a haven for office boredom, these are all up there on my bookmarks bar (and most likely yours as well).

[1] Hypebeast / Slam X Hype / High Snobiety

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Okay, so I know it’s a cheap move to put 3 as 1, but let’s be frank, you visit all 3 at the same time, right? They’re all side-by-side on your list of Things to Do (Every Hour), and to be stark, if it’s not up on those sites, it’s not making noise. Big ups to Kevin, Adam, and David for keeping us informed, and keeping us un-bored in 2006.

[2] Don’t Believe the Hypebeast

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In a community nurtured by snobbery and elitism, the only thing surprising about DBTHB’s long-winded tirades against streetwear’s most noted brands/designers was that it hadn’t been done before. Initially heralded for its barbs against streetwear’s most-celebrated, and balancing out the high-five lovefest that other news-blogs showered upon top-shelf brands, DBTHB’s eventual demise came by way of the very thing it fought against: monotony (and the unveiling of the brand-associated writers behind the site might have had something to do with it). No doubt, there were some nuggets of truth that all of us needed to hear (and will hopefully spurn more thoughtful critique), but unfotunately, they were lost in the ruthless bitter onslaught. Everyone listens to the critic. No one likes the constant complainer. DBTDBTHB, anyone?

[3] Weeklydrop

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The walls dividing brand and consumer are breaking down, and the Bostonians behind Weeklydrop are holding the hammers. Building off of the momentum of online-generated owner/customer interactivity, the logical progression in Screenwear beyond the blogs was an actual internet radio show giving the t-shirt-wearer aural access to their favorite brand. But it’s not just the medium and A-list guests that boost WD, it’s the personality and dynamics between slap-happy hosts Jeff, Heppler, and the Butcher that truly capture the essence of a growing community. #1 response from every first-time WD listener? “Wow, this is..like.. a real, really good, radio show!”

[4] Alife Myspace

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A Myspace page in itself isn’t extraordinary. And to be honest, New York-based Alife‘s Myspace isn’t earth-shattering by any regard. But the simple, miniscule, fact that they (along with Married to the Mob) have posted their Myspace link on the frontpage of their website says something,.. that most street heads either smirk at confusedly, or just completely overlook altogether. 2 years ago, websites were contraband in this game, and any internet association was a blemish on your resume… Let alone an online networking community that achieved popularity by way of 14-year-olds and perverts. But for a brand such as Alife to post a Myspace link is a forward-thinking move, in a market that’s riddled with hesitant, deliberate, coolguy-conscious steps. Of course, the funny part is that like most of Alife’s projects, most heads won’t figure it out until the bandwagon scoops them up off the Duh corner years down the line.

[5] Niketalk

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Before there was EverythingElseTalk, there was Niketalk. Streetwear didn’t really have a strong presence in the online community until the co-branded sneaker tie-ins took off a half-decade ago, and worked their tentacles into the Nike-oriented discussion boards. With the introduction of milestones like the Alphanumeric Dunks, Supreme Dunks, and Diamond… Dunks, in the new millenium it became impossible to ward off street culture’s association with sneaker fanaticism, and the NT kids were front and center. Niketalk provided a homebase for the sneakerfreaks and subsequent streetwear enthusiasts alike, cultivating a flourishing audience of foot-fetished collectors, and a springboard for a burgeoning t-shirt-based industry. Sure, you got Supertalk for the more fashion-heavy denimheads, and Hypebeast Forums for the fresh generation, but NT is the Coca-Cola of the street messageboard world. Always classic.

[6] Digital Gravel

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While everyone else decided this year that there were plenty of ends to be made in online sales, Nima and the DG crew actually struck oil years ago. 1999, to be exact. The first true online streetwear boutique, for the past decade, DG’s had to deal with the minor annoyances that come with innovative success. Such as biters, corporate pirates, and undercutters. But DG’s managed to stay rocksteady through it all, coming out the pipe unscathed, and establishing itself in 2006 once again as the ultimate web boutique for the streetwear cream of the crop. Yeah, I guess sometimes, keepin’ it real really does win out in the end.

[7] Cliquenmove

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I’ll be the first to admit that it took a while to warm up to this one. The problem with the flashy webmag Cliquenmove is that it’s just too nice for an anti-techno industry/scene that’s years behind in the internet game. But once you’ve got your head wrapped around the literal bells and whistles, you won’t be able to let go. I haven’t even had time to move onto #8 because I’ve been sitting through their Nike Air retrospective for the past 20 minutes. Sheesh.

[8] Inquiring Mind

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Sometime last year, before the blog explosion, there was another online trend around online street-centric magazines. Much like the current blog-frenzy, every writer and brand figured online magazines were an easy setup, but within a few months, most had withered away. Inquiring Mind is the only ‘zine out of the litter that outgrew runt-hood into a massive beast; the only online ‘zine that’s done it right. Easy navigation, nice on the eyes, and the substantive and relevant content to boot. Michael and the crew are reppin’ Canada right.

[9] Supreme

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Never say never. It’s always been assumed that Supreme would just never have an actual webspace. But when rumors circulated earlier this year that SupremeNewYork would soon be translated as a dotcom, it signified the most impactful online debut of any streetwear brand in 2006. The icing on the cake was the site was formulated exactly how you’d expect/want Supreme’s webpage to be. Classy, clean, and to the point. No blogfoolerly here.

[10] Us

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Hey, we’re not usually up here tooting our own horn, but..
TOOT*TOOT.

by bobbyhundreds

MERRY CHRISTMAS

..from The Hundreds.

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by bobbyhundreds

“THE ONE THING…

…that can solve most of our problems, is dancing.”
– James Brown 1933-2006

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by bobbyhundreds

HOLIDAY IN CALIFORNIA

Yeah I know, that Dead Kennedys reference was a pretty big stretch. But not as big of a stretch as Super-Intern Alex (aka The Kid) took at Reserve down Fairfax.

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On display, and for sale, is the entire House33/Freshjive double-label project. You can witness the story, from start…

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..to finish.

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Dennis (Crooks)…

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and Gomez (Chick Magnet)…

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..want to remind you that their party is Saturday night.

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Too bad there’s not an actual Holiday Inn Cambodia. But at least we still got the Paris Hilton.

p.s. UNIV down in Encinitas just got their TH Holiday supply. Remember, ONLY 2 SHOPPING DAYS TIL CHRISTMAS!

by bobbyhundreds