HOME ARTICLES DOs & DON'Ts NEWS MUSIC FASHION REVIEWS ARCHIVES ACCOUNT

< PREVIOUS




You don’t have to be rich and famous to be like Jay Z and Beyoncé. You just need 100 shots and weird lighting.
Comments/Enlarge | See all



Fat people aren’t just jolly. They’re joymongers. Sure they’re going to die soon, but the big picture is they’re funny now and they’re making tonight special so who cares?
Comments/Enlarge | See all







I HATE GYPSIES
But They Seem Nice
JANE STOCKDALE
From the Annual Vice Photo Issue
DOOMS DAY METAL
Whaddayouknow! A Danish survey showed tha...
GAMES
Resident Evil 4, L.A. Rush, Heroes Of The...






RETARDO T-SHIRTS
Will Lemon Makes Clothes With His Left Ha...
BIRD-WATCHING BONERS
Indigo People Makes Nature Sexy Again
THE HIGH END OF HARLEM
Santana's Town is Only a Block Away
QUITE CONTRARY
Mary Ping Takes On Gucci and Wins



JERRY MCPHEERSON
THE HEART AND SOUL OF A NEW MACH...
Bogdan Raczynski's Sickeningly Sweet Love...
CORPORATE ROCK
The Destruction of the Desaparecidos
OUR LORD JESUS CHRIST
Kid 606 Has Arisen
THE VICE GUIDE TO FAN FICTION
Sandwiched somewhere between amateur porn...

See all articles by this contributor


What are you Grups so worried about? Getting old is a good thing. Look at this guy. He’s about a hundred years old and he’s loving every minute of it. If you’re over 30 you need to throw all your gel, logos, silk screens, rare sneakers, stressed denim, hairdos, and jewelry in the garbage. Make a clear, even path to this guy and go there, year-by-year, with dignity. Comments/Enlarge | See all




THE AMERICAN TOFFS

Harmon Shows Fops What Dandy Really Means

Photo by Peter Sutherland.


The New York indie fashion scene had one of its few-and-far-between historical moments in the late 90s, when designers were as ubiquitous in the Meatpacking District as tranny whores and slaughtered cows. Two of the luminaries of that time, a couple of designers who made us very happy, were Susan Cianciolo and Miguel Adrover. Then one day they went to the store for a thing of milk and never came back. Cianciolo moved to L.A. to be an “artist” (what…ever) and Miguel, a shorthair away from complete superstardom, decided to stop doing regular collections, choosing instead to focus on growing his beard and riding his bike.

Luckily, there is a young NY menswear designer named Andrew Harmon who worked as a close assistant to Susan and Miguel consecutively. It seems that he successfully absorbed both the crafty, handmade feel of Susan’s stuff and the suave guerrilla feel of Miguel’s designs. Thus, Andrew’s menswear line, pragmatically named Harmon, is the classiest thing to hit downtown New York City since those “Special Delivery” heroin bags.

“I would love to have dressed Rainer Werner Fassbinder,” Andrew says, giving away a key clue to his psyche. Sophisticated yet perverse, like that “shit on me” twinkle in the eye of a guy too rich to enjoy normal sex anymore, Andrew’s garments use a landed-gentry idiom to impart the unavoidable message that below the Camel Flannel Trousers lies a cock that could split you in two.

In the time of some truly repugnant dominant styles (“I hate low-rise jeans,” hisses Andrew), it is a joy to meet a hipster designer making things that most of his friends couldn’t afford with two years’ worth of their salary. “The hardest thing about producing a jacket is the price,” he admits. “But I’ve learned to stick to my guns.” With any luck, the hip community will grow into Harmon once they’re done with daily T-shirts and Air Jordans. These are the kind of jackets you want your grandson to inherit.

JERRY MCPHEERSON

SEE ALL ARTICLES BY THIS CONTRIBUTOR

READ/POST COMMENTS



< PREVIOUS









ABOUT US | SUBSCRIPTIONS | FIND VICE | MEDIA KIT

AUSTRALIA | AUSTRIA | BELGIUM: FRANÇAIS/NEDERLANDS | CANADA: ENGLISH/FRANÇAIS | DEUTSCHLAND
ESPAÑA | FRANCE | ITALY | 日本語 | MEXICO | NETHERLANDS | NEW ZEALAND | SCANDINAVIA | SCHWEIZ | UK | US

© 2000-2008, Vice Magazine North America | E-mail: vice@viceland.com | Privacy Statement | Terms of Use | Site Development: Solid Sender