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Fade of the Day – Somét 003 (6.5 Years, Unknown Washes, 7 Soaks)

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Six years old, my how they grow up so fast. This pair of Somét 003’s comes to us from Roger L. and it’s a multi-year project, to say the least. For the first year, he only wore them for “clean” activities, such as going to school or hanging out with friends (he used a pair of A.P.C.‘s for his “dirty” work as a barista). Since then, he’s worn these jeans often, kept them dry, and hung them up at the end of each day.

The whiskers and honeycombs look crispy, the knees have faded down well, and he’s even got some stacking at the hems. Needless to say, he’s achieved quite a lot over the last six years–due in part to Denim Therapy‘s masterful repairs–and still has wearable jeans to show for it.

Limited-time offer: if your denim is need of some much-needed TLC, you are in luck! Until September 5th, 2016, Heddels readers receive 20% off all of Denim Therapy‘s services (excluding shipping). Simply head over to their site and use the promo code, “Heddels16”.

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Vans x C2H4 x Pros by CH Customized Indigo Dyed Hand-Stitched Patchwork Sneakers

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Indigo dyed sneakers are not a new thing. Dye a pair of canvas sneakers in that magical blue liquid and it’s immediately more interesting. It’s been done. But how do you take it to the next level? Vans has recently walked in step with LA-based streetwear shop C2H4 to show you how.

More than just a pair of DIY backyard indigo-dyed sneakers, they mix hand-stitched boro details with hand-painted navy sidewalls and soles (complete with scuff marks) for a well-thought-out product that’s overflowing with texture. They’re made in two of Vans’ classic styles. The Old Skool swaps out cotton laces for leather ones (indigo-dyed, of course) and goes full friendship bracelet by adding navy wooden beads. Complementary to this, they’ve also made a Slip-On version. Simpler in construction, but no less beautiful, throw on some indigo-dyed socks and you’ll be crocking up and down the skate park.

Find the Old Skools for $315 and the Slip-Ons for $280 only at C2H4.

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Asics Gel-Lyte Japanese Denim Pack Hits Peak Denim

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Have we reached peak denim yet? No, definitely not. But with Asics upcoming Japanese Denim gel-lyte release, it makes me wonder. Don’t get me wrong, I love a well-done indigo dipped shoe. My dreams haunt me still with the FDMTL x Vans sneakers. I look to the empty space on my shoe rack like a widow looking to the horizon, waiting for her military husband to come home from war.

Anyway, this impending release will feature some sort of Japanese denim woven in Okayama. We’re assuming the denim is sanforized. Once the first surprise rain of the season hits, we’ll see whether that assumption is correct. They’ll be used in a mix of leather and EVA in Asics’ popular Gel-Lyte III and Gel-Lyte V silhouettes. When they earn their rips and tears, get them darned.

No word on when the shoes will drop, but keep an eye out on END.’s website.

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Red Wing Heritage 8137 6″ Classic Moc in Black Chrome

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Attention punks, goths, bikers, and New Yorkers: Red Wing Heritage has just released their beloved Classic Moc Boots in a completely saturated black. From the leather to the laces and all the way down to the soles, no color ekes its way into these sturdy boots, first designed in the 1950s for hunters and farmers.

Part of the Red Wing Heritage line, each pair is made in Red Wing, Minnesota, with chrome-dyed, smooth finish leather. Additional details include Traction Tred crepe wedge soles and taslan round laces.

Available from Red Wing Amsterdam for €299,95.

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Fade of the Day – Voyej Natural Pine Wood Wallet (5 Months)

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Switching into patina gear for today’s FotD, we look to the Voyej Leather Goods Pine Wood Wallet submitted by Joseph Andrew who calls Jakarta, Indonesia home. After five months, the original cream color has all but been replaced with a stunning golden-brown patina, much of which can be attributed to Joseph’s mink oil treatment and exposure to the elements.

It’s fair to say his every day carry has seen a fair amount of use, with the vegetable tanned cowhide becoming more supple with age. There are also hints of crocking lending even more character to this hand-stitched wallet. All in all, it’s an enviable bi-fold that’s sure to see many more years of use.

