Founded in Osaka in 1995, Warehouse is one of the most famous denim brands in Japan and the latest entry in the Osaka Five.
Warehouse & Co was founded by the twin brothers Kenichi and Koji Shiotani in 1995. This duo had previously spent good times in Evisu and Full Count. They are known for extremely detailed products of the American vintage. By creating Warehouse & Co, this duo has become in part of an important collective, the Osaka Five (Evisu, Studio D’Artisan, Full Count, Denime, Warehouse) which launched Japanese denim in the 1990s.
For the Japanese, the selvedge denim of Warehouse & Co is a reference. Extremely meticulous on details, their reproductions are perfectly faithful to the original vintage which survived many years.
For more than 20 years Warehouse & Co reviews all the workwear lines, dating from the 1870s to the 1970s, reinterpreted in an incomparable level. Today Warehouse & Co has just become an institution.
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Founded in Osaka in 1995, Warehouse is one of the most famous denim brands in Japan and the latest entry in the Osaka Five.
Warehouse & Co was founded by the twin brothers Kenichi and Koji Shiotani in 1995. This duo had previously spent good times in Evisu and Full Count. They are known for extremely detailed products of the American vintage. By creating Warehouse & Co, this duo has become in part of an important collective, the Osaka Five (Evisu, Studio D’Artisan, Full Count, Denime, Warehouse) which launched Japanese denim in the 1990s.
For the Japanese, the selvedge denim of Warehouse & Co is a reference. Extremely meticulous on details, their reproductions are perfectly faithful to the original vintage which survived many years.
For more than 20 years Warehouse & Co reviews all the workwear lines, dating from the 1870s to the 1970s, reinterpreted in an incomparable level. Today Warehouse & Co has just become an institution.
The USAF (USAAF until 1947) wore the 4-panel cap as a sheepskin winter cap (B-2) and a cotton summer cap (B-1).
Looks like the flight helmet, many aviators worn it instead of the flight helmet at that time.
This "BA-3" is a test sample that was prototyped at the U.S. Navy Clothing and Textile Research Facility (NCTRF).
The visor is long enough to block the sun, and the seams are overlapped to hold the fabric and liner in place.
An "Experimental Garment" label for the proof that this cap is a "test sample".
In the military, this is a valuable cap unique to the USN in the 1940s, when clothing, including BDUs, was generally changed to herringbone twill.
The writing "BA-3" has been faithfully reproduced.