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Tender Co. Denim


braille_teeth

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  • 2 weeks later...

i love my logwood wave calico 483. it's my go-to now particularly for traveling.  temporarily shove my book and headphones and whatever in the giant pockets for the plane, real comfy.

plus a bunch of compliments; three people last week asked to touch it

so thanks for making cool stuff rodeobill

 

 

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^this fabric is called 'sump cloth' and is a sturdy, but fairly loosely woven, industrial cotton canvas made to line trays under oily machine parts and soak up extra grease. It's woven with a red stripe down the middle, which is used to orient the fabric, but makes a nice random stripe in clothing. The shirt in the pictures above is dyed with red ochre, but it's also available rinsed or dyed with Indian black.

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^thanks for this. I love Wabash fabric, and I have considered it, but there are a couple of reasons I haven't come up with anything yet: firstly, it's quite complicated to make- you  either have to weave a solid indigo fabric and then print a stripe onto it in bleach, or you have to print a wax resist onto a white fabric then piece dye it with indigo. I'm sure both these methods have been perfected in Japan, but I prefer not to buy stock fabrics, particularly such specific designs, which are likely to be used by other brands in ways that are more relevant to their aesthetic. That brings up the second reason, which is that Wabash is historically an American fabric, and it's more specifically identifiable as US than, say, denim, so I don't feel like a straight Wabash would be appropriate for Tender at the moment, especially as there are lovely Wabash garments available elsewhere. All of that said, I am indeed experimenting with using more indigo yarn for original fabrics, which will start to come through over the next couple of seasons (developing fabrics is a long process!), and doing some sort of bleached/resist design would be amazing. I'll get thinking....

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Here's a little more information on the pullovers in the new collection:

TENDER-AW18-pullover.thumb.jpg.b565930ee158c0088756063ab975e616.jpg

The Mirror Panel Double Pullover comes from looking at knitted clothes being outerwear- rather than wearing a thinner pullover underneath a coat I thought it would be interesting to try to make a garment that could be pulled on over a Tshirt and provide warmth and wind/shower proofing by itself. The whole garment is mirrored along fold lines at the hem and cuff, just linked together at the neck opening to form a single garment.

We developed a 'blackberry' stitch (it looks a bit like the drupelets (good word!) on a blackberry fruit) which gives a nice texture to the outside and inside of the garment, but also helps to form pockets of air in between the two layers of knitted fabric, making it a fantastic insulator, but also relatively light to wear relative to its thickness. These garments are pretty massive folded up, but are deceptively light to wear.

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On 21/09/2018 at 9:16 PM, rodeo bill said:

Here are some stills, for a better idea of the new clothes:02.thumb.jpg.63063d75f6714784cb5803d9e7571aa1.jpg01.thumb.jpg.710c6ae604d6812ccb8aecb28b71bb18.jpg03.thumb.jpg.4b196cb56f823cbe8df3cddf62ca894c.jpg04.thumb.jpg.936391bc9bec49030b6b25915f20cd83.jpg05.thumb.jpg.de3e0db8014f5e5c63dcf13de03b78d7.jpg06.thumb.jpg.a99f47b158f7984c81a4a06c809b8b14.jpg07.thumb.jpg.289a0d533ccd565b7aa3f0016c467110.jpg08.thumb.jpg.afb46dd0d3d45b9d3d4a2712a9b1c0e8.jpg09.thumb.jpg.9e3abeb3bb1a94fb9848c568c5d1716f.jpg10.thumb.jpg.08f676b829745f846bfb193deb3f1b23.jpg11.thumb.jpg.be4e04e530338fcf58aa336e9c43af5b.jpg12.thumb.jpg.a0218d8e74c00b0d650487771a1e23a3.jpg13.thumb.jpg.e74713e85aa9d59665b76d4443186d78.jpg14.thumb.jpg.a8198b02f03ea1fb03cfe1be1077be2a.jpg15.thumb.jpg.931e7c0fd06cf9f328e8f68693db1986.jpg16.thumb.jpg.78164dc297705ccdc3fe594953272fe8.jpg17.thumb.jpg.03a8bd63d61c2072e189ab269fecd6f3.jpg18.thumb.jpg.afc932c05ecc6d40c91abce203557101.jpg20.thumb.jpg.bde52e4fe0bbf4a4c4f58262a9aeda42.jpg21.thumb.jpg.6aa6d4e6a6950d3e5db9cecfc12a9bb2.jpg22.thumb.jpg.c4dd0fb43cc3943489b67537fdcdfd1e.jpg23.thumb.jpg.6a052174f153aa8ecbcae6078b132876.jpg25.thumb.jpg.6b8da10c9bc155b5b70d3b25dce1c164.jpg26.thumb.jpg.ef0d63697f3044f76b3cdd037d89d9aa.jpg27.thumb.jpg.16c7a9a24ad403894ddf0a1b4d9e3674.jpg28.thumb.jpg.0912ec9fdc61efecf04c39d5f2e7bdc5.jpg29.thumb.jpg.bbd5a3efdfc9c33991dcd116496fe569.jpg30.thumb.jpg.c9a7e64d515eff6f8825ba664e3d4950.jpg31.thumb.jpg.cf2d18a5c9bad5baf4b26017cce8e0d6.jpg32.thumb.jpg.23df43a8b8394dba318e4f41837d1429.jpg

 

This was a really fun shoot to do! The first few styles have gone out and up on the Stores, with more to come over the next few weeks. I'll put some details up here asap.

