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2008 Ed Hardy brand shoe Ed Hardy swimsuit. In the early 2000s, Hardy licensed Ku USA, Inc. to produce a clothing line based on his artwork. [1] Hardy and Ku USA formed Hardy Life, now Hardy Way LLC, [2] which owns the Ed Hardy brand and trademarks.
Converse shoes with designs based on Sailor Jerry tattoo artwork Ad for Sailor Jerry rum in 2010. Sailor Jerry wanted at least one of three protégés/friends – Ed Hardy, Mike Malone, or Zeke Owen – to take over his shop (or else burn it) when he died. [15] [16] Malone purchased the shop and its contents. [16]
After the death of artist Kenny Howard, also known as Von Dutch, in 1992, Howard's daughters sold the Von Dutch name to Ed Boswell who then began working together with Michael Cassel and Robert Vaughn to create the Von Dutch brand. Later, Tonny Sorensen would be brought in as an investor and would become a 51% owner of the company while Michael ...
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In 2006 Berman also acquired the exclusive rights to distribute Ed Hardy clothing line and its associated labels in Australia, under the company name Ed Hardy Operations. Berman opened 14 retail stores in the country and signed sublicensing agreements in other Australasian countries.
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Hardy was born on January 5, 1945, in Des Moines, Iowa. [1] He grew up in Corona del Mar, in Newport Beach, California. [2] As a preteen a young Ed Hardy was interested in tattoos: one of his friends' fathers had Army tattoos, and it intrigued him so much that he took pens and colored pencils to draw on other neighborhood kids. [3]
Cliff Raven Ingram [1] (August 24, 1932 – November 28, 2001) was one of a handful of tattoo artists (along with Sailor Jerry Collins and Don Ed Hardy) who pioneered the adoption of the Japanese tattoo aesthetic in the United States.