Carmina for Epaulet Salinger Double Monk in Chocolate Calfskin
Thanks to NAMOR for the pic!
Wisith in the Epaulet Point Collar Japanese Camo shirt and Gunmetal Rivet Chinos
NewYorkRanger looking sharp as hell!
Epaulet Natural Chromexcel Belt
Epaulet Outfits Dave Ortiz Part Two (Q&A)
As a tried and true New Yorker, summarize New York Style in exactly five words
1: Fresh / 2: Creative / 3: Individualist / 4: Sharp / 5: Black (I mean the color)
What article of clothing of yours has the most sentimental value?
My “OFF” hat which I got as a gift from my girlfriend and symbolizes where I am in my life.
Name one NYC night spot that everyone should visit.
I don’t go out at night anymore, hahahaha. Nah I would say Lilly’s on West Houston
Tell us your most insane celebrity encounter.
Bill Murray Hates Me.
One Sunday night I was at Epsteins my local bar. I’ve been there all day drinking margaritas. Bill Murray walked in to the bar around 11pm to watch the football game high lights.
I get so excited and I have to talk to him so I walk up and tell him I’m a huge fan and know all his lines in his movies and SNL skits, and say “Hey we are wild and crazy guys”.
He sighs and says “I wasn’t in that, that was Dan Aykroyd and Steve Martin”
I said in my drunken state “Are you sure?” He says “Yeah, it was 1978 at the SNL studio, where you there?” I said no.
Then there was that awkward silence and he’s staring at me so I try and be cool and lean on the bar stool, I miss the stool and I fall over, the bar stool hits me in the gut and I fall to the ground grunting in pain. He sighs again and says “Kids Today”. The bartender says, ” Oh, that’s no kid!” Bill Murray sighs again and says “Adults Today”
I get up and walk away. Then I feel like a total jerk and like I have to redeem myself and make up to him for all this drunken nonsense. So I walk over again and say I’m usually not like this and I was sorry, he completely ignores me. I bend down trying to pick up my dog and fall over again. He then says to the bartender can some one Pour Rummy into a cab and get him away from me.
Worst day ever.
If Squishy [your adorable pug] were to pick out a pair of Walt trousers for herself, which would she choose?
The striped pair from this season
What’s the most inspiring film that you’ve seen recently?
An Unlikely Weapon, story of Eddie Adams
The absolute best Bad Brains song and why?
I and I survive, best song cuz its about how man should treat one another. Also it’s on a Rasta steez and not one of the hard fast in your face punk songs. I’m way relaxed in my older age.
Tell us one secret about yourself that NO ONE else knows.
Just before bed I love to eat Milk and Cookies, and yes I like to dunk my cookies.
Your thoughts on bicycle shorts?
I never wear them and I think my friends that do are crazy……Reda. Hahaha.
What recent technology do you wish had never been invented?
Digital cameras, even though I use one I think it made it too easy for Slack Jaw people to say they are photographers and takes away from people who still shoot Analog photos.
Epaulet Outfits Dave Ortiz Part One
To many, Dave Ortiz will always be revered for being the first employee and de facto manager of Zoo York. The innovative NYC skateboarding and graffiti-art collective was the prototype against which all other enterprising skateboarders would judge themselves.
Dave later went on to found Dave’s Quality Meats on East 3rd street, a seminal boutique and social haven for skateboarders everywhere. Having recently departed from DQM, Dave has since set up his second NYC institution, Dave’s Wear House—a magnet for street style and fixed gear bicycle culture. Head down to Baxter Street in Chinatown and you’re likely to meet him there. You’re even more likely to leave with one of his phenomenal bicycles.
This self-declared “world’s biggest Bad Brains fan” and the owner of Squishy the pug lives in New York City.
More shots from San Francisco
Pics from the Styleforum 10-Year Anniversary in San Francisco. Thanks for the good times!
GOWANUS CANAL HISTORY LESSON
By NewYorkRanger
The whole area surrounding the world (in)famous Gowanus Canal was swampy marshlands in 1776. In fact, 4th Avenue used to be called “Shore Rd” cause its where the shore line used to be from Bay Ridge in through Sunset Park and as you got closer to Park Slope, the shore began to give way to the marsh lands that surrounded the Gowanus,.
Anyway, end of August 1776, the British fleet had basically took over all of NY Harbor (was the largest marine invasion in human history until D-Day) and brought about the famous quote from a lower NY balcony that “it appeared all of London was afloat” in NY Harbor. 20,000 men were stationed over on Staten Island and on the 22nd of August 1776, the British began debarking at what is now the VZ Narrows Bridge but what was Denyse’s Ferry, an old farm house/crossing from Brooklyn to Staten Island which still remains today, as property of the US Army and the hordes of water rats that now call its rocky outcrop home.
