Over 15 years of street style, captured in various towns around the world.
Month
- May 2025 3
- April 2025 22
- March 2025 21
- February 2025 20
- January 2025 20
- December 2024 15
- November 2024 21
- October 2024 21
- September 2024 21
- August 2024 16
- July 2024 16
- June 2024 19
- May 2024 22
- April 2024 22
- March 2024 18
- February 2024 19
- January 2024 17
- December 2023 10
- November 2023 18
- October 2023 18
- September 2023 15
- August 2023 21
- July 2023 21
- June 2023 20
- May 2023 21
- April 2023 20
- March 2023 20
- February 2023 20
- January 2023 19
- December 2022 16
- November 2022 22
- October 2022 20
- September 2022 13
- August 2022 14
- July 2022 11
- June 2022 12
- May 2022 13
- April 2022 11
- March 2022 13
- February 2022 8
- January 2022 10
- December 2021 7
- November 2021 12
- October 2021 11
- September 2021 22
- August 2021 22
- July 2021 23
- June 2021 18
- May 2021 17
- April 2021 17
- March 2021 23
- February 2021 14
- January 2021 15
- December 2020 19
- November 2020 9
- October 2020 11
- September 2020 9
- August 2020 11
- July 2020 15
- June 2020 13
- May 2020 3
- April 2020 1
- March 2020 16
- February 2020 19
- January 2020 21
- December 2019 9
- November 2019 21
- October 2019 23
- September 2019 18
- August 2019 22
- July 2019 23
- June 2019 19
- May 2019 23
- April 2019 21
- March 2019 20
- February 2019 19
- January 2019 19
- December 2018 14
- November 2018 21
- October 2018 22
- September 2018 21
- August 2018 23
- July 2018 29
- June 2018 21
- May 2018 23
- April 2018 20
- March 2018 22
- February 2018 20
- January 2018 19
- December 2017 17
- November 2017 22
- October 2017 23
- September 2017 21
- August 2017 23
- July 2017 22
- June 2017 22
- May 2017 23
- April 2017 19
- March 2017 23
- February 2017 22
- January 2017 17
- December 2016 10
- November 2016 21
- October 2016 23
- September 2016 28
- August 2016 26
- July 2016 24
- June 2016 20
- May 2016 25
- April 2016 22
- March 2016 30
- February 2016 30
- January 2016 22
- December 2015 25
- November 2015 44
- October 2015 50
- September 2015 46
- August 2015 45
- July 2015 38
- June 2015 39
- May 2015 36
- April 2015 56
- March 2015 43
- February 2015 29
- January 2015 36
- December 2014 28
- November 2014 25
- October 2014 32
- September 2014 36
- August 2014 30
- July 2014 41
- June 2014 37
- May 2014 36
- April 2014 39
- March 2014 29
- February 2014 39
- January 2014 34
- December 2013 32
- November 2013 56
- October 2013 45
- September 2013 45
- August 2013 35
- July 2013 18
- June 2013 23
- May 2013 31
- April 2013 60
- March 2013 39
- February 2013 25
- January 2013 23
- December 2012 12
- November 2012 18
- October 2012 28
- September 2012 34
- August 2012 22
- July 2012 26
- June 2012 16
- May 2012 27
- April 2012 15
- March 2012 14
- February 2012 22
- January 2012 14
- December 2011 24
- November 2011 24
- October 2011 32
- September 2011 53
- August 2011 18
- July 2011 6
- June 2011 8
- May 2011 13
- April 2011 13
- March 2011 16
- February 2011 18
- January 2011 7
- December 2010 4
- November 2010 5
- October 2010 3
- September 2010 3
- August 2010 4
- July 2010 1
- April 2010 1
Women's Wear
Only 1 more week until the Women In This Town book is out worldwide! Here’s the second last excerpt from the book, this time from Hayley Hughes’ profile in Melbourne.
Overalls
STREET STYLE GALLERY
I don’t see it often but when I spot a guy sporting a pair of overalls on the street it always makes such a statement. Whether it’s one, two or no straps up, the shape is always so different, making it easy to make your own.
Two straps up!
Women's Wear
Women In This Town
STILL LIFE
WOMEN IN THIS TOWN
Besides capturing amazing street style around the world in my new book, I also had the amazing opportunity to meet some incredible women, getting their take on the state of fashion in their towns. I’ve known Jamie Beck (above) of Ann Street Studio for a few years now and always really admired the way she carried herself and went on about life. An inspiring woman and so honoured that she shared her story.
Ah it’s exciting that it’s almost here, not long to go now! The book is available to pre-order now and will be in bookstores November 1st.
Also pictured: Olympus OM-D E-M5 Mark II.
Ignacio Quiles in New York
Ignacio Quiles in New York
MITT MAGAZINE ISSUE Nº1
An excerpt from MITT magazine issue Nº1.