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The Afterlife of Cheap Clothing – Beneath the Surface

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Dear reader, this is the second of a two-part piece about the hidden costs of cheap jeans. If you haven’t had a chance to read the first one, may I suggest you read it first?

For those of you who have, you may remember my casual reference to a statistic. It is the number of pairs of jeans, on average, an American owns – strikingly, it was 6.7 pairs in 2015, down from 8.2 in 2006. That statistic was initially reported to demonstrate how the sale of jeans was declining due to the growing popularity of expensive sweatpants and leggings athleisure, but it begged a different question – where did those 1.5 pairs of jeans go?

Charitable Instincts

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Fig. 2 – A Cincinnati Goodwill, via Cincinnatti Goodwill.

In all likelihood, those jeans were perfectly wearable and donated to charity; a victim of a change of heart, being on the wrong side of a fashion trend, or a change in its owner’s size. If you’re like me, you’ve dragged the odd bag or two of clothing to an organization like Goodwill or Salvation Army. It’s a common perception that these donations are sold within the community to help advance the organization’s goals or distributed freely to those whose needs they meet. It feels good to think that they’ll go to help improve others’ lives – and as a practical consideration, there’s a financial benefit to those who itemize their US income tax deductions.  A win all around, right?

The truth, however, is much more complicated. With the increased availability of breathtakingly cheap clothing, the US market for second-hand clothing has diminished as quickly as fast fashion has risen.  And, since we pay so little for these brand new clothes, we have started to think of them as disposable. The result is, we Americans donate a lot of perfectly wearable clothing – so much so that we are overwhelming the retail system these charitable organizations operate. As a result, donation centers have to cull donated property for desirability according to grades – only the top is deemed fit for local retail.  It’s estimated that only 10-30% of donations make this grade – and even these get downgraded at the busiest centers if they don’t sell within a matter of weeks.

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Fig. 3 – At a Salvation Army – bales of clothing destined for recycling (Jack Hanrahan, Erie Times-News)

Those donations that don’t make the sales floor?  They can be earmarked for different markets on a sliding scale of desirability – a rough estimate of their residual value. In a symbol of how interconnected this system is, the lowest wearable grades are destined for places like Pakistan – a place where labor costs are so low that they produce the cheap apparel that ends up in this lifecycle. If the garment isn’t wearable, it might be destined for shredding and recycling – in particular, if it’s from 100% natural fibers such as cotton or wool.  Not all materials are eligible for this fate, though, especially blended material.  So a pair of 98% cotton jeans with a 2% touch of elastane for stretch, may go straight to a landfill.

Regardless of the grade, donations that don’t make it to the sales floor are wrapped up into bundles with similar items for wholesale distribution – it’s at this point that your donation ends up fully commoditized.  A likely scenario is that these bundles end up in a 40-foot shipping container – 30 tons worth of discarded clothing in a box made of steel.  From here, it’s launched into a network every bit as complicated as the one that produces a pair of $20 jeans.

The Journey Overseas

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Fig. 4 – Toi Market, Nairobi, Kenya. (via Kiva Fellows)

It seems pretty simple – the supply is located in the United States or another affluent country, and the demand is located far away, often in a country south of the equator. This is where distributors come in; they buy supply from charities or for-profit companies, and offer them to importers who buy them sight unseen according to a manifest (jeans, t-shirts or bras, perhaps). These importers land the goods and then sell them to merchants (either directly or through a wholesaler), who sell direct to consumers – often at local market stalls.

It’s not always as easy as it might seem, though – some countries (notably South Africa and Nigeria) have implemented import restrictions or outright bans to try to protect their garment-producing industries.  These are only as effective as the countries’ ability to control national borders, and Nigeria still ranks among one of Africa’s largest consumers of donated goods due to smugglers.

