wow this all looks fantastic ...
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Geoffrey B. Small
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Thank you all for the above comments on our last posting.
Now some breaking news that is pertinent for this day. thanks, Geoffrey...
HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO OCCUPY FROM GEOFFREY B. SMALL
Our controversial Paris runway presentation "You Cannot Evict an Idea," dedicated to
the Occupy Movement and non-violent people around the world working for freedom,
dignity and equality for all is now covered in the international issue of Sport & Street,
the industry's leading street, sport and youth-trend publication. We salute and thank everyone
on the first-year anniversary of Occupy Wall Street today. Story here...
.Last edited by Geoffrey B. Small; 09-11-2014, 10:01 AM.
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Story and Interview in "Many of Them"
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A story which I wrote on making clothes in Italy, as well as
an interview conducted over skype last year about our work appears in the current issue of
"Many of Them," published in Spain and released earlier this year with portraits of Koos Faber by Antonio Macarro.
We have arranged for both the interview and the story to be reproduced here by the kind and express permission of
the publishers exclusively for viewing and reading on Stylezeitgeist.com for a limited time.
With many thanks and best wishes,
Geoffrey
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story and interview in "Many of Them" (continued)
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Many of Them is published in Spain by the photographer Antonio Macarro in a limited edition of 1000 copies
and is available at Colette, Dover Street Market, Tate Modern and other outlets. You can also obtain
the book or find more information on the publication here
thanks for reading,
Next up:
New Works for Persuade in Bilbao
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Thanks for posting this, Geoffrey. As always, it is wonderful to see your insight and thoughts behind the industry--I always enjoy reading what you have to say. It kind of brings a tear to my eye. I think it is quite easy to become blind to some of the darkness in our reality. In the face of so much to see and to learn about, as the world distances itself further and further from it's past principles and standardized modes of living that were present even 100 years ago, one can get quite inundated. I'm happy to see you, astride and doing your thing, in your own right, without becoming washed away and lost in the mess of consumerism. Yours is a consumerism, to be sure and one that caters to a certain class, clientele and income bracket, but it is an admirable one. There is nobody to tell one that "this is the way that things must be done," but I quite feel that your model is an exemplary one and one that will hopefully set some precedent, before every facet of modern living becomes homogenized.
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