
Dreamy Hair With Clothes to Match
A head of flouncy curls made Billy Willis easy to spot as he was strolling through London on a Saturday in March. Mr. Willis's hair, along with his layers of loose pleats in cool tones, gave him an elegantly refined flow.
While describing his ensemble, he confirmed what I had thought upon seeing it: that the clothing was all Issey Miyake (specifically, from the brand's Homme Plissé line). It turned out that Mr. Willis, 21, worked at a nearby Issey Miyake store and was on a break when we met. But he was a fan of the label and its eponymous Japanese designer long before he got the job about a year and a half ago.
'I got my first piece at 14 from a friend who was buying some pieces from the '90s,' Mr. Willis said. He added that his sartorial inspirations included people he described as 'accidentally well dressed' or, as he put it, those who 'have no intention of being fashionable.'
'They have just found a style that works for them and developed it throughout their life, which often leads to their clothes telling interesting stories,' he said. As for his hair, he explained that he started growing it out seven years ago when he was looking for ways to style his thick, fuzzy curls. 'It just stuck ever since,' Mr. Willis said, 'and I think the style unintentionally guided how my way of dressing has developed. And it keeps my ears warm in winter!'
Tap to see more looks

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNBC
2 hours ago
- CNBC
How a 25-year-old entrepreneur is using this Japanese concept to grow a successful matcha business
Angel Zheng is relying on the Japanese principle of "ikigai" to turn her passion for matcha — a powdered green tea with a unique taste and purported health benefits — into building what she hopes will be an iconic household brand of the future. At just 25 years old, Zheng has already owned at least five businesses — six, if you count her past as a social media influencer. Her latest endeavor may serve as the highest expression yet of her ikigai — which no less an authority than the Japanese government defines as "a passion that gives value and joy to life Zheng started her first two businesses — an e-commerce women's wear brand and recording studio — while she was still earning her undergraduate degree in business from Baruch College in New York. The clothing brand was an offshoot of her love of fashion, while the recording studio sprang up when she realized her co-founder, a music producer, was only using his space once or twice a week. In the years that followed, Zheng shuttered her first ventures, using the profits to open omakase sushi bars Moko and Shiso. The two fine dining spots garnered Zheng and her co-founder a spot on the Forbes 30 Under 30 list for the food and drink industry last year. But despite already making waves on New York's foodie scene, Zheng is far from finished. Her latest solo endeavor is Isshiki Matcha, a matcha-dedicated café located smack in the middle of Manhattan's trendy East Village neighborhood. Isshiki Matcha is unassuming from the outside — sharing the same space as Zheng's only other operating business, Moko, there's no sign anywhere on the storefront indicating its presence. But, if things go as Zheng plans, the café could one day be ground zero of a sprawling matcha enterprise. "When you think about coffee right now, you have those names like Lavazza, Illy, La Colombe. But when you close your eyes and think about matcha, it's such a new market that there aren't heritage brands yet. And that's what I want to be," Zheng told CNBC in an interview. More than an attempt to hop on the matcha bandwagon, Isshiki emerged from Zheng's own love for the drink. Matcha, a powder made from ground green tea leaves, originated in China but was refined into its current form in Japan. Its popularity has soared in recent years, especially among millennials and younger generations. Japan's matcha production in 2023 amounted to 4,176 tons—nearly three times more than the 1,471 tons made in 2010, the Japan Times reported, citing data from the Ministry of Agriculture. The same article quoted Kametani Tea saying it had increased its production by about 10% each year since 2019 just to keep up with demand. On Instagram, 8.8 million posts are tied to the hashtag ; on TikTok, 2 million. Celebrities from Dua Lipa to Gwyneth Paltrow to Jesssica Alba have publicly approved the drink, turning it into a cornerstone of the health and wellness movement. Matcha's popularity has swelled to the point where demand now outstrips supply, leading to a matcha shortage. Last fall, two well-known Kyoto tea companies, Ippodo and Marukyu Koyamaen, set strict purchase limits. These supply chain issues, combined with recent tariffs that threaten higher prices on imports, have caused Zheng many a headache in the past few weeks. Nevertheless, she remains steadfast in her mission to one day make Isshiki Matcha into a household name. Zheng, a first-generation Chinese immigrant, grew up on matcha, and credits the tea with helping bring her zen in an otherwise chaotic, entrepreneurial schedule. "Life demands so much from you — school, work, family, relationships, friendships. It's important to have pillars," she explained. "'Isshiki' means one pillar. You should have pillars in your day that ground you — like going to the gym, doing your skincare routine at night, making sure you have your time in the morning to make a matcha, or you come here and we make your morning matcha every day for you." This latest business, Zheng explained, feels different from her previous ventures — mainly because she believes that she has finally found her calling. And in pursuing something she's truly passionate about, Zheng has noticed pieces falling into place. "When you pour your love and heart into something, it's a very big difference, especially when it's something you consume like food," she said. "I have my purpose. There's this Japanese philosophy that I take to heart and live by every day, and it's called 'ikigai.' It means to find the thing that you're best at, that will help the most people and bring you the most joy, bring the world the most joy, and everything else will follow — the money, the success. If you chase money and success first, you're never going to have a fulfilling life." Zheng first came up with the idea to open a matcha café on New Year's Day 2024, when thinking through her resolutions for the year. During a trip to Japan soon after, she serendipitously happened to be seated at dinner next to the head of communications at a matcha farm. Since debuting early last year, Zheng has expanded Isshiki Matcha's presence through careful event curation and digital branding. A brand's online footprint can make it or break it, she told CNBC, which is why she still keeps up with influencing from time to time. "It helps a lot with the business," Zheng added. "I feel like — with social media and the landscape that we live in now — having a digital presence and digital currency is just as valuable as having a real-life presence." Isshiki serves between 100 to 300 customers daily between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. Moko officially takes over the space beginning at 5 p.m., serving fresh sushi to sometimes as many as 150 customers. A digital and physical presence work in tandem, since Zheng publicizes the numerous events she hosts at Isshiki through her social media. Increasing the visibility of the local Asian community is also important to Zheng, many of whose events are free and open to the public. Many of the brands she's collaborated with have been Asian-owned or focused. Events she's hosted recently fit into the category, including a Lunar New Year party and a Valentine's Day popup with Asian dating app Yuzu. Other events have ranged from special morning matcha classes to a rave with a local DJ to capsule clothing collection launches to tea tasting classes. Zheng's influence in the New York community — online and in-person — has led Isshiki to host or cater events for brands including Uniqlo, Mastercard, Puma and Goop. Zheng credits her success to preparation, hard work and luck — which sometimes comes in the form of meeting the right person at the right time. Earlier this year, Zheng's next foray materialized after the owner of a bottled lemonade business, The Lucky Ox, another Asian beverage brand, walked into her café to pitch some of his products for her dinner menu. Zheng expressed interest in entering the ready-to-drink space, and the two soon collaborated on a new, bottled matcha lemonade. While Zheng already sells matcha powders wholesale, the motivation behind the ready-to-drink version was to create a convenient and easily accessible product. The matcha lemonade, which just launched a month ago, is already available in 120 stores, Zheng said, and is aimed at linking Isshiki as closely to matcha as La Colombe is to coffee. When part of being a successful business owner is who you know, Zheng said it's not necessarily a bad thing to suffer from the fear of missing out, or FOMO. In the past, she's found brand partnerships through other attendees at various events. In fact, she got her first internship after encountering the founder of a magazine company by chance. The two stopped to chat after realizing they were wearing the same perfume. "Literally, your network is your net worth. It gives me crippling anxiety to miss anything," Zheng laughed. It also pays to jump at unique opportunities when they arise. Last fall, Isshiki Matcha went viral after Zheng managed to import a shipment of the famous Olympic Village chocolate muffins to the U.S. Perseverance is also important, as when the Omicron variant of Covid-19 raged through New York City just one month after Moko's official opening. Now Zheng is at the point in her career where she can advise entrepreneurs first starting out, telling them to embody confidence and boldness. That's been especially important as a female entrepreneur: believing in her abilities, not selling herself short and advocating for any opportunities she's in the market for, Zheng said. Sometimes, Zheng has found it helpful when meeting potential business partners to not reveal her age upfront. "The best part of being Asian is that I can look the same age from like, 16 to 50," she joked. "So you don't know how old I am, and I've always carried myself this way."


Time Business News
9 hours ago
- Time Business News
Saint Michael Sale Saint Michael Clothing
In an industry overwhelmed by buildup cycles and trend-driven names, Saint Michael stands separated as a streetwear brand with an unmistakable character, crude feeling, and craftsmanship at its center. Known for its bothered surfaces, otherworldly themes, and premium development, Saint Michael has developed a steadfast taking after that ranges from mold insiders to hip-hop elites. At the heart of its advertising are the brand's T-shirts and hoodies—garments that feel more like wearable relics than simple clothing. Saint Michael is the brainchild of two inventive powerhouses: Yuta Hosokawa, the originator of Japanese mold name Readymade, and Cali Thornhill DeWitt, a Los Angeles-based craftsman known for his sincerely charged text-based craftsmanship and near ties to Kanye West's DONDA imaginative camp. Launched in 2020, Saint Michael—sometimes stylized as Holy person Mxxxxxx—blends East-meets-West craftsmanship, countercultural references, and an unmistakable DIY stylish. The brand's title alludes to the lead celestial host Michael, a figure of security, equity, and otherworldly warfare—an able allegory for the brand's gritty-yet-hopeful worldview. From its initiation, Saint Michael has stood out by dismissing flawlessness. Its pieces are intentioned troubled, blurred, and worn, bringing out a sense of history and rebellion. Saint Michael's T-shirts are seemingly its signature pieces. Created from heavyweight, high-quality cotton, these shirts are more than fair basics—they're craftsmanship objects with a punk edge. Each Saint Michael T-shirt is hand-treated to accomplish a vintage see. Whether it's the broken screen prints, frayed fixes, or uneven colors, each shirt carries the marks of deliberateness blemish. This maturing handle gives the pieces of clothing a sense of lived involvement, as if they've as of now had a life some time recently coming to the customer. Designs regularly highlight strong typography, devout iconography, blessed messengers, skeletons, coarse mottos, and Cali Thornhill DeWitt's signature wonderful lines—phrases like 'There Is Magnificence in Pain' or 'Fear No Evil.' The typography is frequently spiked and uneven, bringing out the DIY zine and in-your-face punk scene stylish of the '80s and '90s. No two T-shirts are ever precisely the same, and that uniqueness is portion of the brand's reasoning: grasping flaw as beauty. Saint Michael's hoodies take after the same plan ethos, but on a somewhat bigger, more material canvas. These are larger than usual. Heavyweight articles of clothing that prioritize both consolation and nearness. Much like the T-shirts, each Saint Michael Hoodie experiences a fastidious troubling process. Hand-dyed, washed, and frayed to inspire a feeling of sentimentality and enthusiastic resonance. The hoodies regularly come in washed-out colors—earth tones, grays, blurred blacks—and include striking realistic prints, Gothic-style lettering, and otherworldly images. Numerous of them exhibit the lead celestial host Michael himself or conten. That peruses like journal sections from a tormented poet. Despite their troubled nature, the craftsmanship is premium. These aren't fast-fashion hoodies implied to drop separated after a season. They're built to final, and their vintage see as it were makes strides with wear. They feel like legacies, articles of clothing passed down with meaning. Saint Michael has earned a pined for spot in modern pop culture. Its crude visual stylish and passionate genuineness have pulled in celebrities and specialists over classes. Kanye West, Travis Scott, Playboi Carti, Balanced, and Justin Bieber have all been spotted wearing Saint Michael. Encourage cementing the brand's cachet in design and music circles. Unlike numerous brands that surge the showcase with mass-produced things, Saint Michael keeps up an discuss of restrictiveness. Its pieces are ordinarily discharged in little, curated drops, regularly offering out inside minutes. This limited-release technique includes to its persona and drives up its resale esteem on stages like Grailed and StockX. What sets Saint Michael separated isn't fair the illustrations or craftsmanship—it's the passionate gravity behind each piece. The brand talks to topics of mortality, most profound sense of being, torment, recovery, and excellence in rot. In a world immersed with sanitized, algorithm-driven design, Saint Michael feels profoundly human and soulful. By collaborating with craftsmen, performers, and social rebels, the brand remains associated to the beat of underground and avant-garde developments. It doesn't chase trends—it shapes them. Its personality is an purposefulness dismissal of commercial clean in favor of true expression. Holy person Michael doesn't fair make clothes—it tells stories. As the brand proceeds to develop, Saint Michael is gradually extending past T-shirts and hoodies to incorporate outerwear, denim, embellishments, and domestic products. Collaborations with other craftsmen and streetwear names are too in the works, with numerous insiders expecting capsule collections and worldwide pop-up experiences. Yet, the challenge remains: how to scale whereas remaining genuine to the brand's crude, individual ethos. Saint Michael flourishes on small-batch generation and passionate authenticity—two qualities that don't continuously loan themselves to mass development. Be that as it may, if its authors remain genuine to their vision, the brand seem advance into a social institution much like Chrome Hearts or Undercover—labels that adjust craftsmanship, eliteness, and underground credibility. Saint Michael is not fair a mold brand—it's an creative explanation. With its hauntingly excellent T-shirts, rough hoodies, and candidly charged plans, it has re-imagined what cutting edge streetwear can be. In a world where numerous brands yell for consideration, Saint Michael whispers—with a voice full of verse, coarseness, and otherworldly defiance. TIME BUSINESS NEWS

Hypebeast
9 hours ago
- Hypebeast
WACKO MARIO Reveals Summer-Ready 'JAWS' Capsule
Summary WACKO MARIA, the Japanese menswear label known for its strong cultural references, has released a thrilling capsule collection inspired bySteven Spielberg's iconic 1975 film,JAWS. This collaboration brings the classic 'panic movie' artwork to Wacko Maria's signature silhouettes, making it a bold statement piece for summer. The collection features graphic-heavy designs directly incorporating memorable imagery fromJAWS. Expect to see the terrifying great white shark prominently displayed across Hawaiian shirts, a Wacko Maria staple, perfect for showcasing the vibrant and intenseJAWSartwork, t-shirts and crewneck sweaters. The title, written in Japanese and English, are also featured as a part of the mainstay graphic. The Hawaiian shirts come in black, white and grey, while the crewnecks arrive in black and grey and the short-sleeve tees in white and black staples. This collaboration is a testament to Wacko Maria's knack for infusing pop culture references into its collections, creating wearable art that resonates with fans of both fashion and film. It's positioned as a leading candidate for a must-have summer item, bringing a unique blend of cinematic history and streetwear cool to your wardrobe. The collection dropsonlineon May 31.