Interestingly enough, the trade routes often mirror long-standing relationships dating back centuries – a particularly fascinating example is Maharishi’s Upcycled line, where the UK-based company sends surplus Western military wear to (its former colony) India for upcycling, with the finished product returning to the West to be sold at a premium price.

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Fig. 5 – Designed in England, Upcycled in India – Maharishi fishtail jacket (via DPMHI)

Can Cheap, Second-Hand Imports Be Bad for an Economy?

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Fig. 6 – Bales of imported clothing being wheeled into Gikombo Market, Nairobi, Kenya (via NPR)

On the surface, it makes sense that a large influx of cheap apparel in good quality would be good news for countries that don’t benefit so much from the global economy.  And certainly, many countries do make significant use of these imports – as an example, 81% of clothing purchases in Uganda are of secondhand clothes. And according to Oxfam, used clothing from Western sources constitutes more than 50% of the clothing sector (by volume) of many sub-Saharan African countries.

The key to understanding this impact, however, is this: importing goods means you’re not producing them. The net effect of the flood of donated clothing is that local industries for textiles or garments cannot compete in a local market. Africa continues to produce a lot of cotton, but its textile exports are a fraction of what they used to be. This means that its ability to develop jobs requiring advanced (higher paying) skills is inhibited, even as purveyors of inexpensive apparel utilize its cheap, unskilled labor to put together the very clothing that might end up shipped back as secondhand a few years down the line. Because of this and other pressures exerted by large economic powers, the same path that South Korea and Japan once used to bootstrap their economies is not an option for these countries.

I recently ran across a brand that summed up the predicament. It sells swimwear decorated with African-inspired prints and its name is deliberately evocative of its Nigerian-born founder’s heritage. It’s based in London and produces its garments in Asia. It seems the best way to produce a Nigerian brand may be to leave the country entirely.

Who Benefits? Putting It All Together

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Fig. 7 – A World Vision Employee and a reality that will never exist, at least in the US. (Keith Srakocic, AP Photo)

It’s not just individuals who benefit from tax incentives for donating perfectly wearable apparel; every year, each major sporting league in the US produces a huge amount of souvenir apparel for the post season.  To capture the immediate market opportunity for the winning team’s fans, they produce them for both the eventual winners and losers.  The winners get their merch unboxed immediately and rushed onto the field or court to the players and coaches.  The losers’ boxes are donated to a charitable organization in exchange for a tax write-off and are never against seen in the Western world (the NFL donated 102 pallets of clothing and other licensed products valued at $2.5 million through their partner, World Vision, in 2007).

Others who gain financially from this system include for-profit companies who license the names of charities and collect donations on their behalf. To the consumer, it appears as if the charity is running the collection and solely benefiting from the takings – in reality, the revenue is split.  This isn’t necessarily dishonest; however, it demonstrates the complexity of what has been estimated to be a $2 billion used-clothing export industry.

On the other extreme are charities that are criticized for not meeting the standards to which charitable organizations are normally held (most notably, Planet Aid – a registered non-profit which has gained a reputation for diverting funds away from charity work to the point that the FBI concluded that “little to no money goes to the charities” upon investigation).  And beyond that, there is a growing trend of donation boxes fraudulently posing as charities.

All of this is getting so widespread I found a highly dubious donation box within a mile of my house without even looking for one – the charity’s name is licensed by its ostensibly non-profit operator, which pays out an eye-raising 40% of its operating budget to its Chairman and CEO.

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Fig. 8 – A highly dubious donation box.

A Self-Perpetuating Cycle

It’s easy to think of fake charities and other profit-motivated actors as con artists preying on an unsuspected public, but what fuels this second-hand clothing industry is the constant supply of discarded apparel that we are generating.  It’s like karmic hush money paid by our conscience – we drop something in a bin, pat ourselves on the back and then never have to think of it again.  But karma has a way of coming back in unusual ways; NPR’s Planet Money relays the remarkable story of someone who donated his lacrosse jersey to Goodwill and found it at a market in Sierra Leone months later.  What struck me most is how he had seemed to cross a boundary he wasn’t supposed to, like Bran Stark connecting a young Hodor to an ominous glimpse of his future.

