May 21, 2012

Feel Good Fashion: Jeff Oakes Scarves & Accessories

Jeff and weaver Jaipur

For some designers, their calling is crystal clear from the moment they sit in front of a sewing machine or pick up a pencil and draw their first sketch. And then there is Jeff Oakes, a San Francisco designer who almost accidentally stumbled upon his now-blossoming career producing hand-printed and woven scarves, totes and home accessories with a socially-responsible twist.

Some may call it a happy accident, others fate, but after a chance encounter with a weaver during a trip to India, Oakes had a literal “a ha!” moment. Launching a company focused on ethically-produced, woven textiles made by artisans from at-risk communities around the world would satisfy both his interest in social responsibility and his love for textile design.

With an extensive background in the corporate retail and the design industry (he’s an alum of Gap Inc.) and a degree from San Francisco’s Apparel Arts under his belt, Oakes opened his design studio in 2008.

His goal? To create ethically-made luxury products that support and promote artisan entrepreneurs through a variety of educational projects designed to encourage creativity and improve their skills. Oakes hopes to preserve the artistic heritage of multiple at-risk communities by working with artisans in places such as India’s village of Bagh in Madhya Pradesh, as well as rural southeast Rajasthan and New Delhi.

We caught up with Oakes to discuss his transition from the corporate world to social entrepreneur, his designs, life in San Francisco and what the future holds.

Colors from Jeff's Fall line

A Jeff Oakes tote

A colorful Jeff Oakes scarf

A neutral tone woven scarf

So, prior to starting Jeff Oakes design you were working as an architect. Why did you decide to make the transition and start your own line?

The short answer is “ by accident.”

The more complicated answer is that starting my own line happened over a period of time. At the end of 2007, I was on a quest to see how I might parlay my experiences as an architect and corporate retail executive into playing with textiles.

I was on my first visit to India and by sheer chance I was introduced to an accomplished weaver.  He brought me to his village in rural southeast Rajasthan. I literally had an “ah ha!” moment as he was showing me the entire process of making cloth. I knew instantly that I had found a team to begin designing and producing textile products.

When I got back to SF, I enrolled at Apparel Arts to learn apparel construction techniques and the language of the business. Almost two years later, I met and started working with a fantastic business coach assigned to me through the SF Small Business Council.  Together we honed my business plan, developed two five-year financial models, a short-term and long-term web strategy and put a launch date on the calendar.

What kind of woman wears Jeff Oakes designs? Can you describe her?

Almost all of my clients are genuinely interested in how a design was inspired and executed.  They often will be looking for unique or limited-edition designs to gift or to compliment wardrobes they have built over a lifetime.  I would describe her as a well read and confident woman.

 What types of designs are you drawn to when creating pieces for your line? What and where do you draw inspiration from?

 Inspiration? This is the easy part. It’s all around me – literature, dance, music, parks, travel, my dog Kate, architecture, antique textiles, sculpture, museum exhibits, the weather – it’s endless. The challenge for any designer is in the “editing” of all the ideas and questions that come into your head.  Once you have a clear idea and clear parameters – the decisions you make in developing a product go pretty quickly.

The final pieces for a collection are always informed by the final output of the R&D phase of the process. The weave, fiber content, the hand, the weight of the cloth, the prints, the color will dictate if something should be scarf, a wrap, a top, skirt or pant. I let the magic of the concept and process meld and influence the collection we present. Having said all this, I do enjoy designing accessories, scarves, wraps and bags.

What are your favorite materials to work with?

My current favorite fiber to work with is wild silk from India.

The silk often comes from the forests in rural and very poor areas in the northeast. Tribes people steward these forests and process the silk to supplement their incomes. Being that the worms are exposed to all the elements, when processed the sheen, texture and color of the fibers are much more interesting to me than farm-raised and the finely spun silks.

When you’re not designing and creating, what else do you do?

I am paraphrasing a mentor of mine: “you don’t decide you are going to be a designer on Thursdays at 2:00 pm.  The line between life and work is always blurred. Through the process of discovery, each is always informing the other.”

I think this is true. I read a lot, and, by design, I travel quite a bit.  Observing people, especially in city squares, is a favorite pastime, so is cooking and playing with my dog Kate. OK – I admit it – playing with Kate may not be related to design. She simply reminds me to stay present and to live joyfully.

Tell us some of your favorite shops in San Francisco? What are your go-to spots to find indie apparel and designers?

MAC on Grove Street. The owners Chris and Ben present a wonderful point of view of the industry.  I live in the heart of Hayes Valley, so I don’t have to go very far to find great indie designs and designers.

What inspired you to start your own line?

I can think of many. One of them is reading a lot of biographies of successful businesses and creative people. The most recent book I read is by Barbara Corcoran, SHARK TALES. She writes about how her mom and dad influenced her approach to her life and work: working smart, using common sense, having integrity and surrounding yourself with the best people to help you be successful.

