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Sabres - Fashion Forward


inkman

Do you like the Sabres new clothes line?  

21 members have voted

  1. 1. Pick one

    • Yeah, it's cool
      5
    • WTF does that have to do with hockey?
      3
    • I'm a little too old for crap like that
      0
    • I'd buy it for someone else
      3
    • That is the stupidest thing I have ever seen
      4
    • I don't care
      3
    • I need more pics of chicks modeling to determine how I feel
      2


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Posted

Not sure how I feel about this:

 

Sabres find style: Team's new clothing line is fashion forward

By Susan Martin HOME & STYLE EDITOR

 

Buffalo News

Lauren, left, and Alyssa Lawicki model two T-shirts from the sabrestyle collection, available at the Sabres Store at HSBC Arena. More Photos

 

The Buffalo Sabres have a new third jersey this season, but something else has been brewing he inside Buffalo HSBC Sabres Arena have the last few months: plans for a new fashion clothing line.

 

No, make that fashion-forward. Designed in-house and aimed at the age 15-to 25-crowd, sabrestyle ? as the limited-edition collection of women?s and men?s ?lifestyle gear? is called ? links the ice with the street.

 

The goal: ?Mixing Sabres identity with some of the latest looks in graphic Ts, prints and hats,? said Frank C. Cravotta, director of creative services for the Sabres.

 

He?s talking hoodies, distressed hats, fitted long-sleeve shirts and more. Pieces from the new apparel and hat collection will be in the Sabres Store during tonight?s opening game ? with more on the way.

 

More Abercrombie & Fitch than locker room, the styles echo current fashion trends.

 

At left, Lauren, left, and Alyssa Lawicki model two T-shirts from the sabrestyle collection, available at the Sabres Store at HSBC Arena. At right, Sabres defenseman Nathan Paetsch wears a hat, shirt and hoodie from the new line.

 

The debut collection includes 14 pieces of apparel ? six for women, eight for men. These include two hoodies for guys, one for women. There also are seven hats including one design that is clearly feminine ? a pink, white and black plaid pattern with button detailing.

 

?I?ve used elements of the old logo, and I?ve used the current new logo and a lot of font styles and outlines,? said Cravotta, who created the designs using Adobe Illustrator.

 

One thing the collection is not: blue and gold.

 

Instead, the color palette is dominated by muted blues, grays, beige and a lot of black. The graphics patterns resemble the look of tattoos and graffiti. The apparel is silk-screened with some additional flocking on two of the hoodies.

 

Another graphic represents a cityscape; closer inspection reveals HSBC Arena ? of course ? and Buffalo City Hall.

 

But there are hockey references as well.

 

In addition to ?Sabrestyle,? ?City of Hockey? and ?Bflo Sabres Girl? incorporated into the designs, the popular phrases ?Dump and Chase? and ?Cross Checker? also are part of the edgy typography. A custom ?sabrestyle? tag and a little silver sabre pin on hats add distinctive touches as well.

 

Cravotta began working on the designs during the summer, after looking into such popular brands as Abercrombie & Fitch, Hollister and Juicy Couture and also observing the clothing styles favored by young fans.

 

?We wanted a designer feel but with a more affordable price tag ? although it certainly is not cheap,? he said.

 

Hats are priced $25-$35. T-shirts are $28 (men) and $30 (women). Long-sleeve shirts are $35-$42 (men) and $42 (women). Hoodies are $89-$92 (men) and $68 (women). Available sizes: medium-XXL for men; small-XXL for women.

 

Noted trends analyst Tom Julian finds the concept interesting.

 

?This concept is distinct because it is one part lifestyle clothing; one part youth culture and one part local personality, and these elements allow for a feeling of teen retailers American Eagle, Abercrombie & Fitch and Hollister,? said Julian, president of Tom Julian Group, a New York-based brand consultancy.

