A pair of Brooklyn-based denim designers takes us higher. By Angela Gaimari

Culling inspiration from vintage shopping and old magazines, a muse of the Lips boys is songstress-icon Françoise Hardy, for which they have named a jean. "She is the perfect example of that look," says Cronk. "It's a lost sex appeal that girls shy away from, that we're trying to recapture."

Their focus on a true vintage aesthetic is thorough, including a palette of carefully chosen materials. "We don't do a lot of washing, allowing the fabric do what it does naturally," says Cronk. "We look for what we like through shade, construction, and weight, sticking to small Japanese and Italian mills." The men's versions of the denim, similarly true-to-form, with names like Chet and Buck, are for "the skinny-jean type of guy—whether he's a skater or a kid in a band."
AdvertisementADVERTISEMENT
Bringing back a forgone silhouette in rare washes is quite the endeavor, so the Lips boys don't want to see it go to waste. "It's for the independent kind of fashion girl who's not caught up too much with trends," said Cronk. "I wouldn't want to see our jeans on the cover of Us Weekly. We want to keep it small and tight and special, and keep improving the fits and using great fabrics."

A pair of Brooklyn-based denim designers takes us higher.
AdvertisementADVERTISEMENT