Cornelius
Practically Family
- Messages
- 715
- Location
- Great Lakes
Hell, I would just buy a first class ticket straight to Tokyo, hire a translator, walk right into Desolation Row and announce "ONE OF EVERYTHING, please."
Hell, I would just buy a first class ticket straight to Tokyo, hire a translator, walk right into Desolation Row and announce "ONE OF EVERYTHING, please."
No need for a translator to ask for this
Edit: Hell I would be there and help you if needed just to see you place that order!
It probably won't work because they are usually low on stock on almost everything. The proper way is ask them to send everything in the next season to you when they are ready.Hell, I would just buy a first class ticket straight to Tokyo, hire a translator, walk right into Desolation Row and announce "ONE OF EVERYTHING, please."
It probably won't work because they are usually low on stock on almost everything. The proper way is ask them to send everything in the next season to you when they are ready.
View attachment 209693 If it were really NO object, today it would be this due to the sorta cool leather backstory.
View attachment 209693 If it were really NO object, today it would be this due to the sorta cool leather backstory.
Cool story bro. I thought it was just a brown a-2...BUT WAIT...Right, not like if I had some money and wanted a new jacket but if I had Bill Gates money. An amount where money becomes a sort of abstract concept.
Korozen, also known as the 'dye of the sun', was the color for formal royal garments during the Heian period in Japan. It had incredible color-changing characteristics, much like an opal, with a base color of madder red which shifts as light moves over it. The technique was passed down generationally from artisan to artisan, but was eventually lost to time.
Yusai Okuda was the one to finally unlock this mystery in 1990, at the Yusai Dyeing Laboratory in Kyoto. He founded that laboratory in 1980 after studying painting; engraving; and both Western and Japanese garment design. At this lab, he was able to recreate the Korozen dye in a modern form, calling it Yume Korozen, or "Dream Korozen".
The Real McCoy's is only the 3rd company allowed to use this dying technique, and they chose to use it on their flagship A-2 flight jacket. The result is the most limited edition of a jacket that is already tough to come by due to the atelier-built nature of the product. The color is hard to pin down, starting as a red and then showing yellow highlights in bright sunlight
Hell, I would just buy a first class ticket straight to Tokyo, hire a translator, walk right into Desolation Row and announce "ONE OF EVERYTHING, please."
They speak good English at Desolation Row...
Are they grumpy and not morning people?As long as you're so kind and careful not to go there too soon