Showing posts with label fbloggers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fbloggers. Show all posts

Wednesday, 25 March 2015

Sneakers: The Trump Card Game


This is just for fun really. A quick post that I thought sneaker (trainer) fans might be interested in.

Sneakers: The Trump Card Game, sounds geeky and is geeky. But who doesn't need something to keep them busy on a long car journey - especially when you've ventured so far from London that the 4G no longer works.

They might come in handy soon, actually. The Buckets and Spades team are planning a European adventure for 2015. We already have a few sponsors on-board (including a car company!), but there's still a space for a brand to sponsor the in-car entertainment.

Either that or we'll just record endless podcasts as we drive through Northern Europe - and no-one wants that!


Thursday, 12 February 2015

Blinded by the Light | Le Coq Sportif Eclats


Just when you thought you had anything you needed, a brand comes along and designs more stuff for you to sink your wages into.

Glow-in-the-dark trainers…I know, they wouldn’t look out of place in a primary school playground.


Well I never did get those flashing lights LA Gear trainers, and there’s no doubt I’d look a 100% wally stomping around in those on the mean streets of Lancashire - so maybe these Glow in the Dark trainers by Le Coq Sportif would be a good compromise.

With the Eclat being one of the French brand’s signature and most recognisable models, it seems only a matter of time before they started a “pimp-my-trainer” scheme by sticking all the bells and whistles on them.

Or in this case giving them to Ghostbusters treatment.


I’ve only just bought myself a pair of Le Coq Sportfit Eclat trainers in the Xmas sales (after seeing one of the Harry Stedman team in them and having visited their fine looking store in Seven Dials, Covent Garden), so I may hold off just a while to see if I really want them.

Or maybe I’ll be swayed while on one of my midnight bike rides by an unsuspecting streetwear ninja.


Le Coq Sportfit Glow In The Dark Eclat available at size? very soon.

- Mat. Editor of Buckets and Spades.

You can find Mat on Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest.

Images: Le Coq Sportif.

Friday, 23 January 2015

Peregrine’s Merino wool collection | Is winter over yet?


It seems strange to be writing about spring/summer wear when winter is at its coldest. The idea of wearing anything less than two layers under a giant jumper and even larger coat makes me feel cold at the very thought.

The seasons change quickly though. Before you know it, the tube is unbearable again and all you need to wear in London is a thin rain coat.


These jumpers from Peregrine are perfect for the spring days. They'd be good for a cool summer and a mild winter too. You know, that classic British weather that has my skin growing paler by the minute.

They're definitely on the smarter side of my wardrobe. But maybe that's no bad thing. The big birthday was last year and it could well be time to don the brogues a little more often and dress a little more 'professionally'.


Then again, what with a new pair of Nikes fresh from the box, I think I'd be putting these Peregrine jumpers straight into that constant jeans, jumper, and trainers rotation. Whatever feels most comfortable!

Images: Peregrine


Wednesday, 21 January 2015

Store Visit | Percival, London


Any time I visit London, my “downtime" blurs into my “uptime” (is that a word?). It seems like it’s a done-deal now that Nik and I will no doubt end up searching for new, interesting, and curious shops to visit, no matter what area of London we find ourselves in.

It never feels like work though - yes it’s all research, but most of the time you end up seeing new things you like and get to chat to new people about their businesses (or rather just hearing where you're likely find them on a Friday night: #menswearchat).

Percival is one of those brands we came across on our latest walk around Soho.

Seriously, how confusing is that place? It’s like a maze.


The upside of this is you stumble across stuff you had no intention of finding. I’m no stranger to Percival as a brand - featuring them on Buckets and Spades a few times previously - but for those who are new, they’re a menswear brand from London.

The cool thing about Percival's flagship Soho store on Bewick Street is that they design all of their collections from the basement below their retail space.

Cool right?


The guys behind the brand are passionate about keeping production as close to home as possible, using tried-and-tested factories, all a stone’s throw away from Central London. You can really see the passion coming through into their designs too - spend a few minutes in their store all you'll quickly see that their quality and designs are second-to-none.

It’s not just the gear that’s good looking though. One look at the well-designed print on their brown paper bags or the intricate laser-cut concrete flooring, and you know Percival mean business.

Check out this short video on the brand to hear more about their design process.



You can find Percival at 43 Bewick Street, Soho, London WF1 8SB.

- Mat. Editor of Buckets and Spades.

You can find Mat on Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest.

Images: Mat Pike.

Sunday, 18 January 2015

Men’s Grooming | The Bearded Man Co.


Beard oil. Is it something I ever thought I need? No. Is it something I ever wanted? Not really. Is it something I like now I have some? Definitely!

Credit where credit’s due, I really knew nothing about the stuff until Christmas, when a small present of The Bearded Man Co’s oil arrived from friends up North.