What’s become clear to me is you cannot unlink the poverty of garment factory workers making cheap apparel from the used clothing that eventually gets shipped back.  The cycle is so interdependent that a pair of cheap jeans I bought while researching this piece comes with a tag: “Please Donate When No Longer Needed.”  They were made in Lesotho and seem to have been fated at birth to return to the continent of Africa some day.  It’s given me pause to consider my own prolific, sometimes impulsive, purchasing habits – this rapid-fire cadence of obsolescence acquiring the sheen of the obscene.

I don’t mean to suggest the answer is not to consume anything – although buying less and using what you do have more is a step in the right direction. And certainly, there are those who rely on affordable clothing, whether new or used.  I think of it sort of like fast food – something seemingly cheap that turned out to have less obvious social costs due to its health impact. And now consumers are demanding better, healthier food – and are willing to pay more up front for it.  I look forward to the day that we’ll come to understand cheap clothes in similar terms and challenge companies to give us more ethically sourced options that we consume more responsibly. Because the world is a small place and our choices have consequences.

References

I can’t emphasize enough how much this piece owes to the following (whose references I have made liberal use of).  In particular, Clothing Poverty is filled with detailed examples of the deeply enmeshed economy of secondhand clothing and situates it within both an historical and contemporary social context:

  • Elizabeth L. Cline, Overdressed: The Shockingly High Cost of Cheap Fashion (Portfolio / Penguin, 2012)
  • Andrew Brooks, Clothing Poverty: The Hidden World of Fast Fashion and Second-hand Clothes (Zed Books, 2015)
  • The True Cost, directed by Andrew Morgan (2005, Life Is My Movie Entertainment), Netflix stream

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Viberg Service Boot in Italian Beige Kangaroo Leather

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Expanding their repertoire of exotic leathers, Canadian boot company Viberg has added a little down-under flavor with their new Italian Kangaroo Leather Service Boots. We’re assuming Italy is home to the tannery, not the kangaroos. The Service Boot silhouette was first created by Mr. Viberg in the early 20th century and was the model for many WWII standard issue boots.

In addition to their unusual material, this pair features Goodyear welting, a 2030 last, and Dainite soles, as well as calfskin lining and blind eyelets. As it’s not stated whether these are truly undyed, the patina potential remains to be seen. Regardless, Viberg always delivers on the combination of luxury and utility.

Available on the Viberg website for $740.

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Sugar Cane “Blue Moonshine” Hank Dyed Natural Indigo Workshirt

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We’re all about freshened up classics ’round here, and Sugar Cane‘s hank-dyed work shirt hits every mark. The fibers used to make the 3.5oz. 100% cotton selvedge fabric are carefully hank-dyed to provide richly textured, long-lasting color in ranges of blues and greens. Contrast stitching and blonde wood buttons help to make the tailoring and the quality of the dye really pop.

Extra design details include selvedge gusseted side seams, chain stitch run-off, and dual-chest pockets. Made in Japan with midweight fabric and short sleeves, it’s a versatile piece for this transitional season.

Limited quantities available from Self Edge for $245.

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Fade of the Day – A.P.C. Petit New Standard (7 Years, 2 Months, 3 Soaks)

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Admittedly, we see a lot of A.P.C.‘s in our inbox. While that probably comes as no surprise, what we don’t often see are pairs as crazy and repaired as this pair of Petit New Standards worn for a whopping seven years and two months by Simon See from London.

This is as true of a testament to the brand as any, as even after countless repairs at the local dry cleaner and the fine folks at Darn & Dusted, they are STILL kicking today. If the length of wear doesn’t impress you, they have also only seen water three times for soaks with no washes to speak of.

The results speak for themselves–a totally thrashed and personalized pair of jeans with fades that look like they were pulled out of the turn of the century coal mines. Bravo, Simon, you better frame these bad boys someday.

