Far From Fresh by Alex Young

RB photographed by Alex Young

RB photographed by Alex Young

A red bandana hangs from Ryan Brown's adidas Tiro sweatpants. He carries the fabric almost always for multiple reasons: to pay respect to his brother who was heavily entrenched in Pittsburgh's street culture, red is his favorite color, Woody from one of his favorite movies "Toy Story" wears a similar bandana, and it is a handy tool to wipe his brow or to give to a lady.

The cloth, which essentially doubles as Brown's handkerchief, is a symbol that represents important characteristics in his personality and his work.

Nicknamed RB for short, the Pittsburgh native and Lawrenceville resident understands the heritage and the pride people value from where they come from.

Born in the East Hills area of The 'Burgh and later moved to Stanton Heights, RB's appreciation for culture and the arts stems from his mother and manifests itself now in numerous ways.

"Pop culture kept me busy," he says. His mom wanted to keep him away from the life his older brother was living in the streets, so she sidetracked him with entertainment, shows like "Dragon Ball Z" and video game consoles like Sega Genesis.

A "Dragon Ball Z" DVD set, Power Rangers action figures, Toy Story figurines, such as Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head, and Rock 'Em Sock 'Em Robots adorn RB's mantle piece in his living room. A Sega, silver Playstation 2, and black Playstation 4 machines connect to his large, flatscreen television. Many paintings and photographs hang on his walls in neat frames. Three of Pittsburgh visual artist Cody Baker's NINELIVES portraits occupy a nook.

"I'm real into visual stimulation. Most of what you see comes from my interest. I try not to be closed off," RB says.

RB in his living room

RB in his living room

RB offers me a cup of water and places my red, Solo Cup, and his own, on a Prince, "Purple Rain" coaster. Migos' "3 Way," the Atlanta rap trio's new extended play, hums through AppleTV while we talk. "I didn't get into hip-hop until 2000. My mom played gospel in the house," RB says. "WWF Aggression," the soundtrack album featuring entrance music of WWE superstars, re-recorded by hip-hop icons like Snoop Dogg, Redman, and Ice-T, was the kick start to his rap enthusiasm. His wardrobe keys in on his enjoyment for the music genre too. A vintage wear connoisseur, RB has "The Slim Shady LP" T-shirt and merchandise from Kanye West's "808s and Heartbreak" album. He wears a tee commemorating the 1994 Major League Baseball All-Star Game hosted in Pittsburgh during our meeting.

Officially, RB made his appreciation for popular culture and his hometown his life's work in 2004 when he attended Schenley High School. He and his friends considered themselves "far from fresh," a wave that influenced how they carried themselves and how they spoke. On New Year's, RB threw a house party where he gave away shirts, the first product of farESH Brand.

Now 28-years-old, RB strives to bring different people of different backgrounds together. Through hosting events and creating apparel RB and farESH Brand achieve this.

"Pittsburgh needs to grow, develop, and ask questions," he says.

In the past, farESH brought together different tastes of music from many artists in Pittsburgh. Rapper Mars Jackson paired with Northern pop act badboxes on a song called "Sacrifice." The company blended sounds of electronic, hip-hop, and jazz from an all-Pittsburgh cast on the mixtape "Bridges," mixed by DJ Bamboo.

This year, FarESH Brand held a mini music festival with mixed genres called "The City" to showcase many of the talented acts in Pittsburgh. Blues, hip-hop, and rock were on display at Spirit Lodge, a bar in Lawrenceville. The event and the musical lineup joined the district community and the black community under one roof for a common enjoyment.

Forthcoming is more of the same mission, uniting people of many interests and backgrounds. RB holds an event called "Finesse" on July 23 at Spirit Lodge where DJ EYEJAY and illustrator-DJ Paizley Mind will play hip-hop, jersey club, and trap music. Then on July 28 at Spirit RB will host another event called "Tall Tees," which celebrates hip-hop and 2000s with DJ Pete Butta. Lastly, a beach themed roller derby will take place at Belvederes Ultra-Dive on July 30. DJ Jx4 and DJ Bamboo will assist on the beach disco tunes.

These events are necessary because they provide a contemporary music outlet, an atmosphere that is hard to find in The Steel City. RB and the musicians work hard to present a catalog of music appropriate for the mainstream, but also extremely exciting for those that pay attention to all the new artists and hot tracks that come out daily.

