
Lot. 303 Coverall Jacket - Hand Drawn Sumi
The Lot.303 Coverall Jacket is rooted in history, tracing back to an unbranded American coverall from 1910 discovered in a coal mine. Taiga Takahashi reimagines it as both artifact and living garment, balancing archival reverence with contemporary craft. This seasonâs iteration comes in two distinct fabrications: a revived âTWEEDUROY,â a corduroy printed with a tweed pattern originally developed in Massachusetts for durability in boysâ uniforms, and a hand-painted sumi version inspired by Kyoto karakami marbling. Each piece is unique, the sumi ink brushstrokes applied by Yuzen artisans to create subtle shifts in shading that cannot be replicated. Hardware is true to formâiron buttons and back parts engraved and left uncoated so they patinate with age. What emerges is a jacket that feels like a century-old find but with materials and finishes designed for today.
The Lot.303 Coverall Jacket is rooted in history, tracing back to an unbranded American coverall from 1910 discovered in a coal mine. Taiga Takahashi reimagines it as both artifact and living garment, balancing archival reverence with contemporary craft. This seasonâs iteration comes in two distinct fabrications: a revived âTWEEDUROY,â a corduroy printed with a tweed pattern originally developed in Massachusetts for durability in boysâ uniforms, and a hand-painted sumi version inspired by Kyoto karakami marbling. Each piece is unique, the sumi ink brushstrokes applied by Yuzen artisans to create subtle shifts in shading that cannot be replicated. Hardware is true to formâiron buttons and back parts engraved and left uncoated so they patinate with age. What emerges is a jacket that feels like a century-old find but with materials and finishes designed for today.
Original: $1,290.00
-65%$1,290.00
$451.50Description
The Lot.303 Coverall Jacket is rooted in history, tracing back to an unbranded American coverall from 1910 discovered in a coal mine. Taiga Takahashi reimagines it as both artifact and living garment, balancing archival reverence with contemporary craft. This seasonâs iteration comes in two distinct fabrications: a revived âTWEEDUROY,â a corduroy printed with a tweed pattern originally developed in Massachusetts for durability in boysâ uniforms, and a hand-painted sumi version inspired by Kyoto karakami marbling. Each piece is unique, the sumi ink brushstrokes applied by Yuzen artisans to create subtle shifts in shading that cannot be replicated. Hardware is true to formâiron buttons and back parts engraved and left uncoated so they patinate with age. What emerges is a jacket that feels like a century-old find but with materials and finishes designed for today.











