Skrapper / menswear + womenswear

ARTS / style

Skrapper / menswear + womenswear

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Fashion and art may be intimidating to most people, but Skrapper aims to change that by combining the two. The label was born in 2008 when artist William Quigley printed his iconic paintings of boxers and pop culture figures onto t-shirts, an item that even the philistines and sartorially clueless live their lives in. Skrapper’s first-ever fashion show continued this philosophy of democratizing fashion by sending models with eyepatches, arm casts, black eyes, and lit cigarettes down the runway. Even a child got a chance to walk, showing that there is no reason why the young, old, clumsy, and unrefined can’t look fashionable. However, to add legitimacy to their entry into the Fashion Week scene, the label experimented with cutting, shredding, and painting on the pieces, diverging from their previous lines of standard t-shirts and tanks. On the shirts were crudely drawn portraits and quotes straight out of a cryptic New Yorker cartoon, although it was the crass and beat-up models that really made the show stand out. It was striking, yes, but intimidating it was not. Style tip for the Columbia student: try cutting or painting on one of your t-shirts to make an item that is uniquely yours.

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30 April 2009
vol. 6, issue 12

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