At the end of the day you have to trust yourself and understand you don’t have to do it alone or know all the answers.

How would you describe the Jeff Oakes aesthetic?  

I would describe my aesthetic as modernist. However, you wouldn’t always see that looking at my products.

Where can we find your designs?

You can find my designs at The Gardener in Berkeley and at the Ferry Building in San Francisco, Rubicon and the Vine House at Beringer Estate Winery up in the Napa Valley. By appointment, you can visit and shop in my studio in the Mission.

What new and exciting things are you working on at Jeff Oakes design?

Currently we are working designs that are inspired our study of rain, fog and mist. We’re looking at how these elements are expressed in literature, architecture and music as a way to express pattern, color and texture in cloth.

For Spring/Summer 2012 I will be introducing new home products, including cool retro hand-woven cotton throws, a line of hand-woven and printed table linens. I will also introduce my first collection of women’s tunics.

Photography courtesy of Jeff Oakes

Shop Big on Small Business Saturday (+ $100 Reader Giveaway)

We visited a long list of great San Francisco shops with unique items, including Ruby, Stone Pony, Mira Mira and Gravel and Gold in the Mission, Noe Valley's Shoe Biz, Ambiance and Isso, as well as Pearl in the Inner Sunset.

Earlier this month, the folks at PAPER magazine and American Express asked us to head out on a shopping mission to local, independent boutiques we love in honor of Small Business Saturday. We were only too happy to oblige. After all, small businesses are a seriously big deal to us. Read on for the details on our adventure, get inspired to visit small bizzies on Saturday and enter our $100 giveaway from American Express.

As you know, and we know you know (and we know you know we know), small businesses make our city what it is and keep our lives full of new, unique things to do, see, eat, drink, buy and give as gifts. In that spirit, we dove into a few of our favorite shops in the Mission, Noe Valley and a few other hoods to uncover cool finds from the kinds of shops that lend San Francisco its local flavor.

If you shop on Small Business Saturday, register your American Express card online in advance, then use it on a purchase of $25 or more at a business that accepts American Express, and you’ll receive a $25 statement credit on your account.

These boots from Gravel and Gold are cooler looking than UGGS and made by an artisan in Bodega Bay. And would you believe it: they're machine washable.

How's this for stylish and local: these platform wedges are by Seal of the Sutro, the brand from the owners of the local Shoe Biz shops.

The polka dot shirt dress hanging on the racks is a best-seller at Mira Mira on 22nd.

Lots of local jewelry on display at Ruby, located in the Mission.

Vintage finds at relatively reasonable prices stood out at Stone Pony in the Mission.

Accessories and jewelry were on display in the window of Inner Sunset shop Pearl.

If you’re looking for places to visit on Small Business Saturday, check out PAPER‘s San Francisco City Guide. It’s packed with cool places to visit and additional deals you’ll score only on Saturday.

Need some extra cash to shop? Don’t we all…We’re giving away $100 in American Express gift cards in honor of Small Business Saturday. To enter: do one or more of the following (each counts as one entry):

- Sign up for our newsletter (box on right)

- Tweet us @sfindiefashion with the name of your favorite San Francisco small business

- Post on our Facebook wall with the name of your favorite San Francisco small business

- Comment on this post with the name of your favorite San Francisco small business

(Notice a theme? Smart people will employ the power of copy and paste). The winner will be chosen at random this week and notified via email, Facebook or Twitter, depending on how you enter.

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This post sponsored by American Express, though all opinions expressed here are our own, of course! What does that mean? In the interest of full disclosure, we’re letting you know that American Express compensated us for this post with gift cards, but we did the legwork, took the pics and used it as a chance to showcase some of our favorite local small businesses. We love our sponsors and hope you will, too. They make it possible for us to keep bringing you San Francisco’s independent fashion news five days a week.

Style + Tech: ModCloth Snags Velvet Brigade, Launches Cool Design Contest

In style + tech news: San Francisco-based ModCloth announced yesterday that it has acquired Velvet Brigade, a company that caught our eye earlier this year with its cool crowdsourcing platform for emerging fashion designers. So what does this mean for you – and for independent fashion?

Now that ModCloth has hired the team behind Velvet Brigade, i.e. co-founders Lindsay McConnon and Jena Wang, the independent fashion juggernaut is going to incorporate the startup’s fashion design contests into its own offerings and bring a more targeted social media push to the competition.

For those interested in style and technology, what it means is that the Velvet Brigade co-founders were on to something: crowdsourced fashion is definitely a trend to continue watching. The trick, of course, will be getting enough people to submit designs and actively promote them via social media for the contests to have a meaningful level of participation.

But given ModCloth’s popularity and avid fan base (they’ve got 400,000 Facebook fans and counting), we’re optimistic about the potential for success here – and actual sales of items designed based on submitted sketches.

