logo
In Oakland, fashion retail makes San Francisco jealous

In Oakland, fashion retail makes San Francisco jealous

Fashion Network23-04-2025
After twenty years of climbing the crime ladder, Oakland has been enjoying a new lease on life for the past few months. Long in the shadow of San Francisco, this symbol of American diversity - almost 50% of its population is Black and Latino - is showing a new optimism, with cutting-edge fashion boutiques opening in recent months.
A new vintage clothing scene, Oakland now boasts around twenty vintage specialists including Mercy Vintage, The Sunshine Prophecy, Sola Lucy, Black Bear Apparel, Down at Lulu's and Mira Flores. In recent months, the city has also seen the emergence of a number of new boutiques, including Relove, opened in 2014 at 1815 Polk Street in San Francisco by Ethiopian-born Californian entrepreneur Delia Hailechristos, whose second store opened a stone's throw from the Grand Lake Theater in Oakland in 2023.
Housed in a two-storey 1920s building, this new temple of vintage, with arches and columns on the first floor, offers a wide selection ranging from luxury vintage with brands such as Loewe, Dries Van Noten and Marc Jacobs, to creative Japanese labels such as Junya Watanabe, Doublet, Facetasm, workwear brands, and other couture pieces.
Arranged by genre and color, Relove's wardrobe rubs shoulders with works of art belonging to the owner, such as paintings by local artist Jereme Mendez, or the in situ fresco dedicated to voguing by Devynn Barnes. The ground-floor lounge is occupied by objects for the home, candlesticks and ceramics from Mexico, a collection of vintage glasses and shoes.
"Oakland is the heart of the whole Bay Area," said Hailechristos. 'All my creative friends live, create, work and perform here. The music, art and fashion scene is unlike anywhere else in the world. So it was only natural to open a boutique here. Oakland is a radical city, but one that doesn't draw the spotlight to itself."
Oakland natives Marco Verdin and Tai Raino-Tsui, one the son of immigrants from El Salvador, the other a native American, opened their 3319 Marché in spring 2023, a hybrid fashion boutique combining vintage and contemporary offerings, conceived in place of a former hairdressing salon and designed as an art gallery, with furniture on display, live upcycling performances and curation of art objects and books.
"We've created 3319 to appear as ambiguous as possible, throughout platforms both digitally and physically," explained the founders. "3319 is pioneering a new culture in Oakland, with a blend of elegance yet localized roots. The brand focuses on a range of artistic mediums: music, art, and fashion. Blending these three mediums in a highly curated way has given our brand a reputation foreign to its market, and allowed us to operate as much more than just a physical retail operation.'
The racks at 3319 Marché feature a mix of haute couture-avant-garde brands 'not offered in any tangible way in the neighborhood,' added the founders, including Balenciaga, Bottega Veneta, Issey Miyake, Rick Owens, Craig Green, Martin Margiela, Yohji Yamamoto, Loewe and Kiko Kostadinov. Until the end of April, 3319 Marché is also home to the Dial Ring showroom, featuring second-hand items from brands such as Miu Miu, Comme des Garçons, Fendi, Marni, Prada and Raf Simons.
Another Oakland reference, Standard & Strange, a multi-brand dedicated to crafted, heritage menswear, was founded by Jeremy Smith and Neil Berrett. "We started out in 2012 as two guys selling our own denim with a tiny 200-square-foot space in a back alley in Oakland. We saw that people wanted a warm, friendly, inclusive store that sold the denim and other gear we were wearing at the time,' said the founders.
'The first space we occupied had originally been the municipal stables for the City of Oakland. Then we moved into a new space around the corner to 5010 Telegraph Avenue, which is one of the oldest masonry buildings in Oakland.'
After opening a second boutique in Santa Fe in 2019, the founders of Standard & Strange opened their third boutique at 238 Mulberry Street in Soho in 2021. Each boutique presents a different selection of well-made brands and pieces which have a strong narrative or story behind them. These include a large contingent of Japanese brands, with flagship denim by Momotaro, Kapital and OrSlow, ready-to-wear by Visvim and Porter luggage. Other heritage and craft brands complete the selection, including German Merz B.Schwanen, American John Gluckow and French De Bonne Facture. The company also sells its own collection and its Mizunara Single Cask Whiskey brand, made in California.
Another sign of the Oakland creativity was the opening in 2023 of a brand-new concept store called Two-Two, founded by Portland-born entrepreneur CC Doan, halfway between pop-up, gallery and boutique, bringing together the offbeat fashions of international designers, particularly from Asia.
'I first explored boutique opportunities in San Francisco and Oakland," explained Doan. 'In the end, I found the space in Grand Lake and all the right elements came together to make me feel like it could be a place for fashion, craft, and creative community. Because we have multiple ways people can discover and engage with our curation and also connect with each other, people don't see us as just a boutique. Someone may come in and shop one day, attend a creative workshop the next time, or come with friends to a pop-up we host with other creatives or artists. We get to witness people as multi-faceted beings, not just as customers. I think in that way there is demand for being seen authentically, to have a sense of belonging or connection with others, and to cater to self expression as a whole."
At the Two-Two boutique, emerging designers and brands, with an emphasis on everyday wearable pieces, are displayed as if in an art gallery.
'These designers are often at a very sweet spot of both establishing their voice while having plenty of edge and playfulness to their approach and presentation. Caro Chia, Yusho Kobayashi, Lou Badger, Fey Fey Worldwide, Devastates and Grounds to name a few," added Doan.
"Then there are designers and artists who I've met along my own creative journey over the years and having a space has brought us together to collaborate, like jewelry brand Ino, incense brand Hyungi, and ceramics by Studio Hecha.
Another original initiative is that of Oakland-born designer Shauncy 'Salt' Jackson, who transformed her backyard into a safe space for community events hosted by her non-profit Oakland Don't Play Inc. She converted a storage container into a retail store where she sells her clothing line, Oakland Don't Play (ODP).
"ODP is more than just a clothing brand," explained Jackson, via her website. 'It's a movement to remind the world that Oakland stands strong for its people, land, and unwavering commitment to equality. Inspired by the injustices faced by our community, ODP creates bold, fashion-forward clothing that proudly showcases Oakland pride. From the vibrant streets of Fruitvale to the serene shores of Lake Merritt, our designs capture the essence of our city and the spirit of its people."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

