TALKING ABOUT ARCHIVES Vol.31
New perspectives born from the archive (Part 2)
From high fashion to street brands, the fashion world these days is inseparable from the concept of the âarchiveâ. The genre we call the archive isnât limited to just fashion, but includes everything from everyday items to daily necessities. In this instalment, we bring you a dialogue between Motofumi âPOGGYâ Kogi and the owner of JANTIQUES, Hitoshi Uchida, located in Naka-Meguro; they sell not only second-hand clothes but also everything from furniture to everyday items. From this conversation, you will be able to further your understanding of the connection between fashion and the archive.

--- Letâs move on to hear you talk about the items that youâve brought with you today to introduce to us. Firstly, can you tell us something about this key?
Uchida: âThis kind of old key is, to be honest, a piece of useless garbage.â
--- True, the original intent behind the item has completely been lost.
Uchida: âThatâs whatâs interesting to me. For me, one of my roots is trying to find out how to introduce things to people that they seemingly donât really need. Thereâs all kinds of keys out there. Keys used for clocks, to lock doors, I even have some from the European Middle Ages. One of them cost me 250 dollars. I also have the key to a Ford car from the twenties.â

POGGY: âYouâre right, it does say Ford!â


Uchida: âThis is also a key in the strict definition of the word, but this one was made by hand. This one opens when you match up the letters, but I donât actually use it as a key in itself. It opens when you enter PETZ, which I think refers to those PEZ candies we used to eat when we were kids. Hand-made, or even hand-written items, second-hand clothes and furniture, all kinds of items, it doesnât matter what, I want to be able to introduce customers to the quality of unique itemsâ
--- Unique items always have a story of their own to tell, right?
Uchida: âItâs not just keys, also items that used to have an intended purpose can be repurposed in all kinds of different contexts. I did a lot of experimenting around the theme of why we manage to find these items valuable. Sometimes, a customer appears who has the same sense as I do in enjoying an item, which is very interesting. I think thatâs where my store different a lot from other second-hand clothing stores. Iâm just waiting for that one person to find an item that they enjoy.â
--- Waiting for someone that finds purpose in an item that many other people would find useless, thatâs a really interesting stance to take.
Uchida: âThe same goes for clothing, I think. Thatâs also what I want my customers to take away from their visit.â
--- Thatâs also connected with choosing what to buy on your own, right?
Uchida: âThatâs right!â

POGGY âThatâs a cute globe, so small. It could work well in a childrenâs room.â
Uchida: âI have a habit of collecting globes. I can just keep staring at them for a long time. They donât have to be vintage items; I just want to have a daily life where I can live looking at globes. I look at them thinking âI want to go here, but also over thereâ. Ever since I was a child, travelling across the world has been a theme for me, itâs part of my roots. When I started JANTIQUES, I made a system where I would go buying new items in a lot of countries as to not get bored. Iâm sorry, but this is a personal item. Itâs probably about a hundred years old. It would look cute on a desk, right?â
--- You talked a bit about it just now, but do you have a regular plan of where you go buying new items for JANTIQUES? Or do you just leave on your own timing whenever you feel like it?
Uchida: âI do it for a living, so of course my yearly schedule is kind of limited. I plan my trips from place to place, like in this period Iâll go to New York, then to LA, then to London, but sometimes I feel like doing something new and just go buying without any plans at all, it depends.â
POGGY: âBut items like these, you donât find them in America, right?â
Uchida: âOf course.â
POGGY: âSo do you also visit Europe, Great Britain once in a while?â
Uchida: âBrands like Turnbull and Asser are of course more available in their home country, so I do go there to buy those.â
POGGY: âYou even have a lot of items which still use the old tag.â
Uchida: âI do! Theyâre more expensive, but I buy them because I like them myself. I have to, to gain more knowledge about these items.â
POGGY: âI bought a shirt from Turnbull and Asser at the store before as well, but I wasnât really aware of the difference with the old tags with English shirts. English gentlemen have this image of wearing a shirt until itâs all worn down. Thatâs something I can respect as well, wearing a worn-down shirt inside of a nice suit.â
Uchida: âI also of course went to the actual Turnbull and Asser store while there, but it wasnât really that interesting. I did buy some underwear. I bought some Sea Island Cotton underwear, which was really expensive, but Iâm really happy with my purchase.â
POGGY: âTurnbullâs trunks? I use them a lot as wellâ
Uchida: âTheyâre great, but still so expensive.â
POGGY: âThatâs so trueâŠâ
Uchida: âCompared to normal cotton, it feels completely different, itâs just so good. My go-to brand up until then had been Brooks, but I changed my mind later on.â
POGGY: âStill, the price! But when I think about it, JANTIQUESâ buying must be really difficult, definitely. Iâm not that knowledgeable about this field of second-hand clothes but even I can understand it must take a lot of effort.â


--- Next is this bath towel.
Uchida: âYouâre probably used to seeing graphic designs for T-shirts, but this is one printed on a bath towel.â
POGGY: âNO PARKING?â
Uchida: âYes. In my opinion, these are the kinds of towels that people on the beach in Santa Cruz would be using, the ladies walking on the sand, the guys riding their cars looking for a place to park, probably around the seventies. Just the big American cars, the gaudy parasols, they all coincide with this idea that not only T-shirts can have graphic designs. So bath towels. I brought two to make it easier to show. Arenât they interesting? Theyâre pretty thin, so maybe at the time these were considered to be bad quality.â
POGGY: âItâs cotton, after all. These days a lot of the towels with prints are made from polyester.â
Uchida: âYou have this kind of towel you always see, the one that says âsomething something Industriesâ, itâs similar to that. Towels arenât really popular, but thereâs a lot of varietyâ
--- Maybe we just need to chance our perspective to see how interesting they are.
Uchida: âThat goes for everything of course. Thereâs a lot of people going out shopping, deciding beforehand what theyâre going to buy, but Iâm the exact opposite of that.â
--- Itâs nice as well to be able to see things freely as well
POGGY: âWith corona around, thereâs more and more people just buying single items, or opting to buy online instead of going to the physical store, so the trend is moving towards buying one item at a time instead of a coordinated outfit. People donât go out that much these days without a set reason. So just like Mr. Uchida is saying, if youâre only going out to buy that one item, your creativity starts to drop. I think itâs really important to come to a shop like JANTIQUES, switch off a lot of those unnecessary ideas and start free and anew.â