Paizley, RB, and myself were hitting it to "Money Counter" by Deezlee in the living room. Paizley and RB are best friends and roommates. EYEJAY is quick to say she'll deliver a better DJ set than her partner Paizley. RB and I nodded our heads crazy when he played "no no" by Monte Booker, a song EYEJAY sent him as a reference point for the 23rd.

Occasionally, RB will even host barbecues and pregame parties at his house, The Palace, and in his yard, The Garden. It is a meeting place for many of the actors in Pittsburgh's creative community to interact and meet new faces.

RB of FarESH Brand

RB of FarESH Brand

Additionally, the apparel RB and farESH offer hits on the public's love for their city. Currently, you will see hats, T-shirts, and coach jackets branded with "Pixburgh" and "152XX" text paying homage to inner-city slang and the first three numbers to every zip code in the western Pennsylvania city.

Future collections will build on civic pride, and specifically the 200th anniversary of Pittsburgh. farESH crafts a gray baseball jersey with "152XX" on the chest, the city's flag on the right sleeve, and a bicentennial patch on the upper left chest of the garment. The back of the jersey features the number 1 and "Denny" writing across the shoulders, an ode to Pittsburgh's first appointed mayor, Ebenezer Denny (who is buried in Lawrenceville) in 1816.

Positioned as farESH Brand's Creative Director and owner, RB utilizes culture that many Pittsburghers can identify with, and he adds diverse opportunities for people to enjoy shared experiences.

 

 

With Friends at Culture by Alex Young

With Friends photographed by Keep Pittsburgh Dope

With Friends photographed by Keep Pittsburgh Dope

The meeting place was Culture, there, people With Friends enjoyed a new bar and restaurant in Downtown, Pittsburgh while they detailed their efforts that advocate for arts, creativity, and culture in Pittsburgh.

Their mission was and continues to be offering minorities the opportunity to showcase and enjoy the arts.

Amidst the fanfare and the heavy foot traffic from the Pittsburgh Jazz Festival, Sean Beauford assembled Thomas Agnew, Alysia Beauford, Amani Davis, Tara Fay, Lauren Goshinski, Steve Gurysh, Hannibal Hopson, Lexi Jones, Darrell Kinsel, Ivan Rodriguez, Anqwenique Wingfield, and Alex Young at the restaurant with tasty American comfort food.

African Americans in working attire and casual wear frequented the restaurant with a retro, white and black tiled floor. Drinks stacked the wall behind the wooden bar.

Chef Claude Pierre, the owner of Culture, personally showed our group hospitality. He talked about the establishment's one-year history and gave us a tour of the Seventh Street building.

Briefly, Chancelor Humphrey of lifestyle platform Keep Pittsburgh Dope popped in to mingle With Friends seated at the reserved table. He broke from his photographic coverage of the Jazz Festival to document our group at Katz Plaza next to Culture and on the bar's rooftop, which has close views of the EQT, K&L Gates, and PPG Place skyscrapers.

Together, curators, gallery owners, artists, business owners, managers, students, journalists, and singers' work speak to hardships, icons, and triumphs of black life.

Sean explained the purpose of our gathering, "start a culture club to experience new things in the city."

The motivation is to get people of different cultures to explore new arts and have new experiences with their friends. People are less partial to do or attend something if their friends do not go or the atmosphere is unfamiliar. "Think of it like this, you are not going to the ballet by yourself," Sean told me. "But, if there is a whole group of us that go, you can find some appreciation in that."

Essentially, our meeting at Culture demoed the idea for Sean's club, With Friends, a warm group of art-interested people who want to share, advance, and understand various creativity in Pittsburgh.

 

Visit Hennsylvania by Alex Young

Go to a rap show in Pittsburgh and a bottle of Hennessy almost always gets passed person to person, and you see it raised as a party ornament.

Fixating on the brown, cognac brandy, and his native Pittsburgh, artist and fashion designer Aris Tatalovich conceptualizes the drink into a "Hennsylvania" T-shirt.

When Tatalovich previously released a navy shirt with Hennessy's font and white text saying "Hennsylvania," rapper and member of The Company Only collective, Joel Kellem supported the shirt. He wears the shirt sometimes at performances.

Now, Kellem can add another to his wardrobe thanks to a collaboration with Tatalovich.

