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Season after season, Japanese brand Kapital manages to excite, confound, inspire and captive with its range of clothing. Designs blend familiar and innovative ideas, and utilize top-tier construction and materials. The brand isn’t afraid to take risks and embrace esoteric or quirky concepts. Though operating in this creative space could be a risky business move for many brands, Kapital arrived here after decades of transformation.
Founded in 1984 by Toshikiyo Hirata, Kapital is an independent, family-owned clothing brand based in Okayama, Japan. Its factory initially produced jeans for notable brands like Studio D’Artisan, Denime and 45rpm, helping to establish Japan as the preeminent producer of denim. In 1995, Kapital opened its first store in Kojima and a year later it released its own of jeans called TK. Hirata’s son Kazuhiro (Kiro) joined the brand in 2001 after working as a designer for 45rpm and brought a new vision to the company.
Instead of just producing well-made historically-informed garments, Kiro created a range of new clothing inspired by sub-cultures, vintage apparel and ethnic traditions spanning the globe. Kapital embraces the individual craftsman behind each piece, and at the brand’s Kountry wash-house which was founded in 2010 outside Kojima, clothing is pre-distressed, dyed and mended.

Photo by Eric Kvatek.
With such experimental and unique clothing, the brand needed an alternative to bland industry-standard lookbooks. So they teamed up with Brookyln-based photographer Eric Kvatek to produce in-depth photo books, cataloging each season’s garments on unconventional models in peculiar locales. Over the past 15 years, Kvatek has shot Kapital books in locations like Mongolia, Lappland and Thailand. The titles are as diverse as the content: Azure Anarchy, Hooligan Ivy, Surf Cowboys, Peace Pilgrim, Bad Opera.