Interactive experiences and a welcoming atmosphere aim to attract more younger customers and translate more visitors to sales.
The Japanese brand is known for deconstructing and reworking different items into eclectic new pieces.
The brand’s design team showed large, loose silhouettes with some odd details that didn’t always add to the garment.
Hideaki Shikama took elements of various world cultures and mixed them with modern streetwear for an eclectic look.
Lisa Pek turned out wearable basics with unexpected twists and asymmetric details.
Takeshi Osumi and Yuichi Yoshii incorporated tailored, outdoor, military and typically feminine elements into a covetable collection.
Hisashi Fukatami showed a modern interpretation of men’s wear that used artistic inspirations to seamlessly mix casual with elevated looks.
Pharrell Williams, Sofia Coppola and Soo Joo Park helped celebrate the fifth stop of the exhibition’s tour.
Takayuki Chino took inspiration from the French to craft a collection of relaxed, oversize pieces with a modern edge.
Kozaburo Akasaka drew on Sixties and Seventies influences to craft a collection of effortlessly cool streetwear.
Ryohei Kawanishi worked with New York-based artist Meguru Yamaguchi to reinvent pieces from his archive with a painterly edge.
The historic Milanese coffee house inaugurated a cafè in Tokyo’s Ginza District.
The 1,200-square-foot store will be on Wooster Street.
The store will be the only in Asia to offer the Lot No.1 program for order-made jeans.
The store will offer six capsule collections a year in association with local artisans.