How JJJJound defined good taste for the internet era

In 2006, Justin R. Saunders was living aimlessly. He was in his early 20s, working part-time as a security guard and an art teacher, skateboarding and writing graffiti in his off time. He did not yet know what he would do with his life. As a hobby, he started collecting images he found online, things he liked or found amusing or wished he could afford—classic cars, rare sneakers, “Calvin and Hobbes” comics, brutalist architecture. He was as interested in the style of the ’60s and ’70s as he was in the frequencies of modern fashion and streetwear. Adult life was looming, but he hadn’t yet let go of the things that defined his youth, and this new pastime gave him a way to arrange his feelings into a visual compendium. It was a little like the mood boards designers create to arrange their references for a new collection. Except Saunders was not yet the influential designer he is today. He was simply creating a mood board for the life he wanted to live. Read more at GQ