If you’re an aspiring designer, you can submit a sketch of a design based on ModCloth founder Susan’s moodboard above. She’ll pick her favorites, which will then be voted on via Facebook. The designers behind the five winning sketches will win $500, see the design produced and sold on ModCloth and have their names printed on the labels. Complete contest details are here.

More fashion and technology news

San Francisco’s Best Black Friday Sales from Local, Independent Sources

Instead of big box mayhem and madness, you’ll find us using Black Friday and ensuing holiday shopping opps to suss out deals from local designers and independent boutiques – many of whom only have sales a few times a year. Read on for our growing list* of top Black Friday, Cyber Monday and holiday deals from locals.

RGB Gallery (3024 Fillmore St.) is having a weekend-long Thanksgiving Sale.

And yet more San Francisco Black Friday sales and events:

  • Skunkfunk: Shop the San Francisco stores on Friday for a choose your own discount promo that offers varying discounts up to 50 percent off printed on slips of paper that will be up for grabs in fishbowls by the registers. Or shop over the weekend for up to 30 percent off merch.
  • Rare Device: this Market Street emporium for all things creative will be having a Jewelry and Apparel Trunk Show + Sidewalk Sale throughout the weekend featuring clothing from SET Boutique and accessories by Prismera Design.
  • Y&I: Use the code BlackFriday2011 when you shop online to receive 30 percent off your order.
  • Spa Radiance: The day spa will offer 25 percent off in-store purchases of its gift cards on Friday from 9-10 a.m. and smaller discounts until 1 p.m. See details here.
  • The Harbinger Co.: Take 20 percent off items in the online store Friday through Monday with the coupon code GeeThanks11 at checkout.
  • Sui Generis: Save up to 50 percent in this pair of his and hers high-end consignment shops on Friday and Saturday.
  • The Mission Statement: Get a free terrarium with a purchase of $75 or more. Everything in the store, which specializes in local labels and designers, will be 20 to 50 percent off.

Not an exhaustive haul, but a select assortment (meaning places we actually really truly like) of sales and deals and coupon codes good for use starting this week:

  • Honey Cooler Handmade: From Thanksgiving until Jan. 1, customers can use the code 2011HOLIDAY to take 15  percent off all merchandise in this local lingerie and apparel designer’s etsy shop.
  • Sneakpeeq: Click this link to save 20 percent on your next purchase from the San Francisco-based social shopping site. This is a special badge you’d ordinarily have to earn by playing the game-meets-shopping opp.
  • DL1961: Log onto www.DL1961.com and enter INDIGO25 at checkout to receive 25% off all styles. Deal good Friday through Monday.
  • Peggy Li: Use “holiday11″ for 20 percent off purchases on wwwpeggyli.com.
  • Blissmo: Save an additional 10 percent off this local company’s boxes of eco-friendly goods through Dec. 31 when you use the code greenfriday at checkout.
  • The Marin Store: Until Monday, November 28 at midnight, save 15% off at The Marin Store when you use the discount code TDAY.
  • Sasha Maks Vintage: Save 20 percent on this San Francisco vintage collector’s jewelry through Nov. 30. Shipping within the U.S. is free.
  • JenDarling: Use discount code jetset at checkout for 20 percent off purchases from this local designer.


 

*We’ll be updating this post constantly, so check back for the latest events, sales and deals.

3 Pieces for Subtle Guy Style at Scotts

When it comes to everyday apparel, most guys we know are looking for a few simple things from their clothes: durability, versatility and a look that’s cool in an I-really-didn’t-try way. For that, we turn to three pieces that fit the bill from British retailer Scotts.

The Launch Windcheater from Nicholas Deakins is a Scotts exclusive that’s lightweight but built to fight blustery days with a mesh-lined hood, drawstring hood and woven elastic cuffs. Available in olive and black, this military-inspired jacket is one you can toss on for adventures in the City, whether you’re day drinking on the weekend or just trying to get to work and back during the Monday to Friday slog.

Another casual, go-with-everything piece is the G-Star Cedar Denim Shirt, one item from a large selection of G-Star at Scotts. This 100 percent cotton button down features double front pockets, double button cuffs and numbered print detail on the chest. Pair with black pants, khakis or cords for a twist on the average Oxford.

While denim in blue is the obvious choice in most men’s wardrobes, going for a charcoal pair is an unexpectedly stylish move, yet still subtle enough to up an outfit’s fashion quotient without looking calculated. Shown here, the Rogue from Original Penguin offers a slim fit, three front pockets with contrast stitching and a button fly in hue that will complement black, blue, khaki and other denim fabrics.

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This is a promotional post from www.scottsmenswear.com. We love our promotional partners and hope you will, too. They make it possible for us to keep bringing you San Francisco’s independent fashion news five days a week.