NEWS

ニュース

  • home
  • ニュース
  • Collaboration product with J.PRESS New release of women's products with patterns from the collection of "Mulhouse Museum of Dyeing and Textiles"

2015.06.04

Collaboration with J.PRESS New women's products with patterns from the collection of the "Mulhouse Museum of Dyeing and Textile Works"

Press ReleaseProducts
Toyoshima & Co., Ltd. of a trading company specializing in textiles (President & CEO: TOYOSHIMA Hanshichi, Nagoya City Naka-ku Nishiki 2-15-15) has collaborated with the popular brand "J.PRESS" developed by Onward Kashiyama Co., Ltd. (Chairman & CEO: Takeshi Hironai, 1-7-1 Kyobashi, Chuo-ku) to create a "Mulhouse Print Skirt" and "Mulhouse Print Dress" using patterns from the collection of the "Mulhouse Museum of Dyeing and Textile Two women's items are on sale at J.PRESS stores nationwide. This is the first time that J.PRESS has released a product using a pattern from the Mulhouse Museum of Dyeing and Textile.



◆Product Overview




Product name: Mulhouse print skirt
Color: Beige/Navy/Blue/Khaki
Size / Price (excluding tax): 7/9/11/13 ¥19,000
T13/T15/T17 ¥20,000
Release date: Monday, June 1







Product name: Mulhouse Print Dress
Color: Beige/Navy/Blue/Khaki
Size/price (excluding tax): 9/11 ¥26,000
T13/T15 ¥27,000
Release date: June 1st (Monday)


<J.PRESS>
Born in New Haven, USA in 1902. Since then, we have taken traditional (tradition) and craftsmanship (skill) backed by that history as our starting point. The craftsmanship of the founder, Jacoby Press, who is particular about "comfortable clothes for those who wear them", has established a silhouette that can be worn by anyone and has become popular with people. The commitment to making clothes has been passed down to the present day, more than 100 years after its founding. The attitude of craftsmanship based on spirits is to create timeless values, not values that are caught in terms of times and eras, no matter how the times change. J.PRESS does not perceive fashion and lifestyles as things that change, but as things that complete. We will propose


<About the Mulhouse Textile Museum>
Mulhouse, a city near the Swiss border, is the birthplace of French printed textiles. The Mulhouse Museum of Dyeing and Textiles, which is located there, has an archive of about 6 million printed fabrics from France and abroad, and is known as a museum that is used as a design source by European luxury brands.
One of the greatest features of the archives of the Mulhouse Museum of Dyeing and Weaving is that the patterns can be freely arranged. The designs of vintage fabrics such as patterns and colors are collaged, cut out, etc., and variously changed, from tops such as printed shirts and dresses to bottoms and skirts with jacquard patterns.
What is also wonderful is that the arranged prints will be re-acquired by the museum and later become part of the new archives. Revive historically valuable designs in modern times and return them to museums. This is the identity of the museum.
Since 2013, TOYOSHIMA has signed a sublicensing agreement with Nishikawa Sangyo, a major bedding manufacturer and master licensee of the Mulhouse Textile Museum in France. doing.

To the list