It took them a good couple of days to march the length of 4th Ave (Shore Rd) to 3rd Street (where the Old Stone House now stands). It took them longer than anticipated because, as most Augusts are in NYC, it was miserably hot and humid, and the troops who were marching were Hessians and Red Coats. On their way towards the American ranks they were taking target practice on farmers’ watermelons, particularly near the Red Lion Inn (which was located at present day 39th Street and 4th Ave). the watermelon was a fruit which the German mercenaries had never seen before in Germany, or anyo f their other fighting.. Knowing how hot Augusts are here, you can imagine that upon seeing all the water and beautifully red fruit, these guys all decided to grab some, and much to their commanders’ dismay, they were delayed a couple of days.
Those days allowed George Washington to march his troops from Battle Bass (in Prospect Park) down what is now 1st Street, across the Gowanus, but by the time they were making their escape, the Hessians had finally made it along with two other regiments of British regulars who were advancing from Gravesend and chasing behind the Americans through Prospect Park as well as a battalion coming from New Utrecht. All in all, it was a horrific mismatch, around 20,000 Red Coats and something like 6500 Americans.
Washington and his troops were able to escape through Battle Pass in what is today Prospect Park and the British and Hessian forces chased them across the swamps that led to the Gowanus.
Washington was able to get the majority of his men across the marshy canal into Carroll Gardens (very likely marching through the site where Epaulet now stands on Smith St) and up to the Brooklyn Heights where they made a dangerous night crossing during a huge Noreaster (which would have had the humidity building unbearably in the days prior…think about those 4th Ave Watermelons again…*no not those watermelons, get your minds out of the gutter*)
Washington had asked Lord Sterling (a minor Scottish noble who was pissy about the British taking away family land from him back home) and a regiment from Delaware and Maryland (about 400 of them) to hold off the oncoming British and allow the rest of his army to escape across the Gowanus. They did, but were forced to sacrifice many men. They held the British at the Old Stone House which was rebuilt using the original stones and stands today at JJ Byrne Park between 4th and 5th Avenues and 2nd and 3rd Sts, just long enough to get Washington and his army across the canal.
Had Washington been met by the 20,000 or so redcoats, the Revolution would have been over on the spot, but because of the sacrifice of those 400 men, we were able to escape, regroup, and eventually exit Manhattan into Jersey, scoop around the Delaware River and raid Trenton on Christmas night, which is when the war began in earnest to be one between two armies of numbers and able men, not just a group of 2500 or so rag tag militias. The story goes that Washington, on the night of August 29-30 planned his escape under the cover of darkness. He was also helped massively by the nasty Nor’easter that blew through NY that night. Washington had instructed his men to keep their torches burning on the Heights of Brooklyn (close to where the Brooklyn Heights Promenade is today).
He ordered them kept burning through the night so the British would assume they were still there. As the British were eying these torches through the wind, thunder and rain from New York Harbor and the lower East River, Washington had his men silently escape, rowing in shifts on small boats, across the East River more upstream. When the rain subsided and the sun rose, any American resistance forces had left Brooklyn and were well on their way into northern Manhattan and then into New Jersey where they could regroup to fight another day.
Supposedly many men were shot down in the swampy much of the Gowanus to enable Washington to make his great escape, and many are buried in unmarked graves below 3rd Ave between 8th and 1st Sts. The old U-Haul depot was the site for one of those grave sites for those brave heroes who were the first of many to sacrifice for this great land. Many of those who died had surrendered and were supposedly bayoneted by the Hessians who were leading the charge against the Marylanders there. Knowing the conditions on the prison ships in Wallabout Bay, that may have been the merciful thing.
Really cool piece of NYC History, that most have no idea about, as in many text books, its only mentioned in passing as the “Battle of Long Island” or the “Battle of Brooklyn”. But without it, we all wouldn’t be here today…
Arthur Liberty described his ambition when founding the Liberty Company as being “determined not to follow existing fashion but to create new ones.” When he initially set up shop in 1875 on Regent Street in London, Liberty & Co. was a department store featuring rare goods from across the globe. Ultimately, it wouldn’t be these items that made his store famous, but Liberty’s own “Art Fabrics”. These were printed designs inspired by art movements and cultures from across history. With these fabrics, Liberty gave a new context to historically significant imagery never before associated with textiles.
After more than a century of producing these patterns, Liberty has amassed an extensive library; and for decades companies such as Nike, Hermes, and Yves Saint Laurent have teamed up with them to incorporate unforgettable patterning into their collections. As the range of items that utilize Liberty fabrics continues to diversify, the life and story of these patterns will continue to evolve.
New Arrivals at Epaulet - Sportcoats - Caine Sportcoat Loro Piana Navy Window Pane, Caine Sportcoat Sage Linen Windowpane, Caine Sportcoat Grape Cotton/Linen/Silk Blend, Caine Sportcoat Grass Green UK Corduroy, Caine Sportcoat Navy Hopsack, Weller Sportcoat Barberis Blue Houndstooth, Weller Sportcoat Barberis Camel Guncheck, and Weller Sportcoat Navy Super 120’s Wool