Saturday, August 13, 2016

The Best Way to Vintage Shop That You Haven't Tried Yet

Traditionally the words vintage and technology don't go together, but thanks to Instagram, there's a new way to score the coolest retro finds. Savvy shops across the globe are creating curated feeds and offering their coolest vintage duds to the first commenters to jump on them. Some specialize in goodies native to their location—Western duds in Arizona, for instance, and plenty of tie-dye in San Francisco.

But since we know that finding the best of the best is easier said than done on the photo-sharing platform, we decided to do a little digging and uncover the shops that offer up major style inspiration that you can actually shop! We can promise you you'll want to double-tap (and then take home) just about everything. These 16 cool Instagram accounts, and the vintage shops behind them, are about to serve up all the best throwback outfit inspiration.

Read on to check out each must-follow vintage shop!

Noted: A Winning Look (Outside the Pool) for Michael Phelps

Photo Michael Phelps in his warm-up parka before a race Tuesday at the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. Credit Doug Mills/The New York Times

By now, half the planet knows the meme #PhelpsFace, the viral image of the Olympian Michael Phelps furiously glowering as he prepped in the team room on Monday for his semifinal in the 200-meter butterfly. While his rival, Chad le Clos of South Africa, attempted to Jedi mind-trick the decorated swimmer by shuffling and shadowboxing feet away from him, Mr. Phelps hunkered down beneath the hood of his swim parka emanating death rays.

For many, Mr. Phelps's sourpuss was only half the appeal of that pr iceless moment. A lot of viewers found themselves wondering who made his hooded armor, a cool knee-length parka in flag blue and with red chevrons on the chest and in stripes on the hood. The parka, made by Arena, an outfitter of the American swim team, may be the early fashion breakout at the Games of the XXXI Olympiad, right up there with the fleece Roots beret from the 2002 Games in Salt Lake City and the dizzyingly patriotic cardigan Ralph Lauren designed for the opening ceremony of the 2014 Winter Games in Sochi, Russia, which now fetches thousands on the internet.

One item in a range of styles Arena designed for the team — warm-up pants, jackets, T-shirts, slides — the parka has a practical value that goes beyond the fashionable or symbolic. Few of us watching from distant sidelines have much sense of the conditions inside the Olympics arena, where ambient temperatures can be frostier than Mr. Phelps's glare. "At the Olympics trials in Omaha a few weeks ago, it was in the 90s with 90 percent humidity outside, but it wasn't much over 60 degrees in the pool area," Steve Ozmai, a spokesman for Arena, an Italy-based company, wrote in an email. "Fans were walking in in shorts and T-shirts and walking out in jackets."

Fortunately, the rest of us will have the option of walking out in that particular parka (as well as most other styles worn by American swimmers), although not quite ye t.

"We made this parka exclusively for the team members as a tribute to their incredible achievements," Mr. Ozmai said, adding that a collection of similar designs will become available at retailers and swim team dealers across the United States and online at arenawaterinstinct.com soon after the Games are done.

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