After we saw the street style situation at New York Fashion Week, one thing was abundantly clear: Fright-Rags Welcome To The ‘Burbs shirtStreet style is back. And we couldn’t be happier about it. After New York comes London, and the showgoers at London Fashion Week have clearly been studying the spring trends. It was still a bit chilly in London, but people were creative about working spring trends into their look, mostly via color and accessories. Typically, you see a lot of trench coats, suiting, and midi dresses with boots on the streets of LFW. There was certainly plenty of that, and it’s still as chic as ever, but we also spotted plenty of fresh trends that you don’t see every season. We invite you to keep scrolling to peruse some of the best looks at London Fashion Week and shop the new spring trends that made them excel. As you may have heard, bomber jackets have returned after a long hiatus, but this time, they’re much more oversize and often in bright colors. Color trends for a new season usually pop up first, so it’s not surprising that one of the biggest ones for spring was everywhere in London—orange. This cheerful, bold hue that was once reserved for summer has proven its ability to work year-round.
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But a deep dive into Adidas’s archives had him reeling. Fright-Rags Welcome To The ‘Burbs shirt “I suddenly realised that, with the exception of the waffle trainer and that air bag [Nike’s Air Max technology], this guy Adi was the father of 90% of the [sportswear] industry,” he would say. Maybe Kanye West came to the same conclusion after leaving Nike too. His next stop would be Adidas, where, by the admission of the then-president of Adidas North America, Mark King, his collaboration “definitely helped make Adidas cool again”. Indeed, it was Adi Dassler – from which comes ‘Adidas’ – who pioneered the idea of designing shoes to be functional for specific sports: he set out on the path that would lead to the modern track shoe, the modern football boot (and, for that matter, the modern football), along with shoes specially designed for every marginal sport from handball to high jump, boxing to fencing. Sure, Nike has long dominated golf, tennis and basketball – a sport Adidas was the market leader in before Nike came along. But it’s precisely that focus which, arguably, has meant the latter’s back catalogue of styles is comparatively limited to endless reinterpretations of the Air Force 1, Dunk or Jordan. In contrast, Adidas’ approach has not only tied it to sporting legends as diverse as James Hunt, Muhammad Ali and Gerd Muller, but given it a long roster of stone-cold trainer classics: the Gazelle and the Samba, the Superstar and the Campus, the ZX line and the NMD, even the Adilette shower slides, which sparked their own odd-ball, wear-them-out-with-socks fashion moment. Then, of course, there is the Stan Smith tennis shoe – still Adidas’s best-selling style, 60 years old in 2023 and arguably the progenitor of today’s long line of stripped-back, luxury sneaker makers, reinventing the sports shoe as something semi-formal.
norman schoenradt –
súper original! precioso puesto!
Thomas Glidden –
Love this shirt! Fit as expected. I like my shirts a little loose.
Brian Pringle –
My main concern was the sizing but I followed the other reviews and my son loved it and fit great.
Elsa James –
Love it