VINTAGE LOS ANGELES Archives & Collection

 

























































































































































































Comments

  1. Amazing collection! Thank you!

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  2. Incredible collection if you wanted you could do an auction for some of your location or you could set up a venue with some 40s 50s 60s 70s cars in a large type of retail space set up a rest and some catering space called vintage la . I love it. Maybe you can get ruta to make some recommendations best of luck. How much would you sell the romanoff ashtray.best regards
    Jim bates

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  3. In 1980, I arrived in Los Angeles with Paul Wolfe and two colleagues to open Flip on Melrose, at a time when Vinyl Fetish was already making waves, and Simon Doonan was working as a window dresser—first at Maxfield, then at a small shop on Santa Monica Boulevard. Simon was, in fact, the only person we knew in LA.

    Paul Wolfe, a rag merchant from Brooklyn, had already opened three stores in London and saw the potential to launch a mega-store in LA, loosely inspired by Canal Jeans. I worked with him for a while, but we eventually fell out—mainly because we weren’t really being paid, just handed bits of petty cash to keep things moving while we sorted and graded through stock.

    Eventually, I found work as the doorman at the China Club on Third Avenue, and not long after, I launched my own club night—Club Axis on Melrose.

    Later on, I managed to secure a green card, which opened the door to proper work. I joined Guess Jeans, a denim manufacturer based downtown, and truly embraced the LA lifestyle of the time.

    Now, at 70, I live in Dulwich Village in South London, but I still look back fondly on those wild days of the punk and new wave scene—sex, drugs, and rock ’n’ roll…

    Robert Cassidy London

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