Adidas has been accused of threatening the creative freedom of fashion designers by seeking to establish a “monopoly” on clothing featuring stripes, in a London legal battle with luxury brand Thom Browne. The New York designer faced off against the sportswear group at the High Court on Wednesday (Jul 17), in the latest round of a long-running global dispute over stacks of stripes printed on items such as hoodies and T-shirts. Thom Browne, whose clothes feature a four-stripe motif, is suing Adidas in an attempt to invalidate trademarks covering the Germany-based company’s three-stripe logo.
Adidas is countersuing the fashion brand. It claims that the purveyor of high-end garments including tight-fitting grey men’s suits — sometimes worn with shorts — has violated its trademarks. Lawyers representing Adidas told the court on Wednesday that there were “obvious” similarities between its logo — the “iconic identifier” of its brand — and the solid bars used by the US company.
However, Philip Roberts KC, representing Thom Browne, said Adidas had “sought to monopolise” an “abstract generalisation or conceptualisation of three stripes”. He added: “The breadth of Adidas’ asserted monopoly threatens the basic freedom of fashion designers to design clothing in the manner they wish.” Browne, 58, wore his signature suit and shorts to the courtroom, where a clothing rack was set up with about two dozen garments for the judge to examine.
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