It did take me a few days to bother to use any. I mean, when do you think it’s necessary?

Deodorant - check. Aftershave - check. Beard oil - …

Exactly. But when I did, wow. Now it’s going on every day.

Why? I like coffee. Let’s not mess around here. I love coffee. It’s currently Sunday evening and I’m drinking...you guessed it - coffee!


So, when I opened that packet and saw the words ‘black coffee’ staring back at me, I knew this could be a winner. And it does. It really does smell like black coffee. Fresh, decent black coffee at that. Crisp and delicious, it’s a faint fragrance that I’m carrying around for at least three or fours hours. It sure as hell beats the stagnant pong of rank sweat on the Northern Line.


The Bearded Man Co. have over 40 different oils to try. It has to be fresh cut grass for me next, just in time for the summer.

Check out their site here and also check out their fledgling ‘Behind the Beard’ series, most recently featuring Ricki Hall - he of Gaolhouse Denim modelling fame - and no doubt me soon...I’m just waiting for that call.

Sperry Top-Sider + Band Of Outsiders | Made in...does it matter?


A tale I may have misheard from a dusty lecture hall many years ago features the words, ‘Made in Germany’.

We’re talking history here…but I’ll try and keep it short.

A couple of hundred years ago, German manufacturing was considered so poor, anyone importing German goods would have the mark removed. About a hundred years later, German manufacturing was considered so good, English manufacturers were adding ‘Made in Germany’ to their own goods.

That’s a nice tale. Interesting to some. Boring for others. It’s quite relevant though, with the continued drive for ‘Made in Britain’ to be stamped on clothes.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m keen on British manufacture - keeping skills, employment, and money in our economy. Some folks can get a little militant about it, however.

Often, for reasons of skills, tradition, or value, the UK isn’t the best place to manufacturer clothes. And, the seeming desire to have the ‘Made in Britain’ associated with a brand can push companies to play a little loose with the term, rolling out lines only a couple of which are genuinely made locally.

No names to mention, I’m just saying.


This is a discussion that could go long into the night and well into the next month.

As well as the perceived economic benefits of ‘Made in Britain’, there’s an argument of transparency and responsibility in supply chains.

True, but raw ingredients are rarely brought into this. Where is the cotton from? Where is the leather from? Factors often overlooked in the great drive for that local manufacture stamp, yet factors which are just as important if we’re talking CSR.

Besides this, on the economic front, brands that operate from the UK, but don’t manufacture here, are still creating jobs and economic growth by employing people in design, PR, marketing, and sales - jobs don’t only exist on the factory floor.

Finally, there’s an issue of cost. As a consumer, I want the best quality of product and production for the best price - I don’t want to be subsidising an inefficient factory in Leicester, when one in Portugal can deliver clothes of the same standard.

Ultimately, a nation is an arbitrary distinction - although ours has a geographic boundary that makes it seem less so. In the US, for instance, ‘Made in the USA’ can mean goods have travelled thousands of miles - like buying a t-shirt from Moscow. God knows what distances are involved when ‘Made in Russia’ is analysed.


So, where’s this going?

Well, the Sperry Top-Sider x Band of Outsiders collaboration caught our eye for it’s strong design. A fun and different take on what is a very recognisable shoe.

However, what had us really talking was the ‘Made in China’ mark.

Bold? Brash? Foolish?

Perhaps all, some, or none of the above. The statement it makes is the interesting point. We sat up, we took noticed, we discussed. And that’s what bold design is all about, really.

At the end of it all, no one baulks at a car made in Germany or electronics made in Japan. Maybe one day ‘Made in China’ will emulate that tale of ‘Made in Germany’.

Thursday, 8 January 2015

Sneaker Watch | Nike Free Trainer 3.0


Some people get very excited about the technology behind trainers. The materials, techniques, and devices used in their construction.

That's cool.

Part of me wishes I could understand more about intricacies of trainer design. Who knows, perhaps I will, one day.


For now, I'll appreciate their look and take the slightly conservative approach that if a brand's product has worked for me in the past, it'll work for me in the future. A limited outlook, I know, but one that hasn't seen me too far wrong.


I'm the proud owner of two pairs of Nikes (that's right, two whole pairs!) - one, a pair of black Nike Free 5.0; the other, a pair of Nike Free Trainer 5.0 that Nike were kind enough to give me for attending an NFL training session at Wembley, for Buckets and Spades.

I'm always looking to add to that meagre collection, as Nike are a brand who get their trainers right.

A strange thing to say, but there is never a press release I receive from Nike and wince at - a lot of other brands, who do produce some great stuff, regularly produce a dud.


These Nike Free Trainer 3.0 are exactly what I mean. Click the link and admire.


Read the tech specs if you like, but I'm already wearing these (in my head) to the gym, for a run, or on the walk to the climbing wall. So good, so Nike.

Pictures: Nike.

Like Nike? Like Running? Check this piece on running shoes and this one on running in London.

Wednesday, 31 December 2014

Shoreditch Stores | Club Monaco + Number Six


A quick post on a couple of stores in Shoreditch.

First up, Club Monaco - a US brand that offers a level of style I can only dream to aspire to. Loafers, chinos, and slim-fit shirts, sit alongside more rugged sweaters and parkas. The store itself is like a miniature gentleman's club, with chairs and hatstands nestled between the well presented clothes, many a nod to it's heritage as a former gunsmiths, and even a small bourbon counter.


Second, Number Six. Perhaps not technically in Shoreditch, it's close enough and definitely decent enough to warrant the short walk along Brick Lane. Sat alongside the Truman BreweryNumber Six is in great company, with Son of a Stag almost next door and Albam only a stone's throw away.


While Club Monaco is a narrow and cosy store, Number Six is a wide-open, ceilinged room, where all of the colour and vibrancy of the clothes is immediately on show from the door. Just check those socks!


Last time I visited Number Six, I noticed some good-looking coats from Penfield and Patagonia, gloves from Barbour, and bags from Herschel.


Both stores are well worth a visit. Although, if you can't get there, both Number Six and Club Monaco can be browsed online - just don't expect that glass of bourbon.

Pictures: Club Monaco, Number Six Instagram, and my Instagram.

Monday, 22 December 2014

Go-to piece | Sunspel loopback sweat top


Everyone has their favourite item. A go to piece, that if they didn't give any thought to, they'd probably find themselves wearing each and every day.

Mine is a Sunspel loopback sweater.

It has to be, I have two of them.


The reason anyone gravitates towards a particular item will usually be three-fold: fit, quality, and versatility.

The loopbacks have quality in spades. They're outwear pieces that don't require dainty handling or concern about wear and tear. Both of mine are over a year old and both look as good as new. I know, as I've compared them to ones in-store - sad, I know.


As for fit, someone called me trim the other day (thanks!), but while these jumpers are fitted they also provide a bit of cushioning, so you look less rake-like and more like you're carrying some muscle. No bad thing.

Finally, there's versatility. Round necks work with both shirts and t-shirts. The colour of the jumpers helps too. Plain in tone, they settle in nicely with jeans, chinos, trainers, shoes, and shirts of every colour.


Owning two - and attempting (yet failing) to buy a third in the sales - makes me a fair fanatic of the Sunspel loopback, but when you find something of such quality that fits so well, it's hard not to stock up and make it a key component in your wardrobe.

You can find out more about the design of the loopback range on the Sunspel blog.

Wednesday, 17 December 2014

Twisted Time + Boxpark | Online watches in the real world


I doubt there's many folks out there who've visited Shoreditch and not visited Boxpark. It's a fantastic space to discover new innovations from bands you know well, as well as brands you might never have heard of before.

Twisted Time - a watch 'boutique' - have been online for a few years now, but have only recently taken a step into the physical world, with a store in one of Boxpark's pop-up spaces.



As you'd expect from a boutique store, the focus is on showcasing undiscovered watch brands and designers, sometimes from unusual sources. Braun, for instance, is a well known appliances brand, but not one I'd associate with watches. That said, I was put firmly in my place by my girlfriend and by Mat when I once displayed this shocking level of ignorance in public ;-)


Personally, I'd go there to hunt a Daniel Wellington watch, as my classic Rotary has long since died. A little too different for me, but I'd love to see the HYGGE 2089 series in action and might also be cheeky enough to take a shot with a Junghans on my arm.


If you have some spare shopping time before Christmas, or some cash to spend after, the Twisted Time pop-up at Boxpark would be a good place to visit.

Monday, 15 December 2014

Harris Tweed + ASOS | Classic material, contemporary style


Harris Tweed is getting everywhere, it seems. Those 'Guardians of the Orb' are doing a good job of not just protecting their product, but helping it thrive. An act of Parliament, no less, protects the tweed and guarantees that everything carrying the label contains exactly what it says on the tin.

Following a view smaller projects, ASOS are working once again with Harris Tweed, creating a series of classic Harris Tweed garments, cut to suit their market, as well as a range of more contemporary pieces  - rucksacks, joggers, and overshirts.


The check overshirts are an interesting piece. An evolution of the fashion for thin check shirts of a few years ago, these heavier shirts are perfect for winter and the now ubiquitous pursuit of layers.


The rucksacks and holdalls offer something different too. An opportunity to add some texture to what can be a fairly bland or 'second thought' item.

As ever, these pieces are only available from asos.com. Worth a look once that Christmas money starts rolling in.