
Teddy Santis 為 New Balance 990v6 推出兩款全新配色
其中,990v6 GT6「Clay Ash」預計在 9 月登場,而 990v6 LT6「Vintage Indigo」則將於 7 月發售。這兩款新作皆採用高級網眼與麂皮鞋面,配有 990 鞋跟標誌,並在現代化的鞋底單元上方加入更新的鞋跟穩定片。這些新配色不僅延續了 990 系列的經典傳承,更進一步推動其標誌性的設計語言。
此兩款配色預計於 2025 年春夏季節正式發售,目前尚未公開發售日期,有興趣的讀者們敬請留意。
>Stone Island x New Balance Numeric 272 最新聯名鞋款率先曝光
>New Balance 1906L 最新夏季配色「Beige」配色率先曝光
>率先近賞 Joe Freshgoods 個人品牌 Every Now & Then x New Balance Fresh Foam X RCVRY 聯名拖鞋
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Hypebeast
5 hours ago
- Hypebeast
New Balance and Shohei Ohtani Unveil Made-in-Japan Premium Knit Tees
Summary New Balancehas teamed up withShohei Ohtanito launch a premiumMade in Japanshort-sleeved knit, blending refined craftsmanship with the two-way star's signature style. Each T-shirt, limited to just 100 pieces per color, is made from tightly twisted, 100 percent cotton yarn, woven on a rare high-gauge knitting machine. The result is a luxuriously dry texture and a clean, seamless finish using traditional linking stitching. Subtle design details include a thin ribbed hem and a stitched blue logo label bearing Ohtani's signature. The tees come in three classic colors — white, gray and black — and are packaged in a serial-numbered collector's box. Retailing at ¥33,000 JPY ($230 USD), the garments celebrate Japanese textile artistry while showcasing New Balance's ongoing partnership with one of baseball's biggest global icons. While an official release site and date have not yet been confirmed at the time of writing, the shirts are expected to land on Ohtani'sdedicated New Balance pagesometime soon.


Boston Globe
15 hours ago
- Boston Globe
At Aston Magna, Thomas Jefferson's favorite tunes and Baroque music by modern 30-somethings
Rembrandt Peale, "Thomas Jefferson," 1805. Oil on linen. New-York Historical Society In a phone interview, Stepner called Jefferson's music library 'quite remarkable for its breadth and depth.' He collected popular songs, piano-vocal scores for operas, musical method books, and 'quite a lot' of chamber music. His wife, Martha, was a 'serious amateur' keyboard player and they often played together. 'His wedding gift to her was going to be a harpsichord, and then he heard about this new-fangled thing called a fortepiano,' Stepner said with a chuckle. 'He canceled the harpsichord order and got her a fortepiano instead!' Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up The library itself is a microcosm of the wider musical world at the time, and there was a 'huge selection of pieces' to choose from in crafting the program with soprano Kristen Watson, said Stepner. 'There's Geminiani, there's popular music of the day. … There's Haydn, Purcell, Mozart.' Advertisement But two names on the program might be more familiar to American history buffs than musicians. There are two songs by Francis Hopkinson, a signer of the Declaration of Independence and lawyer who also considered himself 'the first serious American composer,' Stepner said. The program also features music by Italian-English painter and composer Maria Cosway, who may have had a brief romantic affair with Jefferson when he was serving as ambassador to France in the late 1780s and exchanged letters with him for the rest of his life. Stepner, who has been the festival's artistic director since 1991, also curated a program focusing on late Mozart, which he said was his personal favorite this year (July 17 and 19). 'Mozart is more and more satisfying to play as I get older,' he said. In addition, he mustered an intergenerational lineup of soloists for the season finale, 'Four Fiddlers' (July 31 and Aug. 3). Each violinist will carry the virtuosic solos in one of Vivaldi's 'Four Seasons,' with Stepner claiming 'Winter.' Stepner also tends to feature one guest director per festival; this year it's historical keyboard maven Peter Sykes, who crafted an all-Baroque program called 'From Castello to Canzano.' The plot twist: Nicola Canzano, whose music concludes the program, was born in 1991. So was Nathan Adam Mondry, who also has two pieces on the program. How do a pair of 30-somethings end up writing Baroque trio sonatas and sinfoniettas? Canzano, who studied composition as an undergraduate, credits a masterclass with composer Michael Gordon that he signed up for by accident. 'I showed him what I was working on, and he listened, and he said 'Hmm! It sounds like you really just want to write Baroque music,'' he said. Advertisement Historically informed music, or music composed according to Baroque-era principles, was in fact what Canzano wanted to write. However, since his colleagues and teachers were writing in decidedly more contemporary styles, he had drunk 'the Kool-Aid that it wasn't kosher for some reason.' Once he embraced his passion for it, Canzano honed his skills through performing on the harpsichord, which typically involves a good deal of improvisation. 'Now people actually pay me to write it, which is kind of crazy. My mother still doesn't really believe it.' However, given the past several decades' surge of interest in period instruments and historical performance practices, it doesn't feel like such a logical leap to Canzano that composers might want to explore those styles as well. 'People have been playing this stuff since it was invented, which is not true of every genre of music,' he said. 'Corelli's never been out of print.' Both Canzano and Mondry are 'really terrific keyboard players and improvisers, and they're serious about writing real Baroque music,' Stepner said. 'That means they have to become contrapuntalists, and be real familiar with styles — dance music in particular — and also forms.' And at the end of the day, if you listen to his music, Canzano joked, 'you wouldn't know that I wasn't dead.' ASTON MAGNA MUSIC FESTIVAL Starts July 10. Newton and Great Barrington. A.Z. Madonna can be reached at
Yahoo
21 hours ago
- Yahoo
Noma Dumezweni: Timing for 'Murderbot' is 'absolutely perfect'
NEW YORK, July 12 (UPI) -- Harry Potter and the Cursed Child and The Undoing actress Noma Dumezweni says the themes of hope, community and acceptance in her futuristic sci-fi series, Murderbot, are relatable and important in 2025. "I have the joy of playing Dr. Ida Mensah from the Preservation Alliance," Dumezweni, 55, told UPI in a recent Zoom interview. "You can be whatever you want. We don't align ourselves with the polities of the Corporation Rim, which are all different planets, owned by corporations, and the timing for the show is absolutely perfect. It feels like right now." The adaptation of Martha Wells' novella stars Alexander Skarsgard as the titular, partly organic, security unit cyborg, which finds a way to override its "obey" function and think for itself as it is assigned to guard a group of free-spirited scientists led by Mensah (Dumezweni) and Gurathin (David Dastmalchian). Dune and Dexter: Resurrection actor Dastmalchian, 49, described his character as an "augmented human." "Though he is a human, he has a portal so he can connect to data through computer systems both through bluetooth technology and through cables," Dastmalchian explained. "He is an analyzer, a data analytic specialist. He's able to process large streams of data and store data and run it through his computation, so he's on the lookout for any anomalies, always on the lookout for making sure everything stays straight in alignment," the actor added. "He's very, what we would call, 'Type A.'" And that occasionally puts him at odds with the hippie scientist community he finds himself a part of. "It's wild," Dastmalchian said. "I'm right in the middle of this free-loving, socialistic [group]. We've got throuples over here. Oh, my God!" Dumezweni called Gurathin a "wonderful bridge between Murderbot and the Preservation." "They know what that world is, but they understand what the possibility of this world is, so therefore Gurathin's cynicism towards Murderbot is called for, but, for Mensah, [she is like]: 'No, we're all good. Let's try and find out what else we have in common." "He has a healthy dose of skepticism," Dastmalchian chimed in. The actor said the scripts by Paul and Chris Weitz expertly blend entertaining storytelling with important social issues. "It's the gift of great writing and being around an ensemble of great artists," Dastmalchian said. "You play it straight. We're never looking for the laugh. You're never looking for the sci-fi moment, the drama moment. You're playing the intention of the characters, their relationships to one another in the given circumstances and all the amazing, extreme mise-en-scene that comes with building a world like this is just all the fun." Dumezweni also credited Wells with creating such a dynamic, colorful world in the first place. "These stories are so clearly what we are creating and what Paul and Chris have created for us to be part of and that's the joy," she said. "From the well of Wells!" Dastmalchian added. Jon Cho, Jack McBrayer, Clark Gregg, Sabrina Wu, DeWanda Wise, Akshay Khanna, Tattiawna Jones and Tamara Podemski co-star. Season 1 is now streaming on Apple TV+. The show has already been renewed for Season 2.