@rodeo bill What an beautiful shoot! I love the mise-en-scene and character that the Super8 gives the whole video/stills. So exciting!

On 22/09/2018 at 12:38 AM, rodeo bill said:

thank you so much! this is really nice to hear, I'm delighted you're enjoying your Tesseract shirt. Speaking of pockets, here's how the 'periscope' pockets work on the new type427 shirts:

427.thumb.jpg.921b163470bebf2d4507f5003f1c3db4.jpg

I'm really enjoying these diagrams that you're posting of your garments; so informative and fascinating. 

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^thanks! The pattern is called a Doppler stripe, and it's woven into the weft so that there are equal sections of coloured weft and ecru weft (the positive stripes cover the same area as the negative stripes). There are versions with indigo cotton yarn, and with Ryeland wool yarn. Here are some closeups, both dyed with red ochre:

IMG_5587.thumb.jpeg.a20041f2e6440090dab5d27d6e9ea140.jpeg

IMG_5588.thumb.jpeg.9bb19c7da89e5be4ac4cc01cf9086862.jpeg

While we're at it, here are some closeups of the airbag cambric, rinsed and dyed Indian black:

IMG_5585.thumb.jpeg.ad576cc0bd58f2e34cafd026a485a9e2.jpegIMG_5586.thumb.jpeg.336502666d167b26e34e14f3885e2cba.jpeg

This is a finer, lighter fabric, woven double with little air pockets of about 1” square. The pockets cause the fabric to crinkle, giving a three dimensional texture which shows up particularly clearly when the fabric is dyed. It’s woven from very fine yarn so is very soft. The technique is the same as how car airbags are made- stitched seams can perish over time, so airbags are woven as double cloths, so that even after a long time being squashed up in a steering wheel hub then getting blown open explosively they won't risk tearing.

Finally, here's a closeup of Sump cloth, this is the heaviest fabric, although it’s all cotton so won’t overheat. It’s the most workwearey fabric, with a red stripe which runs down the middle of the fabric during weaving, cut randomly across the shirt:

IMG_5584.thumb.jpeg.814e799c87ea79a1cf7d42abd6a25a98.jpeg

 

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Here's my dad and I, I'm wearing the periscope pocket shirt in rinsed sump cloth, size 3 (it's amazing) - my dad wearing the indigo cotton wool pattern pullover, size 4 (equally amazing!).

There are some more pictures on Maritime Antiques instagram account HERE.

Billede 29-09-2018 12.25.58.jpg

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  • 2 weeks later...

more shirts just out from dyeing and out into the world! These are type434, Buggy Back shirts:

5bbdaeaaa9194_ScreenShot2018-10-10at08_47_27.thumb.png.e52d2110ab0501f775fe9cf9f20accc2.png

The idea came from when I was an apprentice coat-maker: sometimes we'd get orders for lighter weight summer jackets, which we'd half line. The fronts get a full lining, fixed in along the side seams, but the back would only be lined over the shoulders. You could just put a flat lining in, but this can get tight and pull across the shoulders as the wearer moves their arms so usually you'd put a pleat into the lining to allow for this. However the traditional way of dealing with a half lining is to make a 'buggy back': you make two layers of lining, from the armhole up to the opposite shoulder, crossing over in the middle of the back. This allows the two layers of lining to fully slip back and forth over each other with the wearer's movements.

The buggy back shirt takes things a step further by running the overlapping back all the way round to the opposite front, with no side seam. It sits at the waist in the back, with a normal front length and big pockets. The lighter weight versions are great with a Tshirt under, and I really like the Sump Cloth versions worn as a jacket. I have one in Indian Black Sump Cloth which I've been wearing loads over the last couple of months. I'll get some fit pics up asap.

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speaking of fit pics, here are Frans & Magali, owners of Maritime Antiques & in Copenhagen (they took over a shop with an old sign which was broken in half, so we'll never know & what) in an indigo 743 wool pattern pullover and bottle green 799 mirror panel pullover (sized up) respectively:

IMG_1824.thumb.jpeg.d4ee601472eb1b81d61843615215d2bb.jpeg

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a few words about the Ryeland wool used in knitwear and doppler striped shirts:

5bbdbf228a1d2_ScreenShot2018-10-10at09_56_59.thumb.png.f0700579c4ef418436b2a8b7823618e7.png

Wool for woven and knitted garments in Autumn/Winter 2018 was shorn from a small flock of Ryeland sheep raised in the Scottish Borders.Their wool was offered exclusively to Tender and has never before been used for clothing.
The Ryeland breed is one of the longest-established in Britain, thought to have originally descended from Spanish Merinos. Mediae- val records show a flock of 300 Ryeland sheep at Dore Abbey in Herefordshire, where the wool was collected and processed for shipment overseas. Ryeland wool was particularly prized in Italy and Flanders, for spinning into the finest yarns which were used as the standard for other wools. In the 16th Century, Elizabeth I is said to have received a gift of Ryeland wool stockings, and thereafter insisted on wearing only clothes made from the yarn.The ‘Wool Sack’ on the Chancellor’s seat at the House of Lords was originally stuffed with raw Ryeland fleeces.
Today, Ryeland wool is unusual as its varied colours and relatively slow growth make it unsuitable for commercial farming, however its texture, weight, and natural colours are second to none.

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