When I was living in Portland, Maine, I even saw some of his
stickers there and wondered about them. I hope he'll break big someday.
This was my first piece for Yall, when they said they wanted to write about interesting Southern people, without it looking like a Southern People magazine.
Across
the South, the name Chane is becoming known. On the backs of car
windows, in places of honor normally reserved for Oakley stickers, more
often you will see an oval sticker emblazoned with the word, “Chane.”
Beside
the ubiquitous oval logo, you might also see a black “SomÃ¥” or a
sticker with “Swell Sk8” on it. These are all labels attached to Chane, a
unique man from Jackson, Mississippi. Chane is sometimes incorrectly
called a fashion designer. He prefers the term “lifestyle designer.”
“If
I feel like I can be creative with it, I’m going to design it,” he
says. So far, he has been creative with clothing, skateboards,
furnishings, and furniture. He is a one-man industry in Jackson, with
four different stores in the arts neighborhood of Fondren: Swell,
Etheria, Somå, and Studio Chane. In September, he is planning to open a
fifth store in the same neighborhood, Dwello @mosphere. This might be
his most audacious idea yet. Dwello @mosphere will be a showroom in a
loft, a place where customers can browse and see the furniture in use.
Chane is making this possible by making the store his home.
“I
could have the perfect scenario. You know, the most crisp, clean
designed museum to live in, where I’d never get tired of my
surroundings, because it’s constantly being sold.” To him, this is not
just thinking outside the box. He refuses to get inside the box in the
first place.
“It’s the most claustrophobic thing I can think of,
from a creative standpoint.” From that place outside the box, Chane has
created two lines of clothing, “Chane” and “Modsushi.” Both of them, he
is proud to say, focus on women’s garb as much as men’s. He is also
responsible for “Chane Sk8 Co.,” his line of skateboard decks, wheels,
wax, and grind rails. His most recent design line is “Dwello Furnitura,”
furniture crafted of industrial metals and glass.
Born Ronnie
Chane 33 years ago in Jackson, Chane doesn’t fit the image of a
businessman or an artist. He is whipcord-thin, with the raw type of face
and features that implies a more rustic sort of upbringing. He is
filled with the youthful energy of a man half his age, but he doesn’t
seem to smile as much as simply let a look of satisfaction cross his
face. Chane speaks quickly, in a sort of stream-of-consciousness
delivery that makes it clear that his mouth cannot keep up with the
turmoil of thoughts and ideas in his head. Asking him a question is much
like blowing a hole in a dam.
“It started when I was eighteen,
because I basically had $150 that inadvertently came from graduating
high school,” he says. “I just wanted a summer project to keep me from
getting bored, because I didn’t have a lot of motivation and ambition at
that point.” Instead of frittering away his $150 during the summer, he
decided to design a t-shirt. His first effort was, admittedly, a strange
one.
“It was kind of marketing volleyball. I have no clue to
this day how that ever happened. [The] volleyball was round, and it
wasn’t that hard to draw.” Chane took his idea and searched for a place
to turn it into reality. “I probably hit close to a dozen screen
printers in town and no one’d really take my order, because I mean, I
only had $150. That’s small potatoes.” Frustrated, Chane reached the
point where only one place was left to try – and he wished they would
turn him down, just so he could spend the money.
“I went to a
local screen print shop, Ad-Graphics, and this lady was there and she
kind of showed a little bit of interest, and that shocked me.”
Melinda
Ledbetter says she was struck by Chane’s presence immediately. She took
his order on the spot. “I admired his drive and ambition even then,”
she says.
Chane says she added as a joke, “I might need a job some day.”
About
a year ago, Chane posted a help wanted ad for a screen printer.
Ledbetter took the position. She is now head of production and customer
service for his screen-print division.
Chane sold his first t-shirts
to his friends and family, “everyone who feels sorry for you,” he says.
“They can’t turn you down.” With that success, he decided to design a
second shirt. “I never really expected it to be a career.”
When
Chane went to college, he started selling shirts out of his dorm room,
turning his hobby into a business. He also began to sell his gear at BMX
meets. A longtime BMX racer and skateboarder, Chane realized that
people who shared the same interests might share the same sense of
style. He was correct. His sales increased.
Before graduation, he made the decision to change his life by moving to New York City. He made the move soon after.
