Toronto Star

Restaurant­s show off their street smarts

Limited hoodie release hopes to drive awareness, support for local eateries

- REBECCA TUCKER

It’s not uncommon for a restaurant to sell out of a popular menu item — when this happens, staff will say the item is “86’d.” Last week, popular Dundas West restaurant Imanishi Japanese Kitchen found themselves 86’d — in less than two hours — on a slightly more unconventi­onal item: a branded hoodie.

The sweatshirt, which went for sale at the restaurant at noon and was 86’d by 2 p.m., was part of a new project from Toronto streetwear company WCROW called Local Series, which partnered with five local restaurant­s and bars — Imanishi, plus Bernhardt’s and Dreyfus, Uncle Mikey’s, and Man of Kent — and local artists for limited-run clothing “drops” that went live last week. Only 20 hoodies per restaurant were released, all available for sale inperson only, and they were first come, first served — once they were gone, they’re gone.

“We figured, if we separated the drops, it would highlight each restaurant better,” says Tomo Hosogoe, WCROW’s cofounder and design director. “And that’s the whole idea: It’s to drive awareness, and to offer a little financial support for each place.”

At the time of each drop, participat­ing restaurant­s (and WCROW) featured the story behind the design on their Instagram account, as well as a bit of informatio­n about their affiliatio­n with the artist. On Nov.19, for instance, Dreyfus wrote that their hoodie design — which featured an illustrati­on of Devil’s Island by artist Joel Malkin — related “their current experience” during COVID-19 to Jewish artillery officer Alfred Dreyfus’ exile on Devil’s Island. Michael Kim, owner of Uncle Mikey’s, was able to collaborat­e with artist and former dishwasher Eliot Teiji Reid on their hoodie; Kim calls Reid their “dishwasher-slash-creative director.”

Each hoodie costs $125, and $100 from each sale will go directly to the participat­ing restaurant. The hoodies were provided by Peros Garment Factory, also located in Toronto, which sold them to WCROW for $25 each; Bait Shop and Shinobi Studios, which did the garment printing, worked pro bono.

The tactics employed by WCROW — a timed release, a limited run, artist collaborat­ions and the strategic deployment of social-media promotion — mirrors those used by popular streetwear brands such as Supreme, whose wares are highly coveted (and widely known) in no small part due to their exclusivit­y. With Local Series, WCROW is hoping for the same effect: splashy, limitedtim­e “drops” will move product, sure, but they’ll also build hype for the restaurant­s featured in the collaborat­ion, and not just the sweaters themselves.

“It’s really not that much money that we’re raising,” Hosogoe says. “Maybe we’re helping pay someone’s wages, or a few expenses. Ultimately, we hope to be driving a bit of business towards these places, whether it’s delivery or takeout, beyond the hoodies.”

With Local Series, WCROW joins a number of local businesses that are capitalizi­ng on high-hype streetwear marketing tactics to both drive awareness and funnel revenue into restaurant­s whose bottom lines have dipped due to the pandemic.

Famiglia Baldassarr­e, for instance, recently released a series of limited-edition snapbacks, while west end wine shop Grape Witches is now selling a limited-run tee with Spa Boy, to benefit Sistering. Hong Shing Chinese Restaurant, which has operated for more than 20 years on Dundas West, sells its own line of basketball

jerseys and shorts — the restaurant has sponsored a team in the Megacity Basketball League for four years now — and also recently branched out into lifestyle gear, including a branded skateboard, which the restaurant released in early November.

“Our restaurant now has three pillars,” says Calvin Li, Hong Shing’s owner who took over operations of the restaurant from his parents a few years ago. “Those are food and drink, obviously, as well as communi

ty, and now lifestyle.”

Li has leveraged his appreciati­on of streetwear brands into Hong Shing’s merch marketing, regularly featuring members of the Hong Shing basketball team modelling apparel for sale, and teasing soon-to-be-released merch on Instagram. Hong Shing’s first major lifestyle marketing campaign will take place in February 2021, to coincide with Chinese New Year.

For Li — as with the WCROW initiative — developing a cohesive brand is only partly about

finding an alternativ­e revenue stream. It’s a pandemic pivot that, he says, will likely become a permanent part of the restaurant’s operations model.

“We need to find different ways of making money, but we also want to find ways to be top of mind for people when they’re thinking about their lifestyles overall,” Li says.

“Especially now, in this climate, if you market yourself as just a restaurant, people will only think of you when they’re hungry.”

 ?? RYAN OHARE @RYANGOTSA ?? Toronto streetwear company WCROW launched a new project called Local Series, which partnered with five local restaurant­s and bars for limited-run clothing releases.
RYAN OHARE @RYANGOTSA Toronto streetwear company WCROW launched a new project called Local Series, which partnered with five local restaurant­s and bars for limited-run clothing releases.
 ?? RYAN OHARE @RYANGOTSA ?? Dreyfus’s hoodie design featured an illustrati­on of Devil’s Island by artist Joel Malkin.
RYAN OHARE @RYANGOTSA Dreyfus’s hoodie design featured an illustrati­on of Devil’s Island by artist Joel Malkin.
 ?? LUKE TRUMAN @LCTTRUMAN ?? Each hoodie costs $125, and $100 will go to the participat­ing restaurant, including Imanishi.
LUKE TRUMAN @LCTTRUMAN Each hoodie costs $125, and $100 will go to the participat­ing restaurant, including Imanishi.

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