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KNITS
CONTINUE TO CHARM WITH THEIR SOFT TOUCH:
BLOCK Headwear and Mixwell make beautiful knitwear
music together. We just learned that Mixwell is
a line of sportswear worn by disc jockeys. Pictures
below:
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| BLOCK Headwear® and Mixwell®
Debut Limited Edition Hats |
The Knit
Cap Reigns Supreme in the Heat according to the
LA Times:
KNITS
FOR ALL SEASONS: Guys get knit-picky
about hats
It’s over 90 degrees in LA, yet men are
donning wool caps all over town. Go figure, fashion
has trumped common sense once again. That’s
good news for the hat industry, even if these
young men are melting on the pavement. According
to the article, “Even in the summer
swelter, wool caps that seem fit for winter have
become part of the L.A. messy male uniform.
They've been spotted on skater dudes in Santa
Monica, on rocker wannabes in Los Feliz and on
Whole Foodies in Hollywood. Alain Mazer, communications
director for sportswear brand OP, was wearing
one at the Tropicana bar at the Hollywood Roosevelt
Hotel on a particularly steamy Saturday night.
"On hotter days people will say, 'How can
you wear that?' "says Mazer, who favors plain
black cuffed styles along with caps emblazoned
with the name of the band Fu Manchu. "When
you have a big mop on your head like mine, it's
a convenient way to keep your hair in order."
U2's lead guitarist,
the Edge, has been wearing knit caps for years,
but it was hip-hop artists who really brought
them to the mainstream. And this summer, it seems
beanies — or skullies,
as they are also known — have become part
of the messy L.A. male uniform of baggy shorts
or slouchy jeans, flip-flops and grubby T-shirts,
coiffed facial hair and tattooed arms.
”They're
not last winter's leftovers. Beanies
in wool or acrylic, ribbed or smooth, cuffed or
flat, with a striped band or a band logo, have
been in stock all summer at retail outlets such
as Energie on Melrose Avenue, Dogfunk.com on the
Internet and even Barneys New York in Beverly
Hills. The edgier ones have flame, skull or camo
designs.
"You will see
lots of skaters wearing them….they fit your
head and don't obscure your face or eyes and block
your vision. So there is a utility factor.
Headgear of all
sorts has long had a place among celebrities striving
to go incognito in Hollywood. Trucker hats soared
to popularity on the heads of Ashton Kutcher and
Justin Timberlake in 2002, and newsboy caps gained
exposure from Janet Jackson and others in 2003.
But this new wave of knit caps is notable for
its seasonal inappropriateness. The phenomenon
is on par with college kids wearing flip-flops
in the snow and surfers donning sheepskin Ugg
boots on the sand.
You don't feel hot
in them because they are loose knit," Mazer
insists. "It truly baffles me," says
Darren Gold, owner of the boutique Alpha Gear
for Gents on Melrose Avenue. He offers his own
explanation: "Now that guys are really getting
into accessories, they want to keep the looks
that they feel comfortable in even if they aren't
completely working with the weather.
"Other than
baseball caps, which not every guy likes to wear,
there really are no other stylish hats that aren't
over the top, so maybe they just keep wearing
what looks good. Summer or winter, sometimes you
just don't want to be seen with just-rolled-out-of-bed
hair.' "
Sitting in a vibrating
massage chair while getting a pedicure at the
Nailtica salon in Los Angeles, makeup artist Gregory
Russell pulls off his navy-blue knit cap, shakes
out his wet blond curls and explains, "They
are great when you haven't done your hair."
But even he admits, "It's pretty hard to
wear them when it's so hot outside."
Jeremy Goldberg,
a freelance photographer who lives in Carthay
Circle, disagrees. He says that wearing knit caps
in the summertime is not as crazy as it may seem
because in L.A. everyone's in the car all day,
in a controlled climate.
Goldberg is a bit
of a cap snob in that he will wear only styles
that he's purchased in Tokyo. (One is black and
cuffed, the other gray and ribbed, with a "tufty
thing" on top.)
The last time he
wore a knit cap was last week when he was photographing
a cast member of "The O.C." at Leo Carrillo
State Beach. "I don't feel genre or subculture
identified. The function of the knit cap is 'I
like the way it looks,' " he sniffs. "It
doesn't do the dishes."
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