Los Angeles Times

Could a T-shirt change the world?

The creators of the hot streetwear brand Total Luxury Spa started with their neighborho­od.

- By Mackenzie Wagoner

“This is my favorite place,” says Daniel DeSure, gesturing to the stretch of Exposition Boulevard in Crenshaw where he’s lived and worked for 12 years. Behind an olive-and-black graphic facade, the 40-year-old creative director and entreprene­ur runs Commonweal­th Projects, a creative agency called on by the likes of Nike, Saint Laurent, MOCA and USC to develop genre-bending installati­ons, design books and re-imagine entire brands.

More recently this spot has also become host to a skate shop and store for DeSure’s 5-year-old side project, the zine-turned-clothingli­ne Total Luxury Spa that is on the cusp of becoming streetwear’s newest household name.

After years of executing visions for others, DeSure and his partner, Hassan Rahim, launched Total Luxury Spa in 2014 as a means of more direct creative output. “There just felt like a little bit of a disconnect. Why can’t the work that I’m doing during the day speak one-onone to what I care about?” DeSure remembered thinking. The name “Spa” was chosen to conjure visions of replenishm­ent. “I always think of books and culture and things that we’re working on as the things that I feel filled by,” DeSure said.

The two started by creating zines for local artists who were outside the purview of gallery and museum representa­tion. Those zines made for cheap and easy distributi­on — but T-shirts, they found, were even better forms of communicat­ion. “They’re a quick way to get a design out in the world and onto people who move around the world,” DeSure said. Against black, white and tie-dye fabrics, Spa T-shirts advertise fake shows for artists including jazz musician Sun Ra and the cellist and singersong­writer Kelsey Lu. Others feature the phrase “Crenshaw Wellness,” an umbrella term for the earnest messages of Afrofuturi­sm, meditation and mindfulnes­s delivered in ironic clip art fonts. “Healing plants for hurt landscapes,” reads one T-shirt. “Your worries washed away,” reads another.

DeSure and Rahim utilized Spa as a means of rejuvenati­ng their neighborho­od. The clothes are made in L.A. and designed, modeled and photograph­ed by members of the Crenshaw community. And, to reverse the sins of capitalism, Spa gives more than it takes, infusing the neighborho­od with resources, guidance, opportunit­y and careers. “I always think about culture as this thing that a lot of times is taken from, meaning people take the aesthetic of other people, but it’s all about how you ante into a system,” DeSure said. “There’s a way to give back to a system to actually make it better.”

He added: “When we make a Crenshaw Wellness shirt, we mean it. Wellness should be here. How do we make it here?”

Using funds from Commonweal­th Projects, he opened his studio to the neighborho­od for free weekly meditation classes, now held every Monday at the Undergroun­d Museum. He helped kick off a children’s meditation program at Hillcrest Elementary School and hopes to open another this year. In search of additional ways to be helpful, he looked to the skate park across the street for guidance: “Everyone takes care of each other there. [Kids are] being taken care of by their peers. I’ve always respected that.”

DeSure asked some of the young local skaters to share their opinions. “We would sit down and talk and just kind of chop it up,” he remembered. Conversati­ons would cover their personal, profession­al and entreprene­urial aspiration­s, and always pose the question:

What does the neighborho­od need?

The first conclusion: “It’s not the easiest place to find healthy, inexpensiv­e food.” Spa responded in a shirt dedicated to the local vegan restaurant Mr. Wisdom, which was closing. The T-shirt featured the owner’s face and borrowed language from a sign hand-painted in the restaurant: “You are entering the spiritual zone. Please turn off all radios and negative thoughts.” The shirt was bought by skaters around the globe, Vogue editors, the Kardashian coterie. Whether or not they understood what the shirt represente­d, half of the profits went to the restaurate­ur.

The kids, now 20-somethings, developed their own response: a streetwear, skate and juice brand called Tropics. Named as a riff on “the Jungle,” a nickname for nearby Baldwin Village based on its tropical plantings, the juice company enables the young men to not only nourish their community, but to learn and teach one another how to build a brand and run a business.

Since launching in 2015 with the help of DeSure’s mentorship, funding and office space, Tropics has partnered with acai company Sambazon, staged pop-ups at the Felix art fair and the Santa Monica Airport Barker Hangar, and held public conversati­ons with restaurate­ur Alice Waters and the late Times restaurant critic Jonathan Gold about food inequality.

They design their own skate decks and T-shirts featuring their company’s name written in a font made out of pieces of fruit handdrawn by Tropics co-founder Preston Summers. Next they hope to open a permanent juice shop on Jefferson and are in talks to bring a farmers market to the neighborho­od.

DeSure is creating strategies to address gentrifica­tion, economic inequality and headline anxiety. Perhaps a T-shirt could change them. Streetwear’s power has always lain with its community, but, to date, no streetwear brand has empowered its community so directly.

“It’s our way of trying to create more balance and fairness,” DeSure said. It’s enough that Spa shirts look good and have been worn by style-setters, but, said DeSure, “our approach gets people to engage with bigger issues that we’re all reading about every day in the paper. The bigger we can make that push, the more effect it will have.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times ?? DANIEL DeSURE, co-founder of streetwear company Total Luxury Spa, at the headquarte­rs.
Photograph­s by Brian van der Brug Los Angeles Times DANIEL DeSURE, co-founder of streetwear company Total Luxury Spa, at the headquarte­rs.
 ??  ?? MERCHANDIS­E at Total Luxury Spa in the Crenshaw neighborho­od. The name “Spa” is meant to conjure replenishm­ent.
MERCHANDIS­E at Total Luxury Spa in the Crenshaw neighborho­od. The name “Spa” is meant to conjure replenishm­ent.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States