Tuesday, 15 April 2014

Money Celebrates Tenth Anniversary with Jubilant S/S14 Collections.


Money, the world’s most sensational luxury street wear brand, parties hard in its Tenth Anniversary Year with striking designs for Spring/Summer 2014. The London-based label seen on soul singer Chris Brown, boxer Amir Khan and in-demand UK producer Naughty Boy presents a wealth of its signature eye-catching pieces in both its mainline and premium Black Money ranges.

White-hot photographer Viktor Vauthier shot the collection on models Gabriel Vazquez (Pro Skateboarder) and Ella Jazz in Los Angeles

Money’s mainline for S/S14 is a Hackney riot of colour, graphics and all-over prints. It takes classic essentials and makes them into hero pieces. Running through the collection, from caps to shorts, are head-turning new signature floral prints that are more than enough to get a chap noticed without any dent in his rep. For those who favour a vintage look, soft colours in mélange weaves perform across the range too.

Outerwear features quilted jackets in chalk blue, and the classic lads’ lightweight coach hood jacket in bold orange with unmistakable Money branding. And among S/S14’s many stand-out pieces are must-have bomber jackets in Money’s new floral print, across three hydroponically-grown colourways.

Trust Money to go bold on light denim, as snow washed and ripped vintage styles debut. For those who’ve got to have a loose fit, lux track pants come in a silver mélange, transgenic yellow, heliotrope purple and aquamarine.

The Run Money trainer range takes Money’s solid sneaker silhouette on a vintage ‘70s vector, with strong primary colourways on nylon and suede. An all-white leather trainer is the proud exception, with a flash of classic green on the tongue’s Money logo.

And needless to say Money’s graphic T-shirts are stronger than ever, from the Banksy-esque Fuzz Tee to our new Orgasm Tee influenced by the playful erotica of photographer Richard Kern. The wider range of graphic tees takes its vibe from the masters of post-war Pop Art across a number of imaginative, colourful designs.




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