Both artists produce a burgundy shirt to match the alcohol and Hennsylvania printed in white plays into the state the pair represent, Pennsylvania. Photographer Julian Ranallo offers visual evidence of the shirt inspired by the spirit.

If people fancy Kellem and Tatalovich's T-shirt offering, then they should attend the Hennsylvania pop-up shop held at Drip Lounge on July 15. The event goes from 6-8 p.m. and will feature other goodies, like dad hats from another The Company Only member, Pk Delay.

Drip Lounge

749 E. Warrington Ave.

Pittsburgh, PA

(412) 224-2707

Shop412 Celebrates Pittsburgh's Bicentennial by Alex Young

Officially founded in 1758 and incorporated as a city in 1816, Pittsburgh celebrates its bicentennial.

A lot of the city's pride stems from what it produces and shares with the world. 200 years as a city, Pittsburgh is home to legends such as actor Gene Kelly, playwright August Wilson, Heinz ketchup, the most  bridges in the world, six Super Bowls, rappers Mac Miller and Wiz Khalifa, the inspiration for D.C. Comic's Batman, and so much more.

A common quality of most people in the city is sharing success and moments, as well as flourishing together, as a community of Pittsburghers.

Pride in tact, and with the community behind it, Shop412, Pittsburgh's hometown, representative lifestyle brand, shares New Era hats in celebration of the 'Burgh's 200-year anniversary.

Via shop412 Snapchat

Via shop412 Snapchat

Using the 59/50 and 920 hat silhouettes, with 412's logo on the front, Pittsburgh's flag and seal is placed on a woven patch on the right side of the hat crossed with the American flag. The fitted, flat-bill 59/50 cap comes in black, red, and yellow colorways while the 920 dad hat comes in colors black, red, and white. Diamond Era, a lightweight, breathable tech fabric to handle Pittsburgh humidity, covers the 59/50 hat.

Created as a gift to the city, Shop412 presented several cultural influencers a run of the headwear to enjoy and display. People like Bill Peduto, the Mayor of Pittsburgh, photographer Keep Pittsburgh Dope, and musicians Mars Jackson and DJ Motor Mane of Taylor Gang support the gear.

Others can too, as 412's Pittsburgh bicentennial collaboration with New Era launches in-store today.

Shop412

420 South 27th St

Pittsburgh, PA 15203

(412) 586-7507

412 forever and always. Thank you @shop412 🙏

A photo posted by Cody Baker (@tehbakery) on

John Geiger and Premium Co.'s Sneakers for Pittsburgh by Alex Young

While working on his own footwear label under his personal moniker, John Geiger continues to push contemporary style and Pittsburgh heritage.

His crafty work with the Nike Air Force 1 sneaker, and imaginative designs admiring his hometown, the city of Pittsburgh, reach broad appreciation.

Previously linking with other creative forces in the Steel City for a two-day pop-up shop selling items unique and exclusive to the metropolis, Geiger again sets Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on a pedestal. 

This time, partnering with Premium Co., a fashion label based in Washington D.C., Geiger offers another pop-up shop and some detailed sneakers. 

Held at Ace Hotel in Pittsburgh's East side, Geiger and Premium create custom Air Force 1 Low and adidas Stan Smith, respectively. Both pairs are clean white with text and graphics inspired by Pittsburgh lasered on. 

Geiger's shoe, called the "New P Logo," features a hand depicting the letter P with the thumb, index, and middle fingers, as well as the phrase "For Pittsburgh By Pixburgh John Geiger '16" on the outer heels of the shoes. The toe box on the pair makes the map of Pittsburgh. Also, Geiger presents a black and white version of the Air Force 1 Mid model. 

Premium Co.'s delivery, "Burned Bridges," depicts burnt bridge planks as the adidas three stripes logo, plus "Premium Pixburgh '16" and "Burned Bridges" font and illustrations on the outer heels.

Keenly, Geiger and Premium use the nickname "Pixburgh," a slang and cultural reference to the city, in both their creations. It is a testament to their smart design and attention to the popular nature of The City of Bridges.

In addition, view Geiger's progress with John Geiger Collection here and shop Premium wear here.

The fashion labels' pop-up shop will take place August 5-6. Shoe sizes 7-14 are available.

Ace Hotel

120 S Whitfield St

Pittsburgh, PA 15206