--- Is this a belt?
Uchida: âItâs not just limited to belts, but while at JANTIQUES we know a lot about American items, I like European items as well and we donât have a specific genre. If you add more native and tribal-like items to that, you get a pretty good image of what we sell at JANTIQUES. This is an item made by the Native American Hopi people, which is one of our more authentic and traditional items. This item was made with a specific purpose. Having some of these around makes me feel quite relaxed; we have many different things lying around, which is part of the feeling I like to express. For Japan, you have things like Aizome (lavender dyeing) and Sashiko stitching, every country has their own style, which Iâd like to introduce to people.â
--- That connects to what you told us at the beginning about wanting to create a store like you just have items lying around in your house. In a living environment, thereâs usually all kinds of items laying around from different countries and periods.
Uchida: âWhen you arrive at the immigration gates at London Heathrow Airport, thereâs just so many people from so many different countries there. It almost makes me feel like Iâm really ordinary there; if you try to express that feeling through clothes, itâs really calming. You can wear anything you like, thatâs basically all there is to it. The blue used here was made by wrapping indigo; I wonder whatâs inside this jewel? ; Why is this fringe so long? Looking at the item and trying to understand its charm by thinking about it is definitely part of the deal.â
POGGY: âItâs almost like that book, Cheap Chic!â



--- The final item are these suede overalls and these boots.
Uchida: âThe thing about suede is, wearing it creates a new layer of color on top of it; the material is really nice to begin with, but when someone wears it, the stains become a new layer. Thatâs what I wanted to show here. When you look at the inside itâs obviously suede, but because it has been worn for so long, itâs getting harder to tell which is the inside and which the outside.â

Uchida: âThe same goes for denim; the reason why models like 501 became so popular, why they use words like fresh or rigid, is because they change when you wash them. We shouldnât just think of the state in which we buy the item at 100; the charm of the item is that it can change later to 120 or even 140. It gains extra layers, so to say. Thereâs a new part on top of the suede, whether thatâs the memories or the feelings you have for the item. That to me is the important thing when thinking about vintage. This is originally an overall from the twenties, probably used by people when welding metal. These details are safe even with sparks flying around. It still feels nice when you wear it too. These are things I consider when showing denim items to people, but it goes for a lot of other kinds of second-hand clothing as well.â
POGGY: âThereâs this club in Sapporo called Precious Hall, where the legends of house music always come to DJ when they visit Japan; the sound system for this club was based on advice by David Mancuso. The air in Sapporo is much dryer than, say, in Tokyo, so the sounds reverberates really well I hear. Thereâs a kind of sound you can only hear in Sapporo. Just like that, thereâs a difference between leather that has been worn down in LA and items that have been used in Tokyo, a different taste to it.â
Uchida: âDefinitely. Thereâs a difference with European humidity and climate as well.â
POGGY: âThatâs one of the things that keeps everything interesting as well.
Uchida: âYes, the charm of second-hand clothes or even of unique items. Looking at it from that perspective, these boots even have a date written on them.â
--- 1825? Thatâs almost 200 years ago!
Uchida: âIt mightâve come with a strap before⊠Itâs kind of weird that thereâs only one layer of leather here, they mustâve been so difficult to wear.â
POGGY: âYes, it looks like itâd hurt at first.â
Uchida: âThis is what I want to introduce to people. I donât think anyone has really ever laid their eyes on these items. I have another item, probably from around 1900, which has a similar shape. It has been updated in those 100 years and is closer to what you would see Margiela make. The front is fairly narrow and itâs just really fancy.â
--- People that actually buy these items donât actually wear them, right? Itâs mostly for collection purposes, isnât it?
Uchida: âMostly, itâs people designing their own shoes. We might actually have a lot of those customers here. Iâd love for normal people to also find an item that fits them perfectly and enjoy this store just like designers do. All the items I showed today are tools for these people to become able to judge for themselves what they want for themselves.â
POGGY: âThank you! I learned a lot today!â
Motofumi âPOGGYâ Kogi
Born in 1976. Started working part-time at UNITED ARROWS in 1997 and opened his own store, Liquor,woman&tears in 2006 after working for the press for a while. In 2010, he opened a new store called UNITED ARROWS & SONS, where he worked as director. In 2018 he went independent and is gathering attention for his various activities, like working as the fashion director for 2G, a store in the recently renewed Shibuya PARCO building.
Hitoshi Uchida
Born in Gunma Prefecture in 1969. Worked at Harajukuâs famous second-hand clothing store, Santa Monica, for eighteen years. After going independent for 2005, he opened JANTIQUE in Naka-Meguro selling items not limited to only second-hand clothes, preferring a style pulling from many different parts of the archive, and is known and loved for many people in the industry. In 2019, he opened his second store, JANTIQUE Uchida Shoten in his hometown, Takasaki City in Gunma Prefecture. Starting from March this year, he also started selling his items from JANTIQUE online as well.
Photo_ Shiga Shunsuke
Text_ Maruro Yamashita