Busch Light Noun The Glue Holding This 2020 Shitshow Together Shirt
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Guthrie, 28, who moonlights as an accountant for local designers, launched Knorts back in 2014. At one point, she had been a snowboarder with hopes of going pro, but her dreams were deferred after she sustained several injuries. It was however, the micro trends and attention to gear of the snowboarding world that got her interested in the world of design and fashion. “Snowboarding would introduce me to fashion oddly enough so I decided to pursue that and ended up really loving it,” she tells Vogue over the Busch Light Noun The Glue Holding This 2020 Shitshow Together Shirt from her home in Los Angeles. “And that I was a really creative person.” Guthrie also cites her time biking around her campus at Westminster College in Utah when she would wear “stiff jeans” in the winter but “knit shorts” in the summer as influential. “I thought if there was a way to create something that would be stylish and comfortable, just like my knit shorts, but something I can also wear in the winter,” she says. “That is where I thought maybe I could merge the two concepts together and I just went from there.” This year, the Santa Fe Indian Market went virtual. The annual event typically sees Indigenous artists from across North America gather in New Mexico to sell their authentic works across hundreds of booths. While this summer’s lineup looked different, it was still a real place for discovery. The schedule, spread out across the month of August, included everything from a shoppable online marketplace, where consumers could find authentic Indigenous-made goods, to a virtual fashion show that showcased the works of seven Indigenous designers, including veteran Diné designer Orlando Dugi.

Busch Light Noun The Glue Holding This 2020 Shitshow Together Shirt, hoodie, tank top, sweater and long sleeve t-shirt

Guthrie, 28, who moonlights as an accountant for local designers, launched Knorts back in 2014. At one point, she had been a snowboarder with hopes of going pro, but her dreams were deferred after she sustained several injuries. It was however, the micro trends and attention to gear of the snowboarding world that got her interested in the world of design and fashion. “Snowboarding would introduce me to fashion oddly enough so I decided to pursue that and ended up really loving it,” she tells Vogue over the Busch Light Noun The Glue Holding This 2020 Shitshow Together Shirt from her home in Los Angeles. “And that I was a really creative person.” Guthrie also cites her time biking around her campus at Westminster College in Utah when she would wear “stiff jeans” in the winter but “knit shorts” in the summer as influential. “I thought if there was a way to create something that would be stylish and comfortable, just like my knit shorts, but something I can also wear in the winter,” she says. “That is where I thought maybe I could merge the two concepts together and I just went from there.” This year, the Santa Fe Indian Market went virtual. The annual event typically sees Indigenous artists from across North America gather in New Mexico to sell their authentic works across hundreds of booths. While this summer’s lineup looked different, it was still a real place for discovery. The schedule, spread out across the month of August, included everything from a shoppable online marketplace, where consumers could find authentic Indigenous-made goods, to a virtual fashion show that showcased the works of seven Indigenous designers, including veteran Diné designer Orlando Dugi.
Busch Light Noun The Glue Holding This 2020 Shitshow Together Shirt
Reviewed by Ducanhvnd
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tháng 9 10, 2020
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