DEVILOOF have announced a collaboration with Village Vanguard (a Japanese online store for all kinds of goods) for some exclusive merchandise items!
The collection includes a T-shirt and a longsleeve shirt, but also a pillow, backpack, baseball cap, keychains, mug, measuring container, flipflops, mirror and smartphone rings and cases. All items are made-to-order, which means that they’re only available during the pre-order period and unavailable for order after that.

(Click to enlarge the image.)
Pre-order information & shipping
The preorder period lasts from July 15 to August 14 2022, so if one or more of these items caught your interest, continue reading!
Of course that’s fun and all, but Village Vanguard is a Japanese store, right? Yes, that is correct. However, they also have a partnership with BUYEE, a Japanese proxy service that allows you to bid on Japanese Auctions and order from Mercari as well.
This collaboration is also available through BUYEE, and you can find the link for it here: DEVILOOF x Village Vanguard Merchandise Collaboration through BUYEE.
BUYEE ships worldwide, and accepts both PayPal and credit cards as payment methods.
雪 (Yuki) is the owner and driving force behind Arlequin.
She originally started the project in 2009 as a photographer under the name of Arlequin Photography, but developed an interest in journalism and translation ever since. Because of these interests interviews and reviews were added to the project, until it eventually hit the limits as a "photographer" in 2021, and Arlequin Magazine was added to the mix.
雪 (Yuki) is a native Dutch speaker with a graphic design degree, which means she is also the main person behind Arlequin Creations.
After all these years, she's still the one responsible for the interviews and most of the live photography you see here at Arlequin, but the majority of reviews and behind-the-scenes work is also done by her.
The reviews she writes are from the viewing point of an overseas fan, and thus written in English before being translated to Dutch, Spanish and Japanese. In the English versions she also tries to explain the meaning behind certain kanji or song titles to the readers, but what you don't see here is that these explanations are omitted in the Japanese versions in order to appeal to these readers more.
She speaks Dutch and English on a native level, but also understands Japanese and German.