Sorry, nothing in cart.
- Field Choices Product is required
Product Description
It’s such a cheeky I love to mess with my fans shawn shirt the actor Josh O’Connor recently told Rolling Stone. “Just so cheeky, and I really liked wearing it because it was just a bit like [raises shoulders and winks], ‘Told ya.’” He was talking, of course, about the T-shirt emblazoned with the phrase “I Told Ya” that has become the most-talked-about garment from Luca Guadagnino’s new tennis film about love, lust and (torn) ligaments, Challengers. The T-shirt is the work of the film’s costume designer and Loewe creative director Jonathan Anderson, and what is particularly cheeky about the T-shirt is that it is not O’Connor’s. It is first worn in the film by his character Patrick’s then-girlfriend, Tashi (Zendaya). After a half-clad fight, he slips it on. An acrimonious breakup later and Patrick clearly never gave it back. He wears it again, some time later, on a day he knows he will bump into his ex. Their relationship might have ended, but turning up in her T-shirt is a reminder that they were once on intimate terms.
I love to mess with my fans shawn shirt, hoodie, sweater, longsleeve and ladies t-shirt
For much of its I love to mess with my fans shawn shirt history, the letterman jacket was not only an exclusively male item, but also an extremely white item. “Who was not going to Harvard and lettering in golf? The hispanic kid, the Black kid, the Asian kid. These universities were not open grounds for these students,” says Clemente. Of course, by the 90s, everyone was wearing letterman jackets, and the item had been fully adopted into hip-hop fashion, alongside preppy brands such as Polo and Tommy Hilfiger, classic American styles associated with wealth and class. Artists such as Diddy and Salt-N-Pepa were known to wear varsity jackets, with the latter wearing iconic all-leather lettermans, designed by Dapper Dan, in their 1987 video for Push It. New York-based stylist Marissa Pelly says she has always had a strong association between varsity jackets and hip-hop style. “[I] was always seeing really cool rappers and artists rocking varsity jackets onstage or on the street – it was always just like, anyone who was anybody in any place in society, I feel like, was wearing a varsity jacket.”
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.