Tempah paid homage to his love of football subculture and diversity
Tinie Tempah’s contemporary menswear brand What We Wear celebrated its 1st year anniversary, at men’s fashion week in London this week.
Throughout the collection Tempah paid homage to his love of football subculture and diversity. What We Wear showcased a sophisticated functional collection which was a combination of sportswear and skilled tailoring. The collection aesthetics focused on training and season football kit with the zig zag logo subtly incorporated.
Yet in between the collection, What We Wear found its strength with its easy contemporary street wear inspired pieces.
What We Wear Introduces collaborative footwear produced with Dutch based footwear label Filling Pieces
Notable garments incorporated fun bold colours, interchangeable luxurious fabrics, glossy patent leather jackets, an easy denim two piece suit, a tie dye jumper paired with lux tracksuit trousers were understated looks.
Over the year What We Wear has grown and elevated into a new breed of sportswear with a confident approach to texture, colour, and contrasting tracksuits and trouser separates.
Equality Team Spirit & Inclusion for all
We look forward to bigger things for What We Wear and an exciting new direction of traditional sportswear with a lux edge.
I find it quite interested how there has been a shift in menswear style from more traditional garment separates to subculture influences from the streetwear scene coming in mainstream fashion from Balenciaga, GUCCI to Supreme of lately.
This season’s collection celebrated the key message of inclusion and everyone should feel welcome no matter what. It’s time to overcome challenges and obstacles for the foreseeable future.
Sport luxe Street Wear Trends make Stance on Diversity this season
Editorial Disclaimer: As always, all opinions are my own and I will never promote something I don’t personally support and believe in. I was an invited guest to the show by the Brand Rep. Opinions expressed here are the author’s alone, not those of any retailer or brand, and have not been reviewed or endorsed by any of these entities.