For this emerging Y2K fashion brand, the best marketing happens on the streets of New York

For this emerging Y2K fashion brand, the best marketing happens on the streets of New York

Fashion, Small business, Business, US news Business | The Guardian

​Kwadjo Owusu-Ansah hasn’t even promoted his latest line of brightly colored helmets, but ‘the most amazing people are finding them’It was a zipper that propelled Kwadjo Owusu-Ansah’s project into motion. “There was a flannel shirt I made with bleach,” the self-taught fashion designer recalls, “and I hand-sewed the zipper on to the back of the shirt. I think I fell in love, because almost everything I make has a zipper now.” That device, and Owusu-Ansah’s fixation on it, were the seeds of Animated People, his brand of innovative streetwear.Owusu-Ansah – who goes by the name DamnKojo professionally and works full time in marketing at a wine and spirits company – sees his fashion line as less of an up-and-coming label than an ongoing art project. “I want you to tell your own story,” Owusu-Ansah, 31, says. “Make your own meaning with my art. Dissect it. Think about it. Why is a dude wearing a miniskirt today? [I want people] to question the pieces when they see them. That’s what starts a conversation.” Continue reading… 

Kwadjo Owusu-Ansah hasn’t even promoted his latest line of brightly colored helmets, but ‘the most amazing people are finding them’

It was a zipper that propelled Kwadjo Owusu-Ansah’s project into motion. “There was a flannel shirt I made with bleach,” the self-taught fashion designer recalls, “and I hand-sewed the zipper on to the back of the shirt. I think I fell in love, because almost everything I make has a zipper now.” That device, and Owusu-Ansah’s fixation on it, were the seeds of Animated People, his brand of innovative streetwear.

Owusu-Ansah – who goes by the name DamnKojo professionally and works full time in marketing at a wine and spirits company – sees his fashion line as less of an up-and-coming label than an ongoing art project. “I want you to tell your own story,” Owusu-Ansah, 31, says. “Make your own meaning with my art. Dissect it. Think about it. Why is a dude wearing a miniskirt today? [I want people] to question the pieces when they see them. That’s what starts a conversation.”

Continue reading… 

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