 

?Historically, licensed sports apparel was always limited to official merchandise, logos and institutional statements. Sabres offer more originality and relevance with artful illustrations and cool phrases ? more relevant to youth culture,? he said.

 

The Sabres teamed with the Buffalo-based New Era Co. for the hats and Old Time Sports, of Massachusetts, for the apparel. The sabrestyle clothing bears the Old Time Hockey brand label.

 

Cravotta initially designed about 40 different graphic ?layouts? and whittled it down to about 10, he says.

 

Once he turned his work over to the vendors ?I let their designers have fun with it . . . using my designs but doing different configurations with it. They would take the art and change an element, as far as scale and placement on the apparel,? he said.

 

?Give us a design, and we will come up with 100 different ways to make that design work on a baseball cap,? said Dana Marciniak, corporate communications manager for New Era.

 

?We have such a great relationship with the Sabres that they are willing to give approval on out-of-the-box ideas that we come up with. They know people are willing to buy things that are a little crazy because it?s their hometown team,? she said.

 

And, from what vendors tell them and the research they have done, the Sabres believe they are the first professional team to do this ? the internal design and distribution of a fashion line.

 

It?s also an opportunity for the Sabres to expand its clothing line with something unique. The goal is to offer a limited-edition collection annually.

 

You can get other Sabres merchandise at stores such as Wal-Mart and CVS, Cravotta points out.

 

?We wanted to have something you could only get in our building that was promoted by our players,? he said.

fashion.BMP

paetsch.BMP

Posted

For me, I'm more old-fashioned. Team colors. Yada yada. But, for my woman, I think she would like it since I'm trying to get her into it a little more (so she won't hassle me about watching/listening 82 games on CI/streaming radio). Anyways, ulterior motive apart, she didn't really like the more traditional fan stuff that we can find. But, I think she'll go more for the trendy, modern look with team stuff on it. So, although I propbably wouldn't shell out for it for me, I might for her. So far though, it sounds like it's only at local retailers and the Sabres store. Hopefully, it will pop up online somewhere (eBay maybe? locals with eBay stores I'm hinting at you). That's my take.

Posted

Is this coming from the same "creative" guy in the organization that came up with the slug? :thumbdown:

 

PS Who are they targeting with these prices? Hats are priced $25-$35. T-shirts are $28 (men) and $30 (women). Long-sleeve shirts are $35-$42 (men) and $42 (women). Hoodies are $89-$92 (men) and $68 (women).

 

I wouldn't buy any of it at half those prices!

 

I'd vote for poll options 2, 3 & 5

Posted

Oh goody! Another "first" coming from the organization that brought us "creative ideas" such as blue ice and hulking nets.

 

And, from what vendors tell them and the research they have done, the Sabres believe they are the first professional team to do this ? the internal design and distribution of a fashion line.

Posted

I commented on this a while back. I love the shirts, but as blue said, prices are a bit high for a shirt. Although if you look at it, you could pay $40 for an Abercrombie T.

Posted
Although if you look at it, you could pay $40 for an Abercrombie T.

 

I'll get my clothes at the normal places Kohl's, Steve and Barry's, Target, and the Old Navy clearance rack.

 

 

Picturing a nearly 40 year old man with tattoos and a shaved head wearing an Abercrombie T-Shirt just doesn't seem right.

 

I'll take my beer T-shirts, sports teams hats, and a nice pair of old jeans. Well, there was those shoes... :unsure:

Posted
PS Who are they targeting with these prices? Hats are priced $25-$35. T-shirts are $28 (men) and $30 (women). Long-sleeve shirts are $35-$42 (men) and $42 (women). Hoodies are $89-$92 (men) and $68 (women).

 

I wouldn't buy any of it at half those prices!

Wow. Those hoodies better be able to replace my winter coat at that price. I have a real nice black & red Under Armour hoodie that was $55 and is fantastic in cold weather. No way I'd spend ~$90 on a frigging hooded sweatshirt.

 

And T-shirts should never be more than $20.

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