- California Assembly OKs highest minimum wage in nation
- S. Korea unveils first graphic cigarette warnings
- US joins with South Korea, Japan in bid to deter North Korea
- LPGA golfer Chun In-gee finally back in action
- S. Korea won’t be top seed in final World Cup qualification round
- US men’s soccer misses 2nd straight Olympics
- US back on track in qualifying with 4-0 win over Guatemala
- High-intensity workout injuries spawn cottage industry
- CDC expands range of Zika mosquitoes into parts of Northeast
- Who knew? ‘The Walking Dead’ is helping families connect
“No Sweat!”
Despite criticism, Team USA’s Ralph Lauren cardigan made by
Korean owned company and priced at $595, is already sold out
By Jane Han
It’s been a week since the 2014 Winter Olympics kicked off and people are still talking about Team USA’s opening ceremony uniforms. While criticisms about them may not really matter to most people, there is one Korean couple in California who can’t help but take it personally.
Why? They’re the ones who made it.
”We put in our hard work and sweat into it, so of course it hurts,’’ Elizabeth Park, co-owner of the knitwear factory that made the controversial cardigan, said in a Korea Times interview.
The shawl-collar, wool cardigan, designed by American fashion icon Ralph Lauren, features a navy blue base covered with patches of oversized red and white stars and stripes. While some compliment the uniform just for being made in the U.S. ― unlike the Chinese-made uniforms for the London Games ― the general public wasn’t exactly impressed with the opening look.
”Every night after work, I found myself going online to check what people had to say about our cardigan,’’ Park said, urging critics not to look only at the sweater itself, but the message behind it. ”It’s very American. It is classic, yet carries a modern twist. I think it displays the true spirit of Americana,’’ the 56-year-old said, confidently.
For Park, it’s only natural to defend her work. After all, the husband-and-wife duo and 50 other full-time employees spent an average of 12 hours a day to put out the finished pieces.
Each hand-sewn cardigan called for at least 14 hours of meticulous, hands-on labor.
”We were first given the job by Ralph Lauren in 2012, but as with any other design, there were repeated edits and additions that had to be made,’’ she said, adding that her team had to do some heavy crunch work toward the end to meet the deadline.
”Not one of the 650 cardigans is identical because every person has their own way of doing stitch work,’’ explained Park, who still isn’t sure how her company, Ball of Cotton in City of Commerce, was selected to take on such a big-scale project. ”I know that Ralph Lauren was busy in search for the right vendor,’’ she said, ”so I guess we got lucky to get chosen. It really is an honor.’’
Park and her husband Eddy, 61, both immigrants from Korea, have been in the business in California for more than 20 years, but wouldn’t compare their Olympic job to no other.
”This isn’t something you get to do every day,’’ she said.
Despite the criticism, Team USA’s Ralph Lauren cardigan, priced at $595, is already sold out online.