With 'Alien: Earth,' the creator of 'Fargo' has brilliantly hijacked Ridley Scott's universe
With 'Alien: Earth,' the creator of 'Fargo' has brilliantly hijacked Ridley Scott's universe

LeMonde

time6 hours ago

  • LeMonde

With 'Alien: Earth,' the creator of 'Fargo' has brilliantly hijacked Ridley Scott's universe

On demand – Series Fame and fortune came to Noah Hawley after he implanted an idea in a foreign body – namely, the Coen brothers' 1996 feature film Fargo, which he used as the template for a series that, since 2014, has brilliantly revisited American anxiety and remorse. It is hardly surprising, then, that this virtuoso practitioner of creative parasitism has turned to the xenomorph that has haunted human nightmares since 1979. Nearly half a century ago, the first incarnation of the Alien creature burst from the chest of Second Officer Kane. This creature who carries the young of her species has served under the direction of Ridley Scott, James Cameron, David Fincher and Jean-Pierre Jeunet. Over the years, she has been by turns a symbol of the hubris that leads humanity to disregard the rest of the universe, the crystallization of corporate greed and the embodiment of an all-consuming femininity. What was Hawley going to do with her? While revealing as little as possible about the tangle of narrative threads and twists that make this first season (six out of eight episodes were previewed) − a structure one never tires of exploring − a word of warning: That same xenomorph, with her grotesquely elongated skull, razor-sharp teeth and corrosive blood, is not at the center of Alien: Earth. The creature will appear, though, since her eggs are aboard the freighter Maginot, chartered by the multinational Weyland-Yutani (as was the Nostromo back in the day), which, at the start of the first episode, is preparing to return to Earth after collecting a few specimens of extraterrestrial wildlife. The name of the spaceship, borrowed from the Maginot Line that failed to stop the German invasion in 1940, will make it clear – at least to French viewers over the age of 90 – that this is, above all, a story about borders and their permeability. Hawley brings his moralistic gaze to questions common to both science fiction and philosophy: humanity's relationship to its environment (which here extends beyond our own planet), the desire for immortality and, as a corollary, the possibility of redefining what it means to be human.