Words by Andrew Geeves
Photography by David Urbanke
Ignacio Quiles is all about the hustle. Born, bred and based in the Big Apple, this stylist, model, artist, fashion consultant, storyteller, designer, documentary star, blogger, vintage store owner, self-described dandy and collector has a motto: “Enjoy what you wear, wear what you enjoy and go out and show the world.” Quiles is a man who practises what he preaches.
The word “character” springs to mind upon meeting Ignacio Quiles. The East Village resident is immaculately put together, engineering a distinctly crisp, rakish look that makes him stand out on the street. His laugh is long and loud, he enjoys using the word “wow” (pronounced “wuh-owwwwwwwwwwwww”) for emphasis, and he isn’t shy about sharing anecdotes and stories from a life fully lived in New York City.
Growing up in Harlem in the 1960s as the son of Puerto Rican immigrants, Quiles has always been surrounded by fashion. “New York City was my playground. You realise early on that the city moves faster than the rest of the country. I moved fast. I grew up around clothing. My mum was a seamstress, so there was always sewing going on. I got to see the old garment district when it was in its height. The hustle and bustle and fashion was really, really big in New York. Fashion and tailoring and ready-to-wear was the number one thing. New York was the fashion capital of the world. I saw guys trying to knock people over because they were in the way of them getting their clothing carts from point A to point B. The city was super alive. One of my fondest memories is of the garment district; how alive it was and how many people were given opportunities there. My mum was able to build our house in Puerto Rico based on the money that she earned in the garment district.”
As he entered adolescence, the urban playground of Quiles’s childhood transformed into a training ground for acquiring street smarts. To survive life in New York City, Quiles had to learn quickly a number of important life skills. He was schooled in the art of the haggle on the Lower East Side. “I learned how to hustle down on Delancey Street. That was considered the bargain area. I learned how to negotiate with Harvey and Shlomo and the other guys. I learned the lingo of how to say yes and no and how to walk away and act like I wasn’t interested in something I really wanted. New York was good that way. No one taught me how to do this; I learned on the streets.”
Through his friends, Quiles learned how to educate himself about designers and current styles. “My friends took me to this French guy who was selling couture clothing in a little tiny shop on Atlantic Ave. We’d catch the train over there, and I’d go in and see a heaped pile of pants and shirts and have no idea what was going on. Designers, I had no idea! Then my friends showed me a place down the block where all these rich people threw out men’s magazines. I would make it my daily journey to walk down these little side streets and pick up my GQ and my Esquire. I’d go home and read them cover to cover. I knew that I’d hit the treasure trove. This was my first window into learning about designers: Gaultier, Valentino, any designer of that period. I would memorise all the brands. Then, when I went over to the French guy’s little shop, I would go in there and I would know these brands. I could identify them all and it was a great learning experience.”
Without the resources to support his growing interest in fashion, Quiles learned to tailor so that he could emulate the latest looks while sticking to a budget. “I was always a big fan of tailoring. Back then, there was something called ‘the continental style.’ It was all about having a tapered shirt, with darts in the back. I would go into one of the big department stores and look at one of these shirts I don’t know how many times. The guard probably thought I was trying to steal it! But I studied the shirt, really looked at it, and thought ‘I can do that.’ I didn’t know what darts were but I went and researched it. I’d end up ruining a shirt because then it was just too tight or I didn’t measure. It was a lot of trial and error. I figured it out along the way. I remember doing the tapering on the shirt, taking the shirt in, finding my zero, getting it all done and tapering these sleeves so that everything fit. I realised that I didn’t have to go and pay 50 dollars for the latest shirt. I could buy a cheap shirt for three or four dollars and turn it into a 50 dollar shirt.”
The resourcefulness Quiles was forced to learn as a teenager equipped him with a sense of fearlessness that influenced the evolution of his personal style. “It’s been a long sartorial journey for me,” he sighs. “I can remember some horrors and nightmares, buying something and then it wouldn’t work and I would be embarrassed. But I was never afraid to try. It’s not where you got it from; it’s what you do with it. It’s not where you were born; it’s how you shape your life that will really define you. You can take a simple piece, a garment, and really define it and really make it your own. I like showing my personal style by taking something and redoing it.” Quiles has a particular passion for a customised aesthetic that showcases the quality of a fabric. Unsurprisingly, he doesn’t love the skinny suit. “People have finally realised that a suit that is so tight that it is like Lycra is not going to look good. I’ve been a big proponent of the anti-super-skinny suit because it just doesn’t look good. What’s more beautiful than seeing the way a fabric moves? Look at the crispness on that fabric! Look at the weave, look at how it layers, look at the drape. When you have a skinny suit, you can’t see that.”
Quiles’s sense of style is inspired by a diverse array of influences. “I’ve always loved suit jackets,” he reveals. “I think I picked it up from a lot of the English musicians that came into the Village in the 70s. Musicians used to spend a great deal of money. They were basically doing the same thing we were doing but they were calling it bespoke and we were calling it tailor-made. I remember running into Mick Jagger and seeing him in a white jacket, with Warhol. I thought, ‘I wanna try that look out.’ ”
Continued in MITT magazine issue Nº1.