Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Telfar Clemens is designing Liberia’s Olympic uniforms

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By Vanessa Friedman

The road to the July Olympics has been fraught, to say the least. Citizens of the host country, Japan, do not want the event to take place. The stadium seats will be largely empty — at least of visiting fans. For one team, neverthele­ss, the Olympics are turning into something of a fairy tale.

For the first time in more than two decades, a fairy godfather (OK, sponsor) has appeared to wave his wand over the Liberian Olympic delegation — all five track and field competitor­s, including Joseph Fahnbulleh, NCAA champion in the 200-meter dash, and Emmanuel Matadi, currently ranked 23rd in the world in the 200 and 25th in the 100, plus officials and support staff. And it is not the usual Nike or Adidas or other sportswear machine. It’s Telfar Clemens. The Liberian American designer and disrupter of the fashion system, whose so-called Bushwick Birkin and direct-to-consumer business model made him a pandemic success story, will be bringing his signature geneticall­y spliced unisex designs — the one-shouldered tank, the track pants/shorts — not just to the opening and closing ceremonies, but also to the Olympic Village, the competitio­n — and merch.

“It’s all things you can’t find,” Clemens said. “They said, ‘Go crazy.’ So I did.”

The result may be the most out-of-the-box Olympic outfitting since Issey Miyake dressed Team Lithuania in 1992. And Clemens has a plan to take the whole Olympics moment to a different, broadly consumer, level.

Matadi said he had the idea to enlist Clemens to make the Liberia uniforms after listening to his girlfriend, who followed the Telfar Instagram account, talk about the bags.

“I didn’t even know if he made clothes,” said Matadi, who has been running for Liberia since 2016. He did know, however, that Clemens was Liberian. (His immediate family emigrated to the United States in 1990 during the civil war, when he was 5.)

Matadi mentioned the idea to Kouty Mawenh, Liberia’s Olympic attaché and a former Olympic competitor, who saw the relationsh­ip as an opportunit­y to merge Liberian talent to the advantage of both.

“He’s an elite athlete in his space, just like we are,” Mawenh said of Clemens, who has won the National Design Award from the Cooper Hewitt and the Accessorie­s Designer of the Year Award from the Council of Fashion Designers of America.

Clemens said he was on board almost immediatel­y, even though the sponsorshi­p is the biggest outside investment his company has made.

Though he had never designed performanc­e gear, he and Babak Radboy, his artistic director and business partner, had been contemplat­ing a line of athletic clothing for a while, and the Olympic project was the perfect opportunit­y to start.

They made about 70 pieces in about four months, from leggings and unitards to sweats, duffel bags and even racing spikes. Think compressio­n tops patterned a la one-shouldered tanks and sweatpants chopped up and wrapped into lappa-like long shorts. And the star of the Liberian flag strategica­lly placed throughout, though slightly atilt, as if being blown sideways in a sprinter’s wake. The athletes are testing the gear now, and it is being tweaked to performanc­e specificat­ions.

“They might have been surprised by some of it,” Clemens said. “But I haven’t heard a no. Just excitement.”

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 ??  ?? Designer Telfar Clemens, shown backstage during New York Fashion Week, is creating out-of-the-box Olympic outfitting.
Designer Telfar Clemens, shown backstage during New York Fashion Week, is creating out-of-the-box Olympic outfitting.

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