Item 2019.192 - Stone Island Reflective Jacket

特征标识版块

参考代码

2019.192

标题

Stone Island Reflective Jacket

日期

  • Spring Summer 1992 (创建)

描述层级

Item

尺寸和媒介

2 (jacket and badge)

背景版块

创建者名称

(1982-)

管理历史

Stone Island was founded in 1982 in Ravarino, Italy, as a new brand under the creative direction of Massimo Osti (1944–2005). Osti had previously founded C.P. Company in 1971. Stone Island is renowned for its fabric innovation, having launched a collection made from a material called Tela Stella. Other fabric innovations included Raso Gommato (1983), Thermosensitive fabric (1987) and Reflective fabric (1991). Osti had an early influence on Stone Island’s design process by photocopying and collaging vintage military, utilitarian and functional garments to create innovative designs. Fabrication is also aided by an extensive laboratory containing over 60,000 dyeing recipes.

Stone Island Marina was introduced in Spring Summer 1983 to differentiate a line of garments designed specifically for use on sailing boats, including jackets, sweatshirts, polo shirts, cotton knits, T-shirts, jeans and canvas shoes. For Autumn Winter 1983, the range was expanded to include windbreakers, PVC parkas and jeans with rainproof PVC overtrousers. Most of the outerwear in the Stone Island Marina range was constructed from Raso Gommato; the sweatshirts were made of fabric that was screen-printed all over to give the garments a rigid finish. Additional ranges were developed, including Stone Island Golf and Stone Island Tennis launched in 1988, and No Seasons from 1989. Between 2001 and 2003, the company produced its first womenswear collection, Serie 100. The Stone Island Denims range was launched in 2001 and Stone Island Junior in 2008.

Massimo Osti departed Stone Island in 1995 and was succeeded in 1996 by British designer Paul Harvey, whose innovations included the fibre optic Light jacket, the Pure Metal Shell jackets, garment-dyed Kevlar, and the NOC-1 range. He left in 2007, and since 2008, Carlo Rivetti (b. 1956) has been the brand’s president and creative director, collaborating with a team of designers to oversee the Stone Island design process. Between 2011 and 2021, Joshua Bullen (b. 1988) served as head designer. The company’s more experimental Shadow Project range was launched in 2008, and originally designed by Acronym’s Errolson Hugh (b. 1971) and Michaela Sachenbacher. Aitor Throup (b. 1980) collaborated with Stone Island on a standalone project in 2008, designing the Modular Anatomy jacket for Autumn Winter 2008 and a capsule collection of Articulated Anatomy for Spring Summer 2009. In 2016, the Prototype Research Series was launched, which features 100 limited-edition garments highlighting new advances in fabrication or construction that are not yet fully industrialized.

The financial history of the company is complicated. In 1981 Trabaldo Togna Holding SpA (an Italian fabric manufacturer) acquired 50 per cent of C.P. Company SpA from Raimondo Cattabriga. In 1983, Massimo Osti sold the remaining 50 per cent of the company to San Benedetto del Tronto–based Italiana Manifatture. Gruppo Finanziario Tessile (GFT) acquired the shares of Italiana Manifatture and Trabaldo Togna Holding SpA in 1983, achieving 100 per cent ownership of the company. Carlo Rivetti left GFT in 1992, founding Sportswear Company SpA with his sister Cristina Rivetti. In 1993, Sportswear Company SpA acquired the Stone Island, Boneville and C.P. Company brands. Sportswear Company SpA (SPW), the brand’s parent company, sold a 30 per cent minority stake to Singapore-based investment firm Temasek in 2017 to fund the brand’s international expansion. In 2010 SPW sold C.P. Company to focus on developing the Stone Island brand and in 2020 it was announced that Moncler SpA would acquire Stone Island, including the 30 per cent owned by Temasek. The agreement was signed between Moncler and Rivetex Srl, a company owned by Carlo Rivetti, who owns 50.1 per cent of Sportswear Company, and other SPW shareholders, including the Rivetti family, who own 19.9 per cent of SPW. The agreement valued Stone Island at €1.15 billion.
Sources: Daniela Facchinato, Ideas from Massimo Osti (Bologna: Damiani, 2012); WWD.

创建者名称

(17 Jun 1944-6 Jun 2005)

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Bright yellow hooded jacket with a centre front zip closure and drawstring hem. The cuffs and neck at the centre front feature Velcro tabs for adjustable fastening. Positioned on either side of the centre zip at the chest are angled vertical pockets with zip closures. A black badge on the left shoulder, fastened with two buttons, is embroidered in green and yellow with the Stone Island compass emblem. The jacket's reflective yellow outer surface shows wear, particularly over the right shoulder, inner arms, cuffs, and around the hem.

The jacket is unlined, though the pocket bags on the inside left and right fronts are made from yellow cotton squared mesh.
Country of Design: Italy
Country of Manufacture: Italy.

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      Labels:
      STONE ISLAND / XL
      STONE ISLAND / PIECE N. / 2308000
      c.p. company / Made in Italy / 100% Polyester

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      说明

      The jacket was bought in the early 1990s from the Woodhouse store on Oxford Street, London. It cost around £500-£550. It was bought after the owner's brother had purchased one in blue - the jackets came in yellow, blue and red. The owner wore it with a shoulder bag in which he carried 12-inch vinyl records so the reflective surface is very worn in places, especially over one shoulder.

      说明

      Ideas from Massimo Osti, ed. by Daniela Facchinato (Damiani, 2012), p. 159:
      This material, able to even pick up extremely weak sources of light, is a waterproof fabric containing small spheres of glass between its fibres. Massimo discovers the material, already used in reflective stripes or tapings on the uniforms of firemen and nocturnal workers to which he makes some minor adjustments (principally rendering it less rigid than the original 3M material) before logos applied to certain overcoats becoming the first to use it for an entire garment.

      The price is extremely high and the Reflective collection is not affordable to all, but its look is so spectacular that it becomes a symbol of the inventiveness of Massimo Osti. The success of the jackets is overriding thanks to their great novelty but also because they perform a "life-saver" function for those who travel by bicycle or scooter at night or find themselves in extreme situations such as thrown overboard into the darkness of the sea.

      说明

      From Inside the Westminster Menswear Archive:

      REFLECTIVE JACKET
      Stone Island
      Spring Summer 1992
      Stone Island produced the first reflective jackets in 1991, using a material similar to that used for reflective stripes on firefighter uniforms. The fabric was coated with thousands of tiny glass spheres that reflect light sources, rendering the jacket highly luminescent. For Spring Summer 1992, the jackets were produced in yellow, red and blue colourways, and when illuminated by headlights or a camera flash, the colour of the jackets was significantly enhanced and intensified. The pattern of wear on this jacket is indicative of the era in which it was created, as the garment’s original owner wore it with a shoulder bag containing twelve-inch vinyl records, causing the reflective surface to become extremely worn in places, most notably over one shoulder.
      Polyester
      Archive no. 2019.192

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