'Who shot JR?': The 'Dallas' episode that had the whole world on edge
'Who shot JR?': The 'Dallas' episode that had the whole world on edge

LeMonde

time14 hours ago

  • LeMonde

'Who shot JR?': The 'Dallas' episode that had the whole world on edge

On an autumn night in 1980, at the iconic London Palladium, American actor Larry Hagman was introduced to the queen mother. It was an honor – for him, and for her. The widow of King George VI and mother of Elizabeth II was thrilled to meet him. She asked the question on everyone's lips: "Who shot JR?" A gentleman, the American actor apologized profusely. He had to keep the secret, even before someone of such high rank. He was used to the question. For months, wherever he went, people asked him the same thing. Who had shot the character of JR Ewing, the unscrupulous billionaire he played in the series Dallas? Who had pulled the trigger twice and left him for dead in the hallway next to his office on the family estate? Viewers of the final episode of the third season, which aired on the American network CBS on March 21, 1980, saw only the hand holding the gun, and had been wondering ever since. But they would have to wait eight months, until November 21 that same year, during the fourth episode of season four, to finally get the answer. "The anticipation before the big reveal and the episode unveiling the shooter became a genuine social phenomenon," explained Marjolaine Boutet, professor of American civilization at Université Sorbonne-Paris Nord and a specialist in TV series. "That was the precise moment when Dallas truly became part of television history. Obviously, it wasn't the first successful TV series, but it was the first to ignite such passion." Viewers get lost in speculation Dallas, which premiered in April 1978, was written by screenwriter David Jacobs. The head of CBS had asked him to create a soap opera set in the elite circles of the American South, rather than the California middle class that was popular in fiction at the time.

Venus Williams to be honoured with new Barbie doll
Venus Williams to be honoured with new Barbie doll

Euronews

timea day ago

  • Euronews

Venus Williams to be honoured with new Barbie doll

When it comes to the Barbie universe, children can become anything... Even one of the greatest tennis players of all time. American tennis star Venus Williams will be honoured with a new Barbie doll celebrating her sports legacy and her fight for pay equity, the dollmaker announced today. Williams' doll is part of Mattel Creations' Inspiring Women Collection, and will be released on Friday. It is expected to cost $38 (€32). Une publication partagée par Barbie (@barbie) A seven-time singles Grand Slam winner and a four-time Olympic gold medallist, Williams belongs in the tennis hall of fame. After more than a year off the tennis court, the 45-year-old player became the second oldest woman to win a WTA singles match during her July run at the Washington Open. Her upcoming doll will feature the tennis icon in all white with a green gem necklace, wristband, racket and tennis ball, as a nod to the tennis uniform she wore while winning Wimbledon in 2007. Her win was the first time a woman received equal prize money as the men at a top-level tournament, a breakthrough she had repeatedly campaigned for. Mattel's Inspiring Women Collection has honoured trailblazing female historical figures from various fields, including Chilean-American writer Isabel Allende, English primatologist Jane Goodall and US civil rights activist Ida B. Wells. Barbie launched the special series on International Women's Day in 2018. "Girls have always been able to play out different roles and careers with Barbie and we are thrilled to shine a light on real life role models to remind them that they can be anything," Mattel executive Lisa McKnight said in a 2018 statement introducing the collection. Mattel has multiplied efforts of representation in recent years, in an effort to empower little girls and make the world's most iconic doll more inclusive. In May 2024, the brand released a series of nine dolls celebrating female 'role-model athletes who have broken boundaries to encourage girls to stay in sports.' The collection, released as part of Barbie's 65th anniversary celebration, already featured Venus Williams. It also included dolls of Brazilian gymnast and Olympic gold medallist Rebeca Andrade, Italian swimmer Federica Pellegrini and Spanish paratriathlon athlete Susana Rodriguez. 'Throughout my career, I've always been driven by the idea of shattering glass ceilings and staying true to myself, and Barbie's mission couldn't resonate more deeply with that ethos,' Williams said at the time. The announcement of Williams' new doll follows the release in July of a Barbie with type 1 diabetes, launched in partnership with model Lila Moss. In April, US basketball player LeBron James also became the first professional male athlete to receive a Ken doll in his likeness.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store