Founded in 2021, with an engaged community of over 40,000 followers, Addicted to Rags sources unique rock 'n' roll fashion that has disrupted the styling industry and dressed Grammy-nominated artists.

Addicted To Rags

Bridging the gap between fashion history and modern style, building this e-commerce business was an exercise in world-building—contextualizing the highly curated, unique items archived and sold through Addicted to Rags. Since 2024, the venture has consistently driven over 950k average monthly impressions. Beyond the metrics, the goal is democratization. By digitizing physical media and sourcing rare pieces, I am making 60s and 70s fashion accessible to an audience that was previously locked out by private showrooms and extinct communities. My hope is to send the next person down a complete visual and sartorial rabbit hole—because good luck finding these pieces anywhere else.

Every Garment Tells A Story

From ideation to curation, each garment is sourced with intention that carries a history of high quality materials and endless stories to tell.

Carrying a unique eye for visual merchandising and curation, i’ve had the opportunity to style Grammy nominated artists & source for renowned fashion labels such as ERD & Re/Done.


Video BTS From our 2024 look-book, featuring our shops 1960s Patchwork Bellbottoms & 1970s Stiff Records tee.

When I accidentally started a war with the Swifties…

When long-term client Charli XCX wanted to pay homage to the New York City music scene for her October 2025 SNL performance with ROLE MODEL, we sourced the perfect artifact: an exceptionally rare, original 1970s Max's Kansas City staff tee.

Our relationship with Charli was already established—we previously styled her in vintage tees to subtly tease her John Cale collaboration for the Wuthering Heights soundtrack weeks before the official launch. However, this SNL placement struck an entirely different cultural nerve.

Airing at the peak of her BRAT remix era and coinciding with Taylor Swift's release of Life of a Showgirl (specifically the rumored Charli-focused track "Actually Romantic"), the Max's Kansas City tee was immediately thrust into the center of a viral pop-culture moment. Pop-culture accounts and rival fandoms heavily dissected the outfit, sparking mass speculation and "feud" drama across the internet.

While the rumors remained unconfirmed, we capitalized on the organic cultural collision. The vintage tee was plastered across major news outlets and fan pages, driving our brand engagement through the roof and yielding over 2,000+ new followers overnight.