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Fade Friday – The Strike Gold 5109 (2 Years, 3 Soaks)

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Take one look at Steve Lafleur’s two-year-old streaky, slubby The Strike Gold 5109 jeans and it’s easy to understand why they’re worthy of this week’s Fade Friday spotlight. A lot of the wear and tear is attributed to daily bike rides, and it’s also the likely cause for the crotch blowout, which has since been repaired thanks to the crew at Self Edge LA.

Overall, the dye has faded dramatically from the original dark indigo but it’s done so superbly. Gradual lap fades and slight whiskers speak to Steve’s bike riding tendencies, while the heavy honeycombs and stacks reminds us that these are jeans made to stand up to the rigours of life on the go!

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Porter x 5525 Gallery x United Arrows Suede Bag Collection

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Stylish motifs meet modern accessories with the latest collaboration between Porter and 5525 Gallery featuring a suede-tastic lineup of functional necessities for those on the go. The collection is made up of six pieces total with five of them being assorted styles of bags ranging from helmet bag to tote bag to waist bag (better known as fanny pack).

Hosted exclusively through United Arrows & Sons, one of the standout pieces in this drop is the studded belt. Maybe it’s the fact that it’s the only non-bag too, but the vintage inspiration is heavy with this piece and really adds some spice (and bling) to the release. The bags are utilitarian and look to be very functional no matter what you are doing or carrying, and all of the hardware is matching brass throughout.

Available for $498-$647 at United Arrows & Sons.

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Red Wing Heritage Gives a New Sole to the Iron Ranger

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From U.S. boot freaks to working class old men, almost everyone knows that the Red Wing Heritage name in synonymous for timeless quality. Recently the brand has revisited their ever-popular Iron Ranger and slapped on a new style of sole to boot!

The body of the boot hasn’t changed much over time and is still constructed with premium S.B. Foot Tanning Company leathers and was previously constructed with a nitrile cork sole with little to no tread. Red Wing thought it was time to change it up and add a little slip-resistance while they were at it. Their new Vibram 430 mini-lug soles feature the same low profile but with added tread, ready to be taken to all new frontiers.

Available for $319 at Red Wing Heritage.

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The Sale Finder Shortlist: August 19

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“I had to come all the way from the highway and byways of Tallahassee, Florida to MotorCity, Detroit to find my true denim.” There’s no need to search high and low for your next pair, hop on over to our Sale Finder Shortlist live now at Heddels.com

Welcome to the Sale Finder Shortlist, the spiritual successor to the Sales Compendium and our editors’ top picks for the best items on our Sale Finder, a daily updated app of thousands of the best online items currently on sale.

Jeans, Pants, and Shorts

Jackets

Footwear

Shirts, Sweaters, and Sweatshirts

Accessories

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The Weekly Rundown: Patagonia’s Balancing Act

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There’s a ton of great stuff out there. And, while we would love to cover it all, we thought it best to just give it to you straight. The Weekly Rundown is here with the latest happenings from around the web.

  • Allen Edmonds’ Higgins Boot tested and reviewed — Dappered
  • What should your first suit be? — Put This On
  • Buzz Aldrin collaborate with Omega watches for a Mars-bound watch — Hodinkee
  • Denim Short Stores: Hollie Ward — Denim Dudes
  • Viberg’s factory, toured — Division Road Inc.
  • From Einstein to Springsteen, a look back in Levi’s history —Levi’s
  • Patagonia’s Balancing Act: Chasing Mass Market Appeal While Doing No Harm — Wall Street Journal

Image: Leah Nash for Wall Street Journal

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Battenwear Promenade Parka in 24oz. Melton Wool

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While the prospect of gearing up for winter may be the last thing on your mind in the middle of August, brands like Battenwear are here to remind you that winter will be coming around soon enough. They recently released their new super heavy duty 24oz. wool blend Promenade Parka in two earthy colorways so that you’re ready when the time comes.

Form and function come together in this piece, cut in a roomy fit for plenty of layering room with durable set-in sleeves and adjustable wrist closure buttons. It features an adjustable drawstring hood and two angled corduroy-lined hand warmer pockets as well as an additional two lower outer pockets. In typical parka fashion, it sits right about in the mid-thigh area because we all know that bit of extra coverage can make all the difference on those frost bitten nights.

Available for $548 at North American Quality Purveyors.

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Fade of the Day – Sage Highlander Special Roll 21 Oz. (1 Year, 1 Wash, 1 Soak)

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Heddels reader Faisal Ridha Yathesta from Indonesia knows a thing or two about putting his jeans to work. He has worn his Sage Highlander Special Roll 21oz. denim almost every day over the last year in college studying as a geological engineer, which means they have seen some serious hiking as well.

Wearing your jeans all day on the trail equals some righteous and dirty fades, and Faisal says after their initial soak the only other experience with water was a beach wash at seven months in. Sage continues to impress us with both their style and ruggedness, and this pair is a great example of both of those things.

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Tricker’s Longwing Boot in Espresso Scotch Grain and Calfskin

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When it comes to men’s boots, there is a fine line between work and dress, and Tricker’s is walking that line in a serious way with their latest Longwing Boot. Constructed with the highest grade materials and featuring a laundry list of multi-purposed details, this boot really stands out.

Where other wingtip boots fall short, the extended wing around the entire base of this boot serves also as added waterproof protection from the elements, while adding a unique look and contrasting texture to the espresso scotch grain burnished calf leather upper.

Further adding to the contrast department is the natural leather Barbour welt midsoles paired with Dainite outsoles for added traction. And in case all of these details may have you forgetting the true potential of your boots, they throw in a pair of classic tan and yellow workman laces as well as the black waxed nylon laces so you can kick it on and off the clock.

Available for $565 at Division Road Inc.

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Winter Session Waxes Poetic With Their Fall 2016 Collection

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Fall is right around the corner and the folks over at Winter Session are here to help you gear up with their latest line of autumn-inspired bags. Their Fall 2016 Collection is out to capture the vibe of the changing leaves and dimming blue sky as the cooler weather sets in, and what better way to make that transition than with some heavy duty waxed canvas?

Painstakingly constructed in the mountains of Denver, Colorado, this is the largest collection yet for the brand and features domestically sourced natural leather accents paired with solid brass hardware throughout, that, as we all know, will age beautifully along with the rest of the bag. From backpacks to totes and all the way down to tool rolls and accessory pouches, there is something for everyone here.

Available from $28-$285 at Winter Session.

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Alden ‘Corbett’ Natural Chromexcel Longwing 97872

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Despite sharing its name with a recently ousted governor of Pennsylvania, the Alden Corbett is a crepe-soled longwing blucher made in Massachusetts and one of the brand’s most enduring styles.

The Corbett recently dropped in Natural Chromexcel, an aniline pull up leather that will make a nice patina and is Goodyear welted and recraftable, so it should last for decades if maintained properly. Though, be mindful that the Corbett should be purchased a half size down from your normal size because it’s on the Barrie last.

The Alden Corbett is available for $575 at Unionmade.

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Fade of the Day – Pronto Denim x The Flat Head PROXFH05 (1 Year, 10 Months, 4 Washes, 5 Soaks)

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We’ve said it time and time again, but we are constantly reminded with submissions such as today’s that something magical happens when wearing raw denim in Thailand. In the case of Atip Aroonsirirat, we suspect his sweat may contain traces of bleach (meant in the most endearing way of course) because these fades are down right out of control.

What you’re seeing here is a pair of Pronto Denim x The Flat Head PROXFH05‘s at just under two years of wear in one of the most humid regions of the world. Made up of a medium weight 16oz. denim, this collab pair have been put to the test and their all-around loss of indigo is staggering. The whole top half is practically white, fading drastically down with crazy and fraying honeycombs to some textbook stacks, making these jeans an archetypal example of southeastern Asia-worn denim.

The post Fade of the Day – Pronto Denim x The Flat Head PROXFH05 (1 Year, 10 Months, 4 Washes, 5 Soaks) appeared first on Heddels.com.

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