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The Los Angeles Review is an annual print and online literary journal. It was established in 2003. [1] Dr. Kate Gale, managing editor of Red Hen Press, is its editor. [2] [3] Reportedly, each issue is dedicated to a West coast writer. [4] It has been presenting awards for writers. [5]
Silverwoods, originally promoted as F. B. Silverwood, after its founder, was a men's clothing store chain founded in Los Angeles in 1894 by Francis Bernard (F.B. "Daddy") Silverwood, a Canadian-American originally from near Lindsay, Ontario. He was a colorful character covered in the newspapers, a "songster" composer of popular songs, Shriner ...
Madhappy is an American clothing and lifestyle brand established in Los Angeles in 2017. [1] The brand is centered around optimism both locally and globally, and was created with the intention of designing products and experiences that uplift people physically, mentally, and spiritually through digital and physical content and activations.
The company paid its manufacturing employees an average of $12 per hour. [13] According to the San Francisco Chronicle the average factory worker at the company makes $80–120 per day, or roughly $500 per week compared to the $30–40 made daily at most other Los Angeles-based garment factories. [108]
Now L.A. residents are using their influence to organize curated boutiques and clothing drives to help those affected by the fires start to rebuild their lives, and wardrobes, with intentionality.
Arpeja-California, Inc. was a Los-Angeles based junior's and women's clothing company in the 1960s and 1970s owned by Jack Litt. [1] Among their labels, their trademarked clothing brands were Young Innocent, Young Edwardian, Young Victorian, and later, Organically Grown, offering affordable, youth- and trend-oriented clothing.
A review of U.S. District Court records for the Central District of California shows that in the last three years there have been around 20 lawsuits registered against the mega-clothing company.
The Victory Clothing Company building was designed by Robert Farquhar Train and Robert Edmund Williams for Mr. & Mrs. J.F. Hosfield and built in 1914. [1] The building was originally built as a City Hall annex, [2] but by 2002 it contained ground-floor retail, second-story mezzanines for storage, and lofts on the third through fifth stories.