“I
knew that going to New York was probably the most intimidating thing I
could do. It was either going to scare me into the fact that I just need
to live a normal life or it was going to push me to the edge and change
me forever.” In New York, the spectrum of cultures changed the way he
looked at things. “It made me want to be a designer in more than just
one way.”
But he was unable to do so in New York. He worked three
jobs at one time, leaving him no time to design. Instead he sold his
inventory in the streets. “I’d slam the shirts down on a footlocker and
sell them as fast as I could, before the cops got there.”
Chane
also found himself meshing another time-honored, yet illegal, urban
tradition with his own marketing skills. Sharing an apartment with
religious cultists meant that he didn’t like to go home much. He
preferred not to return until they had gone to sleep. Chane would stay
out late, carrying a stencil of his first logo, the Chane oval, and cans
of spray paint, tagging walls with stenciled graffiti.
Before
long, he realized he was spending so much time simply trying to get by
that he had let his designs slip. He left New York and returned to
Jackson, after an eight-month stay in Pensacola Beach.
He began
designing skateboards and other types of clothing. Still an avid BMX
racer, even going professional for two years, he toured from city to
city, making sure he was in the right place at the right times for the
BMX meets. With this, his business exploded. He found himself calling
home frequently and having his gear overnighted to whatever address he
could.
The last stop of his tour was back home. During a visit to a
skate shop, the owner told him that the restaurant next door had just
closed. “It was the only time in my life that I had serious money,”
Chane says. “I had $14,000 in my pocket. I went to the landlord and I
dropped bills down on it and said, ‘you know what, I don’t care who you
got looking at this. The time is right. I’m not ready for it, but I’m
supposed to do this right now.’”
They reached an agreement and
Chane opened his first store, which is now “Swell.” He had fears that he
was not a businessman and he would fail. He set a goal.
“I just
wanted to prove to myself that I could do the business for six months.”
It did not go quite the way he thought it would. Working under the idea
that the store was a little bit of New York dropped into Jackson, he
began with no business plan and no idea of how to make it for those six
months.
But he had faith in the youth of Mississippi. His initial
lines were aimed at the younger crowds. He knew they would find him.
From the adults around him, he received apathy. They told him, “’you
know what? These young kids don’t have the money.’” Chane admits that is
true. “But I know their parents do.”
The youth came through. Six
months to the day after he opened his first store, he opened his
second. He has not looked back, but he refuses to do anything the normal
way. Even though he sells men’s and women’s clothing and furniture, he
still considers the high school and college kids his main market. He
lets word of mouth carry his name around the country instead of
expensive ad campaigns. And he works on his own style of 3-D, guerrilla
marketing.
At 2002’s MTV Video Music Awards, Chane went to New
York with backpacks full of his stickers and catalogs. He recruited
several young men and women to his cause. He strapped the backpacks onto
their chests and had them crowd-surf Times Square. They did, throwing
Chane’s stickers, his catalogs, and his name out into the crowd.
He
received orders because of it. But to this day, New York remains his
greatest challenge. He desires to be in stores there, but no one carries
his products.
They can be found in stores from Philadelphia to
Miami and from Washington D.C. to San Diego. Chain stores like Fast
Forward and CHAOS CULTURE carry his gear. Two mail order companies,
Dance Competition and Revolution, sell his things through catalogs. Due
to the unusual ways he gets his name and his products out, occasionally
he is surprised to see his own name.
“On an episode of V.I.P.,
they pop in and do a fast-forward shot into a freeze-frame of Pamela
Anderson’s mailbox. And there sits our oval Chane sticker. How it got
there I may never know,” Chane says. It’s not just the mystery person on
the V.I.P. set who is a fan.
“Right now, we’ve got stuff
that Steven Tyler [of Aerosmith] wears, that he buys from us. We don’t
just give it to him.” Referring to the BMX Grand Nationals in Tulsa,
Oklahoma, Chane says, “He has a son that races BMX. We end up seeing him
on Thanksgiving, pretty much every year. He just happens to pop in
every time.”
“We sold a t-shirt to Huey Lewis. He was there at
that same race last year,” Chane says, proud that his name is being worn
by these celebrities. “I’d love to get it on a million celebrities.”
He
has a fairly strong idea for the future. He wants to go after the young
men and women who only shop at The Gap and Abercrombie and Fitch. But
that’s not the limit of his vision.
“We have got all the elements sitting here. The concrete foundation has been built. We’ve